I’d thought it might be hard having to get back on the road again after a night at home, but compared with the alternative of entertaining a 3 year old and a 7 month old, it was a doddle. With lighter loads and not worrying whether we got wet or not, we set off under low cloud for the final leg. We should have been able to glimpse the sea from the crossroads near the house, but couldn’t really see it and in fact had to wait until we were nearly in St Davids before we could claim a proper sighting.
Again we were mostly on quiet lanes passing through nowhere in particular, then from Llanhywel Church, where the sun broke through the clouds momentarily, we took the lovely track and footpath past Lecha Farm and along the top of the Solva river – into the National Park and the vegetation had been cut back for us. I made the usual mistake of trying to take a path around the outside of the old airfield which gave us a few boggy minutes until we reached the concrete runway. Some lovely flowers there.
Coming into St Davids we had time for an ice cream from The Bench and a quick peek into the cathedral to complete our pilgrimage. Then up the Treginnis lane and over Clegyr Boia so we could at last see the sea properly, and then down the track to Pencarnan as the sun finally broke through. Just over 280 miles altogether.
It was very lovely to find banners, balloons and friends and family waiting for us – and also some fizz and a fantastic cake made by Corinna and Merryn.
Of course everyone wanted to know how we felt now we’d finished – and the odd thing is, I don’t really know. In some ways, having to do nothing but walk and navigate is much easier than all the odds and ends that normally fill up everyday life – all the things that are now waiting for us. So I’d recommend it to anyone who wants a break from the usual routine. But I don’t intend to do it again. Wait a minute though, didn’t I say that last year?