Of course Frodo, Sam, and Pippin had
the blessing of good weather on their first day. Given my luck, I wasn’t surprised
when it started pouring rain ten minutes into the start of my journey. The
torrential downpour continued for 20 minutes and left me soaked to the bone and
frantically trying to figure out whether or not my pedometer was waterproof.
Luckily my pedometer survived and the rain let up to a drizzle which persisted
for the rest of my journey. Overall, I walked a total of 9.86 miles (15.86 km)
in 3 and-a-half hours.
At this point in the journey Frodo was
just starting out. He had sent Merry and Fredegar Bolger (aka “Fatty”) off to
Crickhollow earlier that day with the last of Frodo’s possessions. He, Sam and
Pippin would enjoy their last meal in Bag End (leaving the dishes for the
Sackville-Baggins to clean) before setting off in the dark of eventide to enjoy
a leisurely journey to Crickhollow. Tolkien would write, “For Frodo was going
on foot. His plan, for pleasure and a last look at the Shire as much as any
other reason, was to walk from Hobbiton to Bucklebury Ferry, taking it fairly
easy.” Originally Bilbo didn’t take Frodo with him when he left Bag End for
Rivendell because Frodo was still in love with the Shire. The above passage
from Chapter 3 of The Fellowship of the
Ring shows that Frodo still loved the Shire and other passages in that
chapter talk about Frodo’s sadness at the prospect of parting from his home and
friends. At the 7.5 mile marker (12 km) in their journey Frodo and company stopped
to gaze back at the lights of Hobbiton in the distance. And then they turned
away and at the ninth mile marker (14.5 km) the lights of Hobbiton were lost
behind the rolling hills of the Shire. The hobbits would not see Hobbiton again
until the war was over.
For the Frodo, Sam, and Pippin the
first nine miles of the journey passed without incident. For me that wasn’t the
case. The rain earlier in my journey had made the path I was on slippery. About
7 miles (11.2 km) into the walk I slipped and rolled down the hill I had been
climbing. By the time I had come to rest at the bottom of the hill I was
covered in mud and the berries I had been carrying in my backpack were crushed.
Bilbo was right: “It's a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You
step onto the road, and if you don't keep your feet, there's no knowing where
you might be swept off to.”
~Daisy Buttons
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