I
always
liked
the
Travelers
Rest
Meet.
We’d
climb
onto
Helm
Crag
which
overlooks
the
road
and
the
pub,
a
good
spot
to
look
into
the
boulder
field
and
borran
under
the
summit.
From
there
the
ridge
running
up
towards
Gibson
Knott
is
a
fast
mile
with
a
400
foot
gain
in
height;
from
Gibson
Knott
another
1¼
miles
with
450
feet
of
climbing
sees
you
overlooking
the
valley
of
Far
Easedale,
from
the
top
of
Calf
Crag.
In
other
words,
with
luck
you
were
pretty
much
set
up.
At
the
end
of
the
day,
the
pub
would
usually
put
on
a
hot
pot,
no
doubt
followed
by
the
usual
singing,
but
I’d
always
gone
home
by
then,
it
being
a
6
mile
walk
at
the
end
of
the
day
from
the
pub,
via
the
old
Coffin
Road
above
Rydal.
Besides
you
never
felt
much
like
singing
when
you’re
restricted
to
Lemonade!
Some
years
later,
my
mate
'Doggie'
and
I
were
sat
on
top
of
Helm
Crag
on
Christmas
Eve
morning,
there
was
snow
about
on
the
tops,
not
a
lot,
but
the
wind
coming
from
the
North
had
that
“edge”
to
it
that
chilled.
We
had
seen
hounds
“lowse”
from
the
pub
and
almost
at
once
find
in
the
fields
above
Gill
Foot
under
Helm
Crag.
The
fox
must
have
been
of
the
type
known
as
a
“travelling
fox”
(not
to
be
confused
with
the
type
of
fox
which
travelled
in
a
bag
in
the
19th
century
to
be
“hunted”
by
certain
packs).
This
one
had
travelled
from
the
Borrowdale
Valley,
near
Keswick,
because
that’s
exactly
where
it
went
in
a
dead
straight
line,
the
hounds
in
hot
pursuit.
“Bugger
it,”
said
Doggie,
as
the
last
hound
disappeared
over
the
skyline,
giving
the
occasional
bark,
“bet
they
wa
in’t
come
back.”
“Give
it
a
while,”
I
replied.
And
so
we
did,
huddled
up
behind
a
couple
of
rocks
against
the
wind,
eyes
and
ears
straining
for
the
slightest
clue
as
to
the
much
hoped
for
return
of
the
hounds.
Minutes
went
by
and
then
half
an
hour,
nothing.
After
45
minutes
I’d
had
enough.
“Mine’s
a
pint,
it’s
thy
round,”
I
said
as
my
binoculars
showed
the
opening
pub
door.
Doggie
got
to
his
feet
smiling.
“Warmer
in’t
pub,”
he
said,“which
way
down?
“
We
descended
by
the
Greenburn
side
of
Helm
Crag,
moving
quickly
over
the
frozen
ground
to
thaw
our
frozen
joints
and
soon
we
were
standing
outside
the
open
pub
door,
it
was
about
11
am.
We
stepped
inside;
the
familiar
pub
smell
hit
us,
alcohol
and
old
tobacco
smoke,
the
smell
of
a
cooking
hot
pot
wafted
in
from
the
kitchen,
the
Christmas
tree
festooned
with
lights
even
looked
new,
decorations
and
even
a
few
cards
were
in
evidence.
The
bar
was
empty
save
for
the
landlord
polishing
glasses
as
landlords
do.
“Two
pints,
please,”
Doggie
said,
taking
out
some
cash.
The
landlord
eyed
us.
“Bugger
off,
“he
said,
“you
came
to
hunt,
so
bugger
off
and
hunt!”
And
with
that
he
disappeared
into
the
back.
We
went
outside
and
looked
at
the
fells,
a
clear
sharp
morning
but
there
was
nothing
to
be
seen.
We
got
the
binoculars
out
and
scanned
the
fells
again
drawing
a
blank,
not
a
hound
or
even
trace
of
a
hound.
The
only
thing
moving
on
the
fell
was
a
group
of
walkers
on
Helm
Crag,
their
bright
coloured
clothing
standing
out
as
they
moved
up
the
skyline.
“Looks
like
The
Rule,
“I
said.
Just
at
that
moment
the
555
bus
from
Keswick
to
Lancaster
hove
into
view
and
we
boarded,
heading
for
Ambleside
and
its
familiar
(and
welcoming)
pub!!.
That
was
the
year
(I
think)
when
we
tried
to
drink
the
Golden
Rule
out
of
bottled
Guinness.
God
knows
why
we
tried
it,
but
it’s
the
thing
young
lads
with
nothing
else
to
do
start.
We
did
quite
well
up
to
just
after
Christmas
when
we
had
it
by
the
throat,
the
stock
behind
the
bar
being
noticeably
smaller,
but
a
fresh
delivery
a
couple
of
days
before
New
Year
saw
us
back
on
the
bitter.
Even
today
I
struggle
to
drink
a
pint
of
Guinness.
Christmas
Day
by
necessity
was
always
a
quiet
time.
On
a
couple
of
occasions
I
remember
waking
to
a
world
of
white.
We
would
have
a
walk
in
the
evening
and
assess
the
weather
prospects
for
the
next
day
as
we
wandered
the
darkened
streets,
lit
by
an
occasional
streetlight
and
Christmas
trees
shining
in
the
windows
of
the
houses.
The
silhouette
of
the
mountains
around
the
village
discernable
against
a
background
of
stars
and
the
inky
blackness
of
the
nearby
lake.
It
was
an
oft
used
expression
in
Lakeland
that
“hunting
wud
not
be
up
to
much
til
the
first
frost”
which
I
personally
subscribe
to,
and
on
more
than
one
Christmas
Day
of
my
childhood
the
evening
promise
was
good.
Boxing
Day
dawned
and
folk
began
to
gather
at
the
Market
Cross
to
see
the
hounds,
Loughrigg
Fell
was
dotted
with
groups
of
hunters
waiting
for
the
“off”,
Chappie
and
his
whipper
in
(Dennis
and
then
Chris)
would
bring
the
hounds
down
from
the
kennels
via
Fair
View
Road
and
North
Road,
usually
having
their
photograph
taken
for
the
local
paper
en
route.
For
a
few
years
we
joined
the
throng
at
the
cross
and
then
ascended
Loughrigg
Fell
after,
but
because
I
was
small
my
father
and
I
fell
so
far
behind
we
started
going
with
many
others
to
sit
on
top
of
Ivy
Crag.
It
was
a
great
place
to
be,
as
hounds
usually
went
in
to
the
fell
below
Brow
Head
Farm
and
worked
their
way
around
the
fell
towards
Clappersgate
and
Todd
Crag.
The
vantage
point
of
Ivy
Crag
enabled
you
to
see
quite
a
bit
of
the
countryside,
although
there
were
places
where
the
fall
of
the
fell
blocked
your
view,
in
particular
towards
Ambleside.
Should
a
fox
decide
to
head
for
Great
Langdale
or
Grasmere
you
were
ideally
placed
to
follow,
without
much
effort,
and
keep
up
with
proceedings
and
even
if
the
hounds
found
a
fox
with
a
dislike
of
the
fells
which
went
to
Hawkshead
you
still
could
see
much
of
the
hunt
through
binoculars.
One
year
the
hounds
found
more
or
less
straight
away
and
a
screaming
hunt
ensued;
we
were
on
our
way
to
Ivy
Crag.
After
I
left
school
I’d
come
home
from
work
and
after
getting
changed,
run
to
the
top
of
Loughrigg
and
back
via
Ivy
Crag
on
a
fairly
regular
basis,
as
part
of
my
fell
running
training,
but
I
never
went
up
as
fast
as
we
did
that
hunting
morn!
Once
you
were
sitting
on
top
of
Ivy
Crag
the
temptation
to
eat
something
usually
overcame
you,
and
people
began
unpacking
their
sandwiches,
despite
the
early
hour.
Ours
was
always
a
slab
of
Christmas
cake,
wrapped
in
tin
foil.
This
was
something
of
a
tradition
and
a
slab
of
cake
in
your
pocket
whilst
hunting
lasted
for
weeks
to
come.
Loughrigg
is
a
funny
sort
of
fell,
even
if
you
are
on
the
highest
ridge
a
lot
of
the
fell
cannot
be
seen
at
any
one
time,
there
is
a
geological
fault
which
runs
from
the
top
of
Colwith
and
over
Dunmail
Raise
going
through
the
fell
with
a
subsequent
drop
in
elevation
to
add
to
complications.
Wet
spots
and
bracken
abound
in
summer,
and
on
the
top
there
are
countless
little
pools
of
water.
There
are
however
plenty
of
sheltered
spots
in
which
to
sit
and
on
a
hot
day
become
very
soporific.
One
unusually
sunny
morning
we
came
across
a
certain
follower
who
despite
a
nice
little
hunt
going
through
beneath
him
was
laying
on
the
ground
oblivious.
”
Is
he
dead?!"
I
asked.
“Only
dead
drunk,
“said
Tommy
Armer
who
was
with
us,
“they
had
a
lock
in
at
the
pub
last
night.”
There
was
a
pub
in
Ambleside
which
had
a
back
bar,
down
a
little
alley.
This
bar
was
for
locals
only
and
any
“visitor”
who
went
in
was
asked
to
take
his
potential
custom
round
to
the
front
bar.
The
landlord
through
most
of
the
time
I
lived
in
Ambleside
had
a
casual
view
of
the
licensing
laws
with
fairly
frequent
lock
ins.
Our
friend
on
the
fell
was
an
avid
supporter
of
such
practices.
On
occasions
the
hunt
went
round
and
round
the
fell
almost
all
day,
with
frequent
glimpses
of
proceedings.
Loughrigg
was
a
great
place
to
follow
a
hunt.
Between
Boxing
Day
and
New
Year’s
Day,
there
was
a
hunt
usually
in
Langdale
from
The
Langdales
Hotel
at
Chapel
Stile.
In
the
early
days
we
would
walk,
setting
off
from
Ambleside
in
the
pre-dawn
light,
a
few
stars
still
twinkling
in
the
blackness
of
the
sky,
and
walking
along
by
the
shore
of
Rydal
Lake,
and
then
on
the
ridge
above
the
Wyke
Woods
to
the
top
of
Megs
Ghyll.
I
have
memories
of
these
mornings
with
the
sunlight
suddenly
flooding
down
the
fell
called
Silver
Howe,
our
breath
in
plumes
in
the
cold
morning
air,
water
ice
cracking
on
the
path
under
our
boots,
a
clear
blue
sky
overhead,
the
surrounding
tops
white
with
snow.
As
the
sixties
progressed
and
finances
improved
we
purchased
a
car,
a
little
Austin
A35
puddle
jumper.
This
put
an
end
to
the
early
starts
as
you
could
have
a
lay
in
bed
and
still
get
to
the
meet
before
they
“lowsed”.
We
would
park
up
near
what
is
now
the
Youth
Hostel
at
the
top
of
Red
Bank
and
join
up
with
the
track
we
took
when
walking
up
to
the
top
of
Megs
Ghyll
above
Chapel
Stile,
another
good
spot
to
be
which
gave
easy
walking
to
either
Grasmere
or
Great
Langdale
with
good
views
of
the
valleys
below.
Even
if
the
hounds
went
to
Lingmoor
Fell
across
the
valley
you
got
a
decent
view.
There
was
usually
a
good
turnout
from
Langdale,
and
the
tops
would
be
dotted
with
little
groups
of
followers.
“Like
bloody
Indians,”
someone
who
had
recently
visited
the
local
flea
pit
and
seen
some
Western
film
or
other
commented,
“waiting
for
the
wagon
train!”
But
the
year
slowly
drew
to
an
end,
and
after
celebrating
the
arrival
of
the
new
one,
the
break
of
day
would
find
us
at
The
Drunken
Duck
for
the
New
Year’s
Day
hunt.
A
large
throng
was
always
present
and
as
the
sixties
moved
on
there
were
more
and
more
cars,
an
example
of
the
truth
when
some
politician
or
other
told
us,
“we
had
never
had
it
so
good.”
I
never
much
liked
the
Duck
as
a
place
to
follow
hounds,
there
isn’t
anywhere
where
you
can
get
really
high
and
look
in
bank
except
on
the
fell
behind
(known
as
Black
Fell),
and
the
borran
at
Iron
Keld
was
always
troublesome.
Much
of
the
surrounding
countryside
is
fields
and
patches
of
woodland,
and
hounds
could
go
round
and
round
all
day
allowing
you
to
see
bits
of
the
hunt.
One
year
some
farmer
decided
to
grow
kale
and
that
year
his
field
was
well
visited
as
the
fox
soon
realised
how
badly
the
stuff
affected
the
scent.
Another
time
there
were
some
kids’
ponies
in
a
field,
which
got
more
exercise
that
day
than
in
the
preceding
weeks
as
the
fox
unerringly
visited
them
as
it
lapped
the
countryside,
causing
one
old
lad
to
make
dark
utterances
about
“glue”
as
hounds
lost
the
line
for
the
umpteenth
time.
On
New
Year’s
Day
1972
I
leaned
on
a
gate
near
the
Duck
watching
the
hunt
with
two
others.
On
New
Year’s
Day
1973
I
leaned
on
the
same
gate
alone,
death
having
taken
my
two
companions
during
the
year,
a
reminder
that
nothing
lasts
for
ever
and
I
would
not
enjoy
their
company
anymore
It
was
at
the
Duck,
one
New
Year’s
Day,
that
I
saw
Chappie
lose
his
temper,
the
only
time
I
ever
recall
it
happening
-
it
happened
like
this.
Chappie,
like
many
in
those
days,
was
a
dialect
speaker,
not
the
now
long
gone
pure
Lakeland
dialect,
but
quite
a
few
dialect
words
were
used
in
conversation,
and
when
he
became
excited,
I
at
times
had
difficulty
in
understanding
him.
On
this
particular
day
we
were
standing
on
a
piece
of
fell
known
as
The
Iron
Keld
which
overlooks
Tarn
Hows.
On
that
side
of
the
fell
a
screaming
hunt
was
in
progress,
the
scent
being
breast
high.
Below
and
on
the
other
side
of
the
fell
stood
Chappie
who
could
hear
everything
and
see
nothing.
He
shouted
to
us,
“Wither
w
how?”
and
then
again.
No
reply.
“What’s
he
want?”
somebody
said.
“God
knows,”
another
replied.
"Wither
w
how"
once
more
rent
the
air.
“Ignore
the
daft
bugger,”
a
third
person
said,
and
so
we
did.
The
hounds
killed
in
the
fields
of
Black
Fell
and
we
all
trooped
back
down
towards
the
Duck
public
house.
On
the
road
we
met
Chappie
with
a
little
group
of
hangers
on,
he
did
not
look
a
happy
huntsman.
His
terriers
didn’t
look
too
chuffed
either.
“You
daft
lot
of
buggers,“
he
raged.
I
took
refuge
behind
a
large
follower.
There
was
much
shuffling
of
feet.
“Why
the
bluddy
hell,”
he
went
on,
“did
you
not
answer
my
question?”
He
must
have
seen
the
blank
expressions.
“All
I
wanted
to
know,“
he
continued,
“was
which
way
the
hounds
were
going!”
Finale
And
so
Christmas
ended,
soon
it
was
Twelfth
Night
and
the
tree
was
taken
down
and
consigned
to
the
tip,
decorations
were
packed
up
in
a
box
whose
destination
was
the
attic.
Hunting
continued
of
course
and
usually
improved
with
the
onset
of
hard
frost,
which
is
associated
with
good
scenting.
The
Christmas
cake
first
eaten
on
Boxing
Day
usually
lasted
for
the
weeks
ahead,
on
one
occasion
until
mid-March
before
the
sandwiches
returned.
As
the
year
turned
so
did
the
hunting
season,
although
a
few
months
away,
the
prospect
of
the
best
time
of
year,
that
of
spring,
loomed
and
with
it
my
favorite
time,
the
early
morning
lamb-worrying
meets,
for
there
is
nothing
better
than
ascending
a
fell
in
the
dark
and
greeting
the
dawn
from
the
tops
while
the
valley
below
you
still
slumbers.