In Search Of...Hobbit-like walking paths
I’ve started the Walk to Rivendell hiking and therefore have been looking for
interesting, and somewhat Middle-earthish paths in the Southeastern Pa. and southern New Jersey area. Many of them seem to be either very remote, and barely existent, or almost “industrial strength” walkways made to accomodate large numbers of joggers, walkers, and bicyclists, with partially cindered walkways (one example being Forbidden Drive in Fairmount Park in Philadelphia. BUT I’ve come across one place in Montgomery County: http://www.libertynet.org/pert/trails.htm which has a real hobbity feel. The paths tend to curve and loop back, are partially covered in wood chips- comfy to walk on, there are some (wooden) benches scattered about, and there’s even a nature preserve area with a path through it somewhat reminiscent of Farmer Maggot’s area of the Shire. You’re almost surprised the park headquarters doesn’t have round doors and the Green Dragon isn’t at the end of one of the paths. Are there any other such walking path surprises anyone has found, especially in the U.K. (or elsewhere), since I occasionally get there and the only fairly serious walking I’ve done is a bit in the Cotswolds? For that matter, in New New Zealand, what of the areas shown in FOTR when Frodo and Sam are leaving the Shire, are they on any walking tours, maps? P.S. Since (again) starting (somewhat) serious walking I’ve gained new respect for hobbits, and particularly out-of–condition Frodo, for their hiking prowess right from the beginning. :) P.P.S. Hope this is the right forum for this. :confused: P.P.P.S. Is there a way to get longer lines of type across lines. I've tried, but when a message is posted it seems to break into varied long and short lines, like above. :confused: |
Here's a nice Shire-like place for those Hobbits living in the southern Willamette Valley of Oregon:
Mt. Pisgah Arboretum From the top of Mount Pisgah you can appreciate this scene in LotR - Book One - Chapter 11 - Knife in the Dark: Quote:
|
In Rhode Island, nothing beats Arcadia . There are roads broad and paths slender, trickling brooks and mossy streams, withywindle rivers, pine ridges, beech groves, deep woods, hills, and plenty of rocks for Trolls to hide in.
|
I've never been to the US but from what I've read Appalachia sounds fantastic and unearthly. Someone's going to shatter my illusions now, I can just see it!
In the UK, there's a lot of strange walks you can take. Boggle Hole in North Yorkshire is a fairy glen leading straight down to the sea, which I think of as very elven. You can read descriptions of it in AS Byatt's Possession. Or you could visit the real Green Dragon Inn at Hardraw Force in North Yorkshire. I can always recommend walking around Malham, too, as long as you don't go at weekend! Cornwall provides some very 'hobbity' walking. The little lanes are very narrow and edged with steep stone banks, covered in vegetation - lethal for cars, but wonderful for walkers as you see so many plant species, and occasionally lizards. Speaking of lizards, you are guaranteed to see these on the Goonhilly Downs in Cornwall, with the added bonus of feeling you are on the Barrow Downs. Unfortunately, you do have to look away from the huge radar station (unless you like that kind of thing). I also like Stanton Moor in Derbyshire, which has an ancient feel. Here you find the Nine Ladies stone circle, hidden among the trees. This place has just been saved from quarrying, thankfully. Lancashire has a lot of hobbity places, well away from the towns, and it is said that Tolkien may have drawn his inspiration for The Shire from around the Ribble Valley. There are a few hidden away places well worth a visit, including the tiny village of Slaidburn which is hidden in a steep valley and has a pub called The Hark to Bounty. Going West from here you'll also come across Dunsop Bridge, and then the Trough of Bowland, where you could spend all day walking round and imagining yourself in Middle Earth. Move on from here and you should come to Quernmoor, where you can go up a castellated tower and survey the view for miles. |
Tuor, I know of many good trails in southwestern PA. I don't know any off hand, but if you feel like driving several hours west I can find some names for you. I do know of a beautiful trail out by the state college that reminds me of the hobbit's path out of Bree. I think my dad knows the name. I can ask him if your
interested. For anyone who is looking for a nice vacation you should head to Gatlinburg, Ten. The town is very touristy but it is extremely close to the Great Smoky Mts. If you haven't guessed, it is the Misty Mts. in the United States. Another place out of Middle Earth is the Bad Lands National Park, South Dakota. My brother and I agree it looks strikingly like Enym Muil. Many happy trails! :smokin: |
Bill Bryson's A Walk in the Woods is a great book if you like walking - he sets out on the Appalachian Trail and his adventures are funny and informative - for a Brit anyway. This book should give you plenty of ideas for good Hobbity and Entish walks.
|
ah well living in the city I dont have much choice, but we do have some parks that I can take a walk in. Well good luck in your endeavor.
|
In Wisconsin, we have 14 state trails (I just learned this yesterday). I'm not sure how many are "hobbity", exactly, as I haven't been on any except on that runs from my town 15 miles to a larger town, mostly in the city. Not exactly hobbity. Anyway, there is a nice walking trail in the Upper Penninsula of Michigan that's by the Menominee River (I think). If you have an odd imagination, it's kind of hobbity, maybe... Thinking back on it, it strikes me as such, but my memory tends to fool me. And maybe the Kettle Moraine area has some. Driving through, it seemed to be a place hobbits would enjoy.
|
I think the Shire parts of Middle-Earth could have been easily shot in PA. Living in a very rural area I know of many places that are very hobbit like. Alot of over grown paths and little rivers and fields everywhere. It wouldn't have been difficult at all really. Just take your pick. However our grass isn't really THAT green, so that wouldn't work. Maybe in some rich soiled areas it would. There's an area near Pittsburgh called Novelt that is VERY Shire like. It has so many foothills and little rivers running everywhere. It's very beautiful.
|
"I think the Shire parts of Middle-Earth could have been easily shot in PA."
---------------------- And if you've been along Route 6 in northern Pa. near Wellsboro is "The Grand Canyon of Pennsylvania", (Pine Creek Gorge). Of course, it's thickly forested, but from the west side looking to the headquarters buildings and lookout veranda it rather reminds you of Rivendell, especially since it's a little tricky getting to the park headquarters. (A few pictures) http://postcards.route-6.com/tioga.html http://www.visittiogapa.com/grandcanyon.html |
Right here on my farm of course :D Well, it's part farm & part woodland, all 156 acres of it. There are many different paths in the woods and fields that the deer have made ... looks like something right out of a Hobbit's world. It's especially enchanting during a rain storm. Many huge trees, wildflowers, rocks, a couple of caves, etc .... Mountains & hills surround us from every angle, complete with a creek that runs through our backyard, gently rolling over rocks, shaping it's way. It's quite nice here, wouldn't wanna live anywhere else.
Plus we live at the foot of a mountain that is said to have gold buried on it from the civil war times. The Appalacian trail runs through it too ... another old trail that would be wonderful for a scenic view. All of this is here in southern WV. |
I've pulled this old thread up because I was just looking at some Alfred Wainwright fellwalking books and they made me think just how 'Hobbity' they are. All 'handwritten' with sketches and fantastic maps drawn by Wainwright himself, together with dry little observations on things you might see on your hikes.
Has anyone else ever been struck by this? You can almost imagine an Alfred Wainwright guide to walking the Ettenmoors or bagging peaks on the Misty Mountains, together with little notes about where to avoid Goblins ;) Obviously we can't go for any proper walks right now because I don't think a buggy would cope! But as soon as he can walk I'm itching to drag ye childe off to Longshaws - a great 'Hobbity' type walking spot for anyone thinking of visiting the Peak District http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main...ongshawestate/ That's one of our favourites. Plenty of 'triple-trunked' Beeches and a magical moorland stream, plus the jaw dropping view down towards Hathersage, Mam Tor and 'Orthanc'. :cool: This one on Stanage Edge is good too: http://www.walkingbritain.co.uk/walk...s/walk_a/1090/ You can pretened to be Keira Knightley or just look for snakes. It's a bit like you imagine the walk from Rivendell to have been. Awesome views. |
Quote:
I've always imagined Rivendell, hidden as it was in the foothills of the Misty Mountains, to be overhung by the mountain range. Part of its hiddenness lies in its inaccessibility. Tolkien's original postcard of Gandalf, the old man hiking in Swiss mountains, probably has something to do with my non-English sense of Rivendell. (I've always imagined Rivendell having hot springs too, for their healing quality, although I know that "baths" aren't particularly English, except for, of course, Bath, which in my experience of Austen has nothing to do with healing. :D ) Anyhow, here's a peak at my Rivendell walking terrain (which of course has nothing to do with this thread's topic, Hobbity walks): Kootenay Rookies and this one, as the town of Jasper is huddled at the foot of some very tall peaks: Jasper |
To me, who thinks the Lake District fells are the ultimate in sublime (especially those around Buttermere), those are what I'd call MOUNTAINS! and are so eye-bleedingly awesome they look like Roger Garland dreamt them up. I'm a bit scared to think that such technicolor marvels even exist :eek: How do you scramble up one without the use of a rope?
Though the Lakes can be quite unpleasant and dangerous, don't be fooled by the small-ness of English mountains ;) Hot springs are all over the place - there's also Harrogate (very un-mountain-y) and Buxton, nestled in the midst of some quite creepy peaks - there are some hills near Earl Sterndale that look uncannily like green dragons asleep. Take a look at Chrome Hill, it freaks me out whenever I go past it: http://choose-film.com/wp-profiles/2...-District..jpg |
Well, see, I suppose such places are powerful enough not to need dressing up in dragon-imagination to make them awesome. :D
And, really, they can simply be climbed and hiked, although this one, Whistlers Mountain, does have a tram for part of the way for those unwilling to take a real hike. You can imagine Bethberry at the top here, as I've hiked it twice, and the glue in my photoalbum won't let go so I can't scan my own pictures and post them. http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y64...ain-jasper.jpg In fact, you can just about hike the whole chain of the Rocky Mountains, from Jasper to Banff, from Whistlers, ( Jasper Hiking) pretending you're on your way to Rohan, including tramping through a snow storm and imagining those dark shadows of clouds on the distant ground are massing groups of orcs. :D |
Tch. You would be impressed if you saw a hill that looked like a sleeping dragon, you cannot tell me otherwise ;) Plus there's a pub nearby called The Quiet Woman that bears the sign of a headless lady, which is amusing in a sinister kind of League Of Gentlemen way (with the bonus it's frequented by folk musicians and general beardy types) ;)
And for anyone who fancies it, I've found walk details which include both ale house and dragon-like hill: http://www.derbyshire-peakdistrict.c...rndalewalk.htm I may even sample that one myself... Trams up mountains are a good idea - though strangely, more for going down again than going up. Going up just makes you tired and out of breath, but going down gives you vertigo and makes you scared you're going to break your neck. There's some true Lalwende-logic for you ;) |
If it's mountains we want, I must cast my 'vote' for the Olympics, as seen from Hurricane Ridge.
Hurricane Ridge is both bare enough (and hikable enough) to be hobbity, but, the views of the rest of the Olympics are majestic enough. Misty Mountains indeed. And the lakes are jewels, Durin. |
Actually, that second link makes me think of one thing only - the Firienfeld in Rohan! It's a dead ringer for what's inside my head.
If you want to see something that always makes me think of maybe the approach to Moria, then a walk to Gordale Scar is a good one: http://www.walkingenglishman.com/dales17.htm That's probably one of the most walked routes in the UK - I was taken on this one when I was a child and we ended up under a wall with the sheep, sheltering from a sudden thunderstorm. And here's a Romantic painting of said landscape beast: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:James_Ward_001.jpg Though it's just like a garden feature to you Americans :P |
I think the issue, Lal, might be that us North Americans don't have the likes of The Quiet Woman pub to start us off on our hikes. ;) :D
Those are great pictures, Helen, much more suitable than Mount Baker, which I first hiked as a young lass of eight, when my four year old brother climbed three feet up a tree and then couldn't get down. By the by, Canada apparently has more lakes than the entire rest of the world combined, so I must find me some lake pictures that don't look like muskeg or moose meadow. Surely there are some. ;) |
Quote:
|
I have hiked on a trail on the Oregon coast that is actually called "The Hobbit Trail".
It is mossy and the bushes arch over the trail and form a "tunnel". It reminds me of the trails to the Withywindle. Hobbit Trail |
Quote:
It reminded me of another cool Hobbity place to have a walk - around Robin Hood's Bay and Boggle Hole - the latter is in fact named after hobgoblins who live in the area (along with the very scary Barguest :eek:). Most appropriate. Here's a decent walk I found: http://www.dalesman.co.uk/walks/robinhoods.htm Alternatively you could just walk down the beach (at low tide only), looking in the rockpools on the way, and have a shorter walk but more time in the pub later and then you are guaranteed to see Hobgoblins. |
Wow! Very Beautiful. Perhaps some day Helen and I will come and visit you there. We do love to hike together. Singing required, of course!
|
...singing required...
Upon the hearth the fire is red,
beneath the roof there is a bed, but not yet weary are our feet-- Still round the corner we may meet A sudden tree or standing stone that none have seen but we alone. |
I tried to find pics of the Deer Lake Trail we hiked to but there's nothing out there.
That was the most fun of all! Even the rain didn't stop us! |
Much of central and upper Michigan bears a resemblance to Nimbrethil.
http://www.jmarfoto.com/images/12-318.JPG http://home.comcast.net/~tangsphoto/...ite3_53269.jpg http://farm1.static.flickr.com/45/12...feb438.jpg?v=0 Like Bilbo, I love white birch trees. |
Oh wow! That's beautiful! We don't have forests like that here in Washington.
|
Quote:
Oooh, yes. I went out to Olympic National Park when visiting my aunt in summer 2006. It really was amazing. The landscape out there that the pictures capture is so very different and beautiful; untamed and so much wilder and fresher than the eastern part of the States, where I'm from. Along the same thought, on the same trip, we encountered the Hoh rainforest, which I must say reminds me a bit of Fangorn, perhaps: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ho...Rainforest.jpg http://3dparks.wr.usgs.gov/olympic/images/oly494.jpg It really does look like that. Fantastic. I kept expecting to find an Ent around the next turn in the trail. I want to go back there someday. |
New Zealand
Oh come to New Zealand. There are wicked tracks to walk!! Beech forest lies low and is accessable off most roads.
I've recently moved to the South Island have seen some spectacular landscapes...Rohan, where there's huge rocks poking out from ground, and in the background towering hills. Walking through the forest and river beds reminds me of Arwen's race to Rivendell. http://i566.photobucket.com/albums/s...s_1/0099-1.jpg http://i566.photobucket.com/albums/s...les_1/1511.jpg |
Quote:
I do enjoy the hiking in the the rainforest, but I have to say that the Mountains are by far, my favorite. |
I want to see mountains again, Gandalf. Mountains! And find someplace where I can finish my book!
|
Quote:
|
Exmoor
IMO, Exmoor, a national park in the SW of the UK, (and where I live) is as Shire-like as can be. There are areas on this planet that receive more than their fair share of beauty, and Exmoor is one of them.
Gentle rolling fields and woodlands. Higher up, you come to open moorland covered in heather. Pretty streams, little villages with old cottages, very unspoilt countryside. And an extremely good network of public footpaths that go for miles and miles. Very untouristy, I can walk for hours and not see another soul. Plus, we have barrows - real honest to goodness barrows (if you fancy imagining yourself on the Downs). Not yet seen a barrow wight, but I keep hoping. Exmoor is a walker's paradise, and because of the distance from larger cities, with no major roads spoiling it, it does not attract the hoardes of tourists that areas like the Cotswolds or New Forest do. Long may it stay that way. The countryside is very much as it looked a 100 years ago, even 200 years ago. As it is a National Park, it will stay that way. I love it here, and have yet to see a part of the UK I like more. In fact, it so Shire-like, I always find myself thinking of the hobbits when I walk, I just can't help it! |
It sounds wonderful! I'd so love to see it Melilot!
|
Anyone in the UK might have found some ideas from last night's Railway walks on BBC2 which was about the Monsal Trail. I've been along some of this and it's ace - loads of old tunnels, lime kiln workings, trout, and it includes the valley far below Monsal Head, the old mill villages of Litton and Cresswell and a weird bit where there is no actual path, but you have to go along stepping stones in the Wye at the foot of a gorge!
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
There is a park by my house (in Anchorage, AK), that reminds me much of the Shire, although I do not live in the UK (wish I did), it is still a nice place to walk, my little brother and I went on a walk there barefoot.
|
I agree with Mithalwen. The New Forest is very Middle-Earthish. Or at least seemed to be so at the times when I have been there.
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 12:14 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.9 Beta 4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.