Thursday, January 18, 2007

I can't count!!

After putting the route together I thought it wise to add up the miles. I was confident that I would not be out by much from my original estimate of 900 km (600 miles) which is the mileage I clocked up when driving from London to Schweinfurt and our walking route looks fairly straight.

How wrong could I be? Well about 50% underestimated. I am now estimating our walk to be 1377 km (860 miles) long. My 15 km average a day over 60 days is out of the window and it all looks a bit more of a challenge now. Somehow I could compute my original estimate, it did not seem too bad. I have not yet got my head around the new distance.

Our average day has just gone up to 25 km, that is five hours walking on flat terrain and about 8 hours through hilly (hey, we are not 21 any more!). I am gingerly starting to think about what I will need / am able to carry with me as bare essentials and am hoping that my idea of having some pre arranged check in points will make it easier. I will send what we need for every two weeks ahead. That includes some spare clothes, the maps we need for the next leg, medicine etc. All the used stuff will go into the parcel and send home. The rest can be purchased ‘en route’.

I am looking for some kind people around Ruedesheim and Aachen to be our check points in Germany, Gent (Ghent) in Belgium and Dover in the UK. This brings me to another point – we will set ourselves a yet to be determined daily budget which has to cover all our expenses. Every penny we do not spend we will donate to our charity. So we are looking for more kind souls who live on our path to put us up for the night – it will be their way of donating to our charity just by letting us have a bed.

Sunday, January 14, 2007

My heart through my navel

Over the last few months, I came to seriously doubt whether our journey would be possible. In September, I alluded to the health problems that had arisen for each of us. I am pleased to report that Doris's problem was resolved. Either it wasn't frozen shoulder after all, or Doris came up with a miracle cure, aided by a TENS unit and an excess of determination.


Unfortunately, mine turned out to be more serious and longer lasting. After years of Cardiophobia, and a health regime designed to forestall the onset of heart problems, it turned out that the cause of my problems is s a heart arrhythmia. As this blog was intended to be about my pilgrimage to Bavaria, rather than a journey through my health, I decided not to write until I knew whether I would be able to undertake the journey.


I know now that although my arthymia will make the journey more challenging, there is every reason to go ahead. I have now joined the ranks of those who have to remember to take regular medication and can refer grandly to “my Cardiologist”. And, my Cardiologist sees no reason why I should not attempt to walk 600 miles, so there you have it – the pilgrimage is on and we intend to start in May 2007. In the meantime, I have been turning down freelance work and playing poker to pay the mortgage but more of that, perhaps, another time.


On the journey front, we need to firm up on our route. A key aspect of the pilgrimage is to meet people along the way. I want, therefore, to get cracking and publicise our chosen route and this blog. One reason for this is because Doris has always wanted to use the journey as a way of raising money for a charity by getting people to sponsor us. This has lead me to wonder whether we can combine the two. Perhaps if we select a charity, they might publicise our journey to their supporters and we can meet some of them along the way. I am also considering writing to Satish Kumar, to see whether he might publicise our journey to readers of Resurgence, the magazine that he edits. But to do any of that, we need to decide on a route.


Which brings me to Doris's decision that she would prefer not to walk to Bavaria at all! She wants to do it the other way around and walk from Bavaria. She would also prefer to walk to our home in Kent which, I have to admit, would be considerably more scenic than two days walking through the mostly urban landscape along the Thames Estuary. This is very tempting, as we would also be able to take in much of the historic pilgrim's way – albeit backwards. She also tells me that, rather than our currently planned route through Belgium, a route through France might be more uplifting!


She has left the decision to me but the good news is that I am now focusing on that question, rather than navel gazing on my heart, so to speak.