{"id":181467,"date":"2023-11-15T02:30:03","date_gmt":"2023-11-15T02:30:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/hotworldreport.com\/?p=181467"},"modified":"2023-11-15T02:30:03","modified_gmt":"2023-11-15T02:30:03","slug":"pensioner-completes-annual-600-mile-ride-from-england-to-scotland","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/hotworldreport.com\/travel\/pensioner-completes-annual-600-mile-ride-from-england-to-scotland\/","title":{"rendered":"Pensioner completes annual 600-mile ride from England to Scotland"},"content":{"rendered":"
An 82-year-old woman has completed an annual seven-week trek from England to the Scottish Highlands with her pack pony and pet dog.<\/p>\n
Jane Dotchin has been making the epic 600-mile journey every year since 1972, catching up with friends she has made along the way.<\/p>\n
Heading north, the horse lover travels between 15 and 20 miles a day until she reaches Inverness in the Scottish Highlands.<\/p>\n
This year, she set off again with her steed Diamond from the off-grid smallholding where she lives near Hexham, Northumberland.<\/p>\n
‘I love camping and I love the countryside,’ she said.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Jane Dotchin (above) has completed an annual seven-week trek from England to the Scottish Highlands with her pack pony and pet dog<\/p>\n
\n<\/p>\n
Jane travels between 15 and 20 miles a day until she reaches Inverness in the Scottish Highlands. She carries everything she needs including her tent, food, a few belongings, and her Jack Russel, Dinky, tucked into the saddlebag<\/p>\n
‘The more I\u2019ve done it, the more nice people I\u2019ve got to know en route who I want to go back and see again.’<\/p>\n
Jane carries everything she needs including her tent, food, a few belongings, and her Jack Russel Dinky tucked into the saddlebag.<\/p>\n
‘She loves sitting in the saddlebag,’ Jane said. ‘She\u2019s quite happy sitting in there, watching the world go by.’<\/p>\n
And despite wearing an eyepatch, Jane is determined to continue the annual tradition for as long as she can.<\/p>\n
‘I know the route so well, I don\u2019t need to read maps. I can manage if I keep to the routes I know,’ she added.<\/p>\n
‘If ever I were in trouble, I know somebody would be there, not far away, to help.’<\/p>\n
Jane first got a taste for long-distance trekking when she trotted off to the idyllic West Country around 40 years ago, in 1972.<\/p>\n
Speaking previously, she said: ‘My mother would look after my other ponies but she wasn’t that keen on looking after my Halfinger stallion, so I rode him down to Somerset to see a friend, which is about 300 miles.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Jane says the more times she has made the trip, the more people she has got to know en route<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Jane explains that Dinky is ‘quite happy’ sitting in the saddlebag, ‘watching the world go by’<\/p>\n
‘It was a bit of a hard slog, but it was good.’<\/p>\n
Jane made the trip every year, riding south where the bridleways were much better.<\/p>\n
But as the area developed, she noticed the route becoming more congested and decided to head north instead.<\/p>\n
She has made the journey north every autumn since, for the past three decades, visiting friends along the way – including some near Fort Augustus, at the edge of Loch Ness.<\/p>\n
‘It’s is nice to go and see them again – I ring them up in the morning to say I’m going to be there in the evening,’ Jane said.<\/p>\n
‘I don’t warn them too far in advance, because if the weather suddenly changes or I decide to stop early then they can be left wondering where I’ve got to.’<\/p>\n
The journey takes around seven weeks, depending on the weather.<\/p>\n
‘I refuse to go slogging on through pouring wet rain,’ Jane added.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Despite wearing an eyepatch, Jane is determined to continue the annual tradition for as long as she can\u00a0<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Jane is devastated by the littering she has seen over the years, which she finds ‘shameful’\u00a0<\/p>\n
‘I don’t want to go over hilltops in foul weather, but I work it out on the way. I don’t bother with maps, I just keep to the routes I know.’<\/p>\n
Jane\u00a0lives on porridge, oatcakes and cheese, and carries an old mobile phone that has a battery that lasts six weeks – although getting a signal can be a problem.<\/p>\n
While Jack Russell Dinky has a diet of porridge oats, oatcakes and cheese, which is bought at local shops.<\/p>\n
Jane is devastated by the littering she has seen over the years, which she finds ‘shameful’.<\/p>\n
She once said: ‘It’s appalling, in particular single-use barbecues, which are left lying all over the place.’<\/p>\n
Jane previously received The British Horse Society lifetime achievement award, which she said was ‘a bit of a surprise’.<\/p>\n
‘There is always something interesting happening and there is never a dull moment,’ she added.<\/p>\n
The British Horse Society Scotland wrote in a Facebook post: ‘Well done Jane, Dinky the dog and Diamond – 2023 was a wet one but even well into your 80s you never let the rain deter you. You are an inspiration to riders everywhere.’<\/p>\n