52°N · 10°W — Atlantic Edge

The edge is where you begin.

Remote coastal expeditions where the path ends at the cliff.

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Three coasts.
Twelve entries.

62°N · 9°W

Faroe Islands

Eighteen sea-stacks rising from the North Atlantic. The path follows the cliff edge for 40km. No shelter before nightfall.

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51°N · 10°W

Wild Atlantic Way

The longest defined coastal route in the world. Eleven days. Zero beaches designed for comfort.

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58°N · 6°W

Orkney Passage

Ancient sea cliffs inhabited since the Iron Age. The wind is not a challenge here — it is the expedition.

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There is no view without the walk, no edge without the approach, no expedition worth the name that didn't cost something.

— Horizon Field Philosophy

Winding coastal cliffside path above churning ocean at golden hour
Field Dispatch · 01

Where the path ends,
the expedition begins.

On day four of the Faroe Islands route, the path disappears — not because it isn't there, but because the fog comes down so completely that you navigate by sound alone.

Dramatic sea cliff face rising from the North Atlantic ocean, seafoam and spray
Field Dispatch · 02

The cliff
is the compass.

The Orkney Passage crosses fourteen headlands. On each, you see the next — just far enough away to remain uncertain. That uncertainty is what you paid for.

Rolling coastal mist at blue hour, tiny figures descending a clifftop path
Field Dispatch · 03

Mist at the edge
of the world.

The Wild Atlantic Way ends where the Atlantic begins. Eleven days. Zero designed comforts. One view that costs something to earn.