
Walking the Coast to Coast Path
NATIONAL TRAIL - St Bees to Robin Hood's Bay
Terry Marsh(Author)
Cicerone Press
5th Edition
Will be published approx. on 25. August 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
192 pages
978-1-78631-206-8 (ISBN)
Description
Walk one of the UK's most iconic long-distance trails on the Coast to Coast Path National Trail, crossing northern England from St Bees on the Irish Sea to Robin Hood's Bay on the North Sea. Covering 182 miles (293km), this classic route links three of England's finest national parks - the Lake District, Yorkshire Dales and North York Moors - offering a spectacular journey through mountains, valleys, moorland and historic countryside.
The Coast to Coast Path is widely regarded as one of Britain's best long-distance walks. Avoiding towns wherever possible and favouring high ground, the trail reveals the changing landscapes, geology and cultural history of northern England. Beginning with a dramatic clifftop walk at St Bees Head, the route soon heads inland into the western Lake District, exploring remote valleys and high passes beneath famous fells before leaving Lakeland by the shores of Haweswater. Beyond the Lake District, the route crosses the limestone uplands around Shap and enters the Yorkshire Dales, where historic mining landscapes and sweeping moorland lead to the high crossing of Nine Standards Rigg. The trail then continues through Swaledale and Richmond before traversing the quiet farmland of the Vale of Mowbray. The final section crosses the wide open heather moorland of the North York Moors and finishes with a memorable clifftop walk down to the North Sea at Robin Hood's Bay.
13 stage-by-stage route descriptions covering the full Coast to Coast Path from St Bees to Robin Hood's Bay
Alternative itineraries of 15 and 19 days allowing a more relaxed pace across the 182-mile (293km) route
Clear route guidance supported by 1:100,000 mapping and a detailed 1:25,000 OS map booklet
Downloadable GPX files for easy navigation using GPS devices or smartphone apps
Practical planning advice covering fitness preparation, accommodation, transport and daily logistics
Stage summaries outlining distances, ascent, facilities and accommodation along the route
Background information on the landscapes, geology and cultural history of northern England encountered along the trail
Whether you are tackling your first ever long-distance walk or planning your next multi-day National Trail, the Coast to Coast Path offers a rewarding end-to-end adventure. With clear mapping, practical planning advice and reliable route guidance, this guidebook makes it easier to organise your journey and enjoy every mile of this classic walk across England.
The Coast to Coast Path is widely regarded as one of Britain's best long-distance walks. Avoiding towns wherever possible and favouring high ground, the trail reveals the changing landscapes, geology and cultural history of northern England. Beginning with a dramatic clifftop walk at St Bees Head, the route soon heads inland into the western Lake District, exploring remote valleys and high passes beneath famous fells before leaving Lakeland by the shores of Haweswater. Beyond the Lake District, the route crosses the limestone uplands around Shap and enters the Yorkshire Dales, where historic mining landscapes and sweeping moorland lead to the high crossing of Nine Standards Rigg. The trail then continues through Swaledale and Richmond before traversing the quiet farmland of the Vale of Mowbray. The final section crosses the wide open heather moorland of the North York Moors and finishes with a memorable clifftop walk down to the North Sea at Robin Hood's Bay.
13 stage-by-stage route descriptions covering the full Coast to Coast Path from St Bees to Robin Hood's Bay
Alternative itineraries of 15 and 19 days allowing a more relaxed pace across the 182-mile (293km) route
Clear route guidance supported by 1:100,000 mapping and a detailed 1:25,000 OS map booklet
Downloadable GPX files for easy navigation using GPS devices or smartphone apps
Practical planning advice covering fitness preparation, accommodation, transport and daily logistics
Stage summaries outlining distances, ascent, facilities and accommodation along the route
Background information on the landscapes, geology and cultural history of northern England encountered along the trail
Whether you are tackling your first ever long-distance walk or planning your next multi-day National Trail, the Coast to Coast Path offers a rewarding end-to-end adventure. With clear mapping, practical planning advice and reliable route guidance, this guidebook makes it easier to organise your journey and enjoy every mile of this classic walk across England.
More details
Edition
5th Revised edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Kendal
United Kingdom
Edition type
Revised edition
Product notice
Laminated cover
With flaps
Illustrations
81 photographs; 33 maps and 15 profiles; 100pp trail map
Dimensions
Height: 172 mm
Width: 116 mm
Thickness: 12 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-78631-206-8 (9781786312068)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
05/2026
5th Edition
Cicerone Press
€29.49
Available for download
Person
Lancashire-born writer and photographer Dr Terry Marsh specialises in the outdoors and travel. He has been writing guidebooks and magazine articles since the early 1980s and is the author or revision author/editor of over 100 titles including the award-winning Cicerone guides to the Coast to Coast Path (first published in 1993 as A Northern Coast to Coast Walk and which received the Outdoor Writers Guild Award for Excellence in 1994), The Shropshire Way and Wild Edric's Way (1999) and Great Mountain Days in the Pennines (2013). He has been a Cicerone author since 1991.
Terry has a long-standing interest in Cumberland, Westmorland and North Yorkshire, in particular the Lake District, the Yorkshire Dales and the North York Moors. An historical geographer holding a Master of Arts degree with Distinction in Lake District Studies and a PhD in Historical Geography, he is a Life Member and former Secretary of the Outdoor Writers and Photographers Guild.
Terry has a long-standing interest in Cumberland, Westmorland and North Yorkshire, in particular the Lake District, the Yorkshire Dales and the North York Moors. An historical geographer holding a Master of Arts degree with Distinction in Lake District Studies and a PhD in Historical Geography, he is a Life Member and former Secretary of the Outdoor Writers and Photographers Guild.