Just seen a local news piece about old cumbria postal routes. These were the routes postal workers walked to deliver post and newspapers. They linked often remote parts of Cumbria often by 15 mile routes every day.
The news was about a guy who wrote a book about them after hearing about l'al someone or other (sorry missed her actually name other than the local dialect for little). She walked the Eskdale route from 1911 to the 1970s. They were used until vans took over.
The writer is trying to get these routes recognised and perhaps used like some of the Scottish postal walking routes that have effectively become tourist walking routes in some places.
Are there any on here who know some of these Cumbrian routes? Have you walked any that you know of? Anyone interested in them? I think I'd love to link them up into a tour of the Lakes. I've walked another lakeland round and it was fun. Two of us did it but we were joined by two others for part of the route. These postal routes I think are part of our history and should not be forgotten, completely. Some no longer exist apparently.
What do you think?
The news was about a guy who wrote a book about them after hearing about l'al someone or other (sorry missed her actually name other than the local dialect for little). She walked the Eskdale route from 1911 to the 1970s. They were used until vans took over.
The writer is trying to get these routes recognised and perhaps used like some of the Scottish postal walking routes that have effectively become tourist walking routes in some places.
Are there any on here who know some of these Cumbrian routes? Have you walked any that you know of? Anyone interested in them? I think I'd love to link them up into a tour of the Lakes. I've walked another lakeland round and it was fun. Two of us did it but we were joined by two others for part of the route. These postal routes I think are part of our history and should not be forgotten, completely. Some no longer exist apparently.
What do you think?