The Perimeter is a photography project by Quintin Lake based on walking 10,000km around the coast of Britain in sections. The journey started on 17th April 2015 at St Paul’s cathedral and I’m following the coast clockwise. I expect the journey will take around 5 years.
I’ll be walking two to three months per year and the daily distance will be 20-40km depending on the going. I’ll be camping in the wilder parts and staying in guest houses in urban areas.
Why do this? I hope to learn more about our mysterious island nation and I can’t think of anywhere else where each footstep leads to such different surprises, beauty and strangeness.
“It is only shallow people who do not judge by appearances. The true mystery of the world is the visible, not the invisible”
Oscar Wilde
good luck, great idea.
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Many thanks Malcolm!
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Really enjoyed the first 14 days. I’ve put it in my RSS feed because I don’t want to miss a day of it.
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Thanks Gary! Great news Sussex will be day 15, hope you enjoy it
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Quintin- Recently, we have bumped into you twice on your South Devon/ South Cornwall stretch. We are about 60% through the Southwest Coastpath and just wanted to wish you all the best. We hope we see you again sometime.
Very best wishes
Mike & Tony
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Mike & Tony, It was great to meet you both and an inspiration not to “Take to the chair” in retirement. Thanks for the best wishes and I hope you have fair weather for your remaining 40%. Hope our paths cross again, Quintin
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“Why do this? I hope to learn more about our mysterious island nation and I can’t think of anywhere else where each footstep leads to such different surprises, beauty and strangeness.”
I share your sentiments. Will you share your surprises and thoughts, maybe in a book?
All the best Peter
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Yes a book and hopefully an exhibition too
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Hi Quintin
I think Tony and I have now bumped into you three times in three different seasons and we continue to be inspired by your project. We have only about 3 days to go before we finish the Southwest Coast Path- like you we love every minute of sharing our lives with the sea and the land and when we finish our anti-clockwise journey we are going to turn around and walk it the other way. We hope to see you again soon.
Good luck and very best wishes
Mike Jane
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I kept an eye open for you as I finished the SWCP coming into Minehead expecting to bump into you for a forth time! Very well done on finishing and the fact you want to go back and do it again is testament to the pleasure of the experience, I imagine knowing what is around the corner will help with pacing oneself to savour the best bits.
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Hi Quintin
Great to see your progress on this epic journey and also to see that on 1 Jan 2017 you adopted the motto “Solvitur Ambulado”.
Tony and I adopted this motto when we began our Southwest coast path journey just over two years ago- it describes perfectly what walking means to us.
We finished the coast path about three months ago and after a few trips going the other way, we have now decided to walk it anti clockwise again but this time in sequence rather than with a number of different starting points. We start from Minehead tomorrow and I plan to keep a daily diary with two or three photographs for each section which will illustrate the most iconic scenes for each section.
Very best wishes to you for 2017.
Mike
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Hi Mike,
Its very apt for us wanders isn’t it. Congratulations on completing the SWCP and good luck for the repeat journey, From my recent camps in south Wales I’ve seen the lights of Minehead over the Bristol Channel which seems like another world.
All the best for 2017.
Quintin
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I know I am joining your journey somewhat late, but I find your idea inspiring and wish you continued luck. I am looking forward to reading your future posts, and to catching up with at least some of your previous ones.
Best wishes, Tanja
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Many thanks, glad to hear you find the idea inspiring
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Brilliantly ambitious, wonderfully obsessive, fabulous photos – hats off to you sir and I wish you the very best with this mammoth undertaking – most inspiring!
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Thank you. I’d like “wonderfully obsessive” on my tomb stone!
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What an inspired idea and to bring to life is quite remarkable. Look forward to seeing more of your photography.
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Thanks very much. There’s wisdom in the first step as the saying goes!
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Fabulous idea and wonderful photos!
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Thanks very much!
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am much enjoying your photos! so glad I found your site 🙂
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Many thanks!
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Quentin,
Congratulations on your journey so far. My wife, Lyn and I are completing the SWCP this year having enjoyed every minute. We do a week at a time and will complete it in 3 years. Each year we have completed a book and are now working on a massive coffee table picture book of the whole experience. I am still struggling to find Bridges Rocks on the OS Map …. you took one of St Georges Island do you have a grid ref? Great picture .
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Nick, Thanks! That sounds like a great way to approach the SWCP. I’m sure you find, as I do, that doing it in sections gives one time to reflect on the previous leg and research the next one which makes the overall journey a richer experience St Geoges Island is 2km due south of Looe. Bridge Rocks are 1.5km west of the Island adjacent to the SWCP. It is only marked on 1:25,000 scale, on 1:50,000 that area is called Hore Stone. Good luck with the rest of the walk and the book.
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Quintin-
What an incredible undertaking! Thank you so much for taking the time to share your journey! Your images are more than just inspirational! We’ve never had the opportunity to undertake something so immense, but are fellow travelers and are always so humbled and warmed knowing the world is full of other humans interested in just a little bit more than the average! Thanks again for sharing!
Cheers!
Katie & DJ
http://www.venturewild.net
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Thanks for your kind words guys! Happy travels…..
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Love what you’re doing! My photographer husband and I are attempting to travel over the entirety of Oregon in order of its geological history. It involves a lot of hiking, though we aren’t traveling entirely by foot:) Some documentarian friends of mine are in Ipswich. I’ll share your project with them, and maybe they can put you up near the end of your journey.
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Thank you that would be welcome. What a fascinating project you are undertaking, and an interesting way to see the landscape in a new way. Good luck with it!
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Fantastic! What an adventure. I had half planned to do it myself when I retired, however I have now retired and unfortunately have had a knee replacement, so I isn’t a good idea. But good luck – I will be following your adventure with interest (and a little jealousy). Hope it all goes well for you and take some good photos 🙂
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Many thanks for your best wishes! My knees are sore today so I’ll be trying (unsuccessfully) to take it easy 🙂
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Just found your blog courtesy of Discover on WordPress, really fantastic photos and I love walking the coastal path. It’s magical. In fact I think I may have to plan for more of that in the future!
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Thanks. You won’t regret doing more coastal walking!
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Congratulations on reaching Blackpool Quintin! A grim but wonderfully photogenic place. I’m enjoying this thing of yours very much. Keep going 🙂
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Thanks for the best wishes Paul, It’s about the contrasts in Blackpool!
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Any photos taken on the iPhone ?
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Most of the lighthearted & behind the scenes pics in rectangular format below the daily maps are iphone. All the square format images are Canon 5dsr which is 50 megapixel so I can print them large
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I look forward to reading about your progress so far and reliving the coast of Scotland which I have just completed.
Jimmy Hudson
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thanks! I look forward to meeting in Edinburgh
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Wow. Sounds awesome.
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Thanks, I’m enjoying it so far!
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Have you thought about compiling your photos into a book when you complete your journey?
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That’s the plan!
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It is already 2019 year, are u still walking?
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Yes I’m due to finish in 2020 as planned
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On planning the second part of my SWCP, around Cornwall, I came across your site. For I love photography very much your pictures are very inspiring to me! Most of them I like very much! Thanks for sharing, I´ll keep following you around! And hope to go on myself soon …
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Thank you and enjoy completing the SWCP – one of the gems of British coastal walking
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Found your website on WordPress. Awesome ,fantastic and interesting adventure ! i will bookmark this website and see your picture, and also wait until you finish the walking.
have a happy day!
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Thanks for following!
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Hi – I only found out today, the very last day, about your walk via a news item on the BBC website. Congratulations on such a great achievement and a beautiful journey. I very much hope you will publish a book of your adventures, as the images on the BBC site are tantalisingly wonderful and I’m sure you have many great stories to share. Well done on such a beautiful, inspirational achievement!
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It doesn’t seem to be letting me change my username, but it should just say Neil!
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Hi Neil,
Yes, a book is the plan but with 200 odd days of pictures yet to edit I’ve got my hands full before then!
If you’d like to be added to my very occasional email newsletter, which would include the book launch when known, please follow this link: https://quintinlake.us1.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=596378e25b2e0cf3c55e0321b&id=6707ab0349
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Hi Quentin,
great project. Great pics. So many great shots, really nice.
You should read “How long is the coast of Britain?” by Benoit Mandelbrot…
Then you realize that you did not walk 11.000 km but many many more …
Have a great time,
Jörg
PS looking fwd to your forthcoming book
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