Yippee, yippee, hooray, hooplah, happy dance, yay! We made it! We made it!
Sort of.
We started at 9:30 a.m. and arrived at Robin Hood's Bay at 7:00 p.m. Seventeen miles. But the trip is not over until you dip your boot in the bay and leave the pebble you have brought all the way from St. Bee's. We haven't done the boot and pebble bit yet. And this is why.
I drank a toast at dinner to Mary 's determination. She came down with a cold a couple days ago. It has steadily gotten worse, but Mary was determined (is there a word for extra-, super-determined) to finish the walk. The last five miles into Robin Hood's Bay were an absolute misery for her. She likened it to childbirth, only with red, screaming feet to show for it instead of a red, screaming baby. That's not much of an incentive. Our B&B was very close to where we entered Robin Hood's Bay, so we just stopped there, a few hundred feet short of what Stedman (our guidebook author) labels, "The End." We will do the official stuff tomorrow. Right now my feet are also red and screaming and I'm absolutely knackered, and I didn't even have a cold to contend with. I voted right along with everyone else to postpone.
This last walk encapsulated almost every environment we've come through over the last 17 days. The only thing missing were the fells of the Lake District, and I gladly will give a sampling of that a miss.
This is the righteous Horseshoe Hotel, home of Sunchaser and Falling Stone ales.

The little town of Grosmont was on the way, and we stopped to share in the spectacle of a steam locomotive pulling out of the train station.

We kept on a country road that eventually climbed into the moors. The contrast is always startling, the desolate moors and the lush valley, and the change is abrupt.

After the moors, we descended into another valley and a forest that reminded us all of Forest Park, except for the waterfall.

We had been tramping pretty steadily since we began, with a brief stop for lunch right before plunging into the forest. We were all feeling the weight of our packs and the mud on our shoes. We were about ten miles into our hike at this point. Cue Volga Boat Song.
When all of a sudden … another miracle. At a place in the forest the guidebook said was abandoned was Midge Hall, a newly opened TEA ROOM. The sun had been going in and out all day, and this was at an "outie" point. We sat on their lawn, ate delicious scones with cream, butter, and jam, and drank strong, revivifying tea. They listed a fairy cake, which none of us had ever tried, so we ordered one. "It's only a cupcake," the owner/waiter whispered to us. That's okay, we said, we've got to have one just because of the name. It was indeed a cupcake. Oh, well. Now we can say we've tried one. Their loo had a better view (over a burbling stream) than some of our B&Bs!
We all agreed later that this was a turning point for us. We now had enough energy to plug on.

We came out of the forest onto another country road and then onto another moor. This one was boggy. The map said "somewhat boggy" and "boggy." We would have labeled it, especially since it started to drizzle, "boggy" and "nastily boggy."
We were about a couple of miles from the sea, within sight of cars traveling on a coast road, when we hit the cruelest bog of all.
We had fairly dry shoes, the rain wasn't really a significant force, we had visions of a sunny walk down the coast, similar to the one we had when leaving St. Bee's. We were soooo close. Then we hit the bog to end all bogs. It was the kind of bog that sucked at boots, erasing all boot marks within five seconds. You never knew if you were stepping onto fairly solid ground or into a two-foot hole that would drain marshy, smelly water into your boots. People who had come before had tried to help. Planks from rotting duckboards had been placed forward to create a dry stepping spot. But let me remind you: You don't beat the bog; the bog always wins.
A sliver of the sea, tantalizingly, is in the background. The rest of the walk was straightforward, and not without its charms.
On another country road, we came across a group of ducks, waddling up the lane, all in a row. (Why didn't they fly?) We followed at a respectful distance. Mother, father, two teenager ducks, and a doting uncle.

Just before we hit the path that would take us along the cliffside into Robin Hood's Bay, we descended THROUGH an asphalted trailer park. "Please be respectful of the residents," the sign said. Yes, ma'am.

Throughout the day, dark clouds would loom over us, only rarely spitting anything out, for which we were extremely grateful. As we hit the coast, this is the sight that greeted us.

But as so often has happened to us in the past, the weather dramatically turned around. We walked the rest of the way in sunshine, sporadically interrupted by light clouds. It was the walk we had hoped for.
Sort of.
Did I mention we were walking beside sheep pastures? A sheer drop to the water on one side, sheep pastures on the other. A farmer had just manured one of the fields closest to the trail and was working hell-bent-for-leather on another one further away, upwind of us. The delightful smell of grass after a rain was smothered, stifled, choked out, eradicated, and stomped on by the malodorous and pervasive smell of…manure. And the tiller had thrown clods of crap all over the trail. Dee-lightful.
About a half mile before we actually hit the border of Robin Hood's Bay, we passed into Nirvana. The manured field ended. The smell drifted to the north of us. The sun was shining. The sea was blue. We could finally see Robin Hood's Bay peeking out at us.

The thing in the middle is a "rocket pole." A rope was tied to the top, a rocket attached and launched toward a distressed ship at sea. The ship would tie its end of the rope to the ship, and a pulley system was used to pull shipwrecked sailors to land. Neat trick.

Welcome to Robin Hood's Bay. Our B&B was about a block and a half away. We headed for that immediately and collapsed. We roused ourselves briefly for dinner, then back to collapse.
Dipping, pebbling, and celebrating have been left until tomorrow.