“Yorkshire Three Peaks? Oh, I wouldn’t be doing that. I haven’t understood the ‘why’ part about all of that stuff yet.”
This is the response I get from a glint-in-the-eye Doncastrian I’ve just met. I’m in a country inn deep in the Yorkshire Dales, chatting to a group of fifty-somethings on the table next to me about my plans for the following day. I’ve probably had one too many pints of Black Sheep, considering the miles ahead – and the alarm set for dawn.
That friendly Doncastrian, you could say, is in the minority. Every year, it’s estimated that as many as 200,000 people find their ‘why’ and come here. Many flood in during the summer to raise money, taking part in organised charity treks; plenty more arrive primed to tick off a personal goal they can upload to Strava. For me? Curiosity. I’ve been an outdoors writer for almost 15 years now but, guiltily, I’ve never set foot in the Yorkshire Dales. To get a taste of the area, it feels right to start with the route that links its three highest hills – Ingleborough, Pen-y-ghent and Whernside.
“Our day finishes at Ribblehead Viaduct – perfectly timed to watch the sun set behind its 24 arches.”
“Oh, it’s fantastic, you’ll love it,” replies his wife, who had just been detailing her favourite route up Pen-y-ghent. “Just ignore him – he’s clueless. Doesn’t know what he’s missing.”
The first recorded attempt at the Yorkshire Three Peaks is believed to have been in 1887 by J. R. Wynne-Edwards and D. R. Smith, in a time of 10 hours. A fell race followed, but it wasn’t until the 1960s that the route really gained popularity, when the Pen-y-ghent Café in Horton-in-Ribblesdale introduced a clocking-in service for walkers aiming to join the Three Peaks of Yorkshire Club. While this check-in no longer exists, the village is still regarded as the start and finish – and it’s where Dave, who’s joining me, and I begin on a fine mid-March morning under a bluebird early spring sky.
