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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Solo “hiking”

190 replies

ApricotDanish83 · 22/10/2025 07:58

Posting here mainly for traffic to be honest.

I’m planning a day out to Dartmoor this weekend to go on a pretty long walk up a couple of the tors. Going by myself because I have nobody to go with but I’m craving being outside 😂

the route is set to be about three and a half hours back, two hours in, and about 12 miles all together. I’m relatively fit but wha do I need to take with me??? I know I’ll need some snacks but that’s about all I can think of

OP posts:
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blobby10 · 24/10/2025 14:31

@ApricotDanish83 I also find cotton snoods very useful in this weather as I generally hate my ears being covered with a hood but do like my ears covered in the wind and a snood keeps my neck warm too without messing too much with my hearing.

ApricotDanish83 · 25/10/2025 14:10

I survived! I got a little lost which was terrifying but honestly the phone signal was fine so it was more just my anxiety. I also fell on my arse on the way home which will no doubt leave an impressive bruise!

Solo “hiking”
OP posts:
StewkeyBlue · 25/10/2025 14:45

Oh wow!
Well done OP, I hope you enjoyed it

crackofdoom · 25/10/2025 14:46

You're back already?! Nice one!

Is that the West Okement?

How far does the step counter on your phone tell you you've walked, out of interest? Xx

senua · 25/10/2025 14:51

Whew, that went well. We needed have worried so much.
Well done. Are you planning the next one already?Grin

ApricotDanish83 · 25/10/2025 15:00

crackofdoom · 25/10/2025 14:46

You're back already?! Nice one!

Is that the West Okement?

How far does the step counter on your phone tell you you've walked, out of interest? Xx

it is. I changed my route this morning and I’m glad I did, because I think the constant tors would’ve been too much.

it was 8 miles according to Komoot, my app has 13.27km or 8.25 miles. It was going to take me off down to another town but I took that off after I got lost on a tor 🤣

OP posts:
ApricotDanish83 · 25/10/2025 15:01

senua · 25/10/2025 14:51

Whew, that went well. We needed have worried so much.
Well done. Are you planning the next one already?Grin

Not on the moors, or if I do, avoiding the tors!

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helpfulperson · 25/10/2025 15:26

Sounds like its been a great experience and you have made sensible choices along the way.

Solo hiking is amazing. If you are wanting to do more and more adventurous it is worth investing in some sort of emergency beacon that operates via satellite. Mine was about £300. You don't need a subscription. If you press it anywhere in the world it notifies local authorities.

ApricotDanish83 · 25/10/2025 15:45

helpfulperson · 25/10/2025 15:26

Sounds like its been a great experience and you have made sensible choices along the way.

Solo hiking is amazing. If you are wanting to do more and more adventurous it is worth investing in some sort of emergency beacon that operates via satellite. Mine was about £300. You don't need a subscription. If you press it anywhere in the world it notifies local authorities.

I think (at least for the winter) I’m going to stick more local - routes that I know and they all definitely have signal etc., and are a lot closer to the town 😂

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childofthe607080s · 25/10/2025 16:39

Sounds like a good walk and adjusting your day based on the ground is always useful skill

backinthebox · 25/10/2025 20:53

Fab OP! I have Dartmoor on my bucket list of places to ride my horse (I cover many hundreds of miles on horseback, but there are so many places to go, I haven’t got to them all yet!)

Things I can recommend if you are going to do more (and you definitely should do more if you enjoy it.) -

  1. set yourself up for 999 texts. Google how to do this. If you end up with no phone reception, you can still contact emergency services for help. Invaluable for if you injure yourself badly enough you cannot move to better reception.
  2. learn how to locate yourself - lots of ways to do this so I won’t describe each one. But current favourites of mine are an 8 figure OS grid reference with a What3Words to fine tune it. Either one on its own is good, but there are weaknesses to both. Together, you should be able to give a location precise to within a 5m square.
  3. learn to read a paper map and compass, and use them to navigate by. A phone is fine, but can run out of battery, lose reception, ditch data, break, or just generally let you down at an inopportune moment. They are a good primary nav tool, but a map and compass backup with the knowledge of how to read them is a core life skill imo. A good knowledge of pacing and distance measuring is useful too. (I teach these skills, so I am biased. 🤣)
  4. carry a basic survival kit - a whistle (and know what to blow on it - otherwise you could just be yet another dog walker trying to call their dog back!) something very visible (mountain rescue roll their eyes about the number of rescuees who are invisible against the mountain/moor/forest. FWIW, I wear a khaki hiking jacket. But I do carry a neon yellow backpack cover I could wave if an air ambulance was looking for me,) a sensible first aid kit (something to stop blisters, allergic reactions, and something to stop a massive bleed. Everything else is helpful but not essential.) I also carry a small multitool with knife, saw and wire cutters, a pee wipe so I don’t leave tissue around, and a bivvy bag. I have had to use a foil bag on 2 occasions for injured parties, both times in winter when the injured person was laying on the ground, and it is nice not to have to lie them in the mud in the cold. A small torch in case you end up in the dark (it happens!) enough water, and emergency food rations beyond your basic (I carry a Kendal Mint Cake bar with electrolytes as my snack of last resort.)
  5. find other likeminded hikers! It’s much more fun in company. I don’t hike much, but I have my circle of long distance riding friends and know I can always call on someone to ride with wherever I am in the UK, and round much of Europe too. And they will show me routes and places I might never see on my own.

Let us know how you get on.

Left · 25/10/2025 22:35

Thanks for sharing the pic! Solo Hiking is amazing but if you want to mix it up with some group hikes the Outdoor Adventure Girls has a younger demographic, and Hiking Buddies has a fairly mixed age range, in case their are events near you x

Weekendwatch · 26/10/2025 07:14

ApricotDanish83 · 25/10/2025 15:00

it is. I changed my route this morning and I’m glad I did, because I think the constant tors would’ve been too much.

it was 8 miles according to Komoot, my app has 13.27km or 8.25 miles. It was going to take me off down to another town but I took that off after I got lost on a tor 🤣

8 miles…. Much more appropriate
good you adjusted

ApricotDanish83 · 26/10/2025 08:50

Left · 25/10/2025 22:35

Thanks for sharing the pic! Solo Hiking is amazing but if you want to mix it up with some group hikes the Outdoor Adventure Girls has a younger demographic, and Hiking Buddies has a fairly mixed age range, in case their are events near you x

I’ve signed up to the outdoor emails! I’m definitely going to stick local during the winter though, it was cold enough there yesterday

OP posts:
Firebox64 · 26/10/2025 17:49

Well done, I bet you feel great. First of many and you’ll be more relaxed and confident every time. You’re right though, most walkers scale it back for the winter.

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