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    Ribble Way


Distance: 70 miles
Difficulty: Easy to Moderate
Way-marking: Fair.
Trails: Good river walking.
Lodging Styles: English B&Bs
Best Season: Spring and early summer.
Highlights:


Lots of history and an enjoyable route near the river. Good way to access the upper portion of the Pennine Way.


England's Lancashire county is reputed to be the place where Queen Elizabeth would like to retire. Walking through it's emerald green countryside neatly divided by grey stone walls, it's easy to see why. In many ways this is quintessential England at it's very best.

The Ribble Way footpath, stretching 70 miles from the Irish Sea to its source in the Yorkshire Dales, provides the perfect way for the walker to visit Lancashire. The river is ever present and provides a serene and gentle companion. The cry of baby lambs, black and white cows grazing on the green riverbank, and the sight of English blue bells flourishing along the path, all add to the bucolic countryside.

The path itself is easy to moderate in difficulty and displays a love for twisting and turning; a patch of field here, a lane over there, a footpath straight ahead. Getting lost or deciding to make a detour is never a problem as the route is never far from a local farm, small village, or country lane.

There is much here for the history lover as well, such as the old town of Ribchester, dating from 79 AD. As the name "chester" suggests, the town was once the site of a Roman encampment. Ribchester, as it stands today, was built in the late 1800s and exhibits one of the things I love most about England. Instead of building new buildings, the town remains much as it did 200 years ago. Residents have remodeled and modernized the interiors of the old town. Outside, the old grey stone is adorned with new windows and beautifully painted front doors, a perfect blend of the old and the new.

Heading north, the lush river valley takes on a subtle change as it widens and adds an element of starkness while approaching the Yorkshire Dales. Only the walker who travels step by step can so appreciate the difference.

When we walked the path in late April, we found the people generous and welcoming AND glad to see Americans traveling.

The economy in the rural areas of England has suffered in the last several years. First came mad cow disease, then came foot and mouth which caused the destruction of entire herds and closed the walking trails, taking the B&B and local tourists businesses down as well. Unlike the US, the English, as well as many other European farming communities, have a direct link to tourism and to their cultural past. People do not come to America to gaze out at the cornfields of Indiana or to watch the harvesting of sugar beets in eastern Colorado. But to separate the rolling green farmland dotted with sheep from the English countryside, and you've taken away the very heart and essence of what we love about traveling here. Like when I asked someone why the farmers continued to raise sheep when they weren't worth anything. He responded with passion, "It's tradition!"
 

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