Britain for Beginners: Easy Long-Distance Treks in the U.K.

This week the Deal Detective laces up his hiking boots to help a reader find a beginner's walking tour in the U.K. As always, look for a new case each Thursday in SmarterTravel.com's Deal Alert newsletter.
Dear Deal Detective:
Dear myteemouse
,
Self-guided hiking trips are typically organized by a tour operator who arranges your accommodations, transports your overnight luggage between hotels or guesthouses, and provides a map and emergency assistance. It's an inexpensive way to see the countryside while letting someone else handle the stressful details. What you can expect to pay varies greatly based on the region and the level of service you want from the company you book with.
Though the U.K. may look small on a map, there's a tremendous amount of geographical diversity among the hills, mountains, valleys, moors, and meadows of England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Since you identify yourselves as "fit but not expert hikers," I recommend focusing on walking trips rather than outright mountain hiking. After you get a taste of walking in the U.K., I'm sure you'll want to come back for more, but for your first outing I'd avoid the incredible but challenging
Snowdonia
region of Wales or the
Munros
of Scotland.
Fortunately, you simply can't go wrong by choosing the superlative
West Highland Way
, Scotland's premier long-distance route. At a distance of 95 miles, it's long enough to be worth doing, but short enough to finish in a week, and flat enough to qualify as just a very long walk. And my, oh my, what a walk! I'll let the trail's official website do the talking: "The West Highland Way passes through a wide range of different terrains, ranging from lowland moors, through dense woodland and rolling hills, to high mountainous regions."
If you get the sense that I love Scotland, you're right. Also worth loving: these prices. Wilderness Scotland's
seven-night self-guided route
is available from April through October starting at £495 per person (about $968; see
XE.com
for current exchange rates). North-West Frontiers'
similar trip
spans eight days for £480 ($938). I've heard good things about both outfitters from people I trust.
Our resident adventure travel columnist and Indiana Jones wannabe, Josh Roberts, suggests either the
Hadrian's Wall Path
in Northern England or the central section of the
Pennine Way
. Contours Walking Holidays offers a
four-day Hadrian's Wall route
from £260 per person ($508). Footpath Holidays small-group
central section
trips start at £235 ($459); this includes a guide but not accommodations, which must be booked separately. To be clear: Hadrian's Wall is on the easier side, while the Pennine Way covers more challenging—but still manageable for good walkers—terrain.
Lastly, consider the
Pembrokeshire Coast Path
in Wales, which boasts tremendous cliff-top views and is a great introduction to long-distance walking. HF Holidays'
seven-day self-guided trek
runs from March through September and checks in at £399 ($780) per person.
This is by no means a comprehensive list, but it will be enough to get you started. To my other readers, I hope you'll weigh in with suggestions as well.
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All prices, dates, and booking details listed here were valid at the time of publication. Some information might have changed since that time.

