Moth told me he was dying ... when a doctor had said his brain scan was normal
Moved by the plight of the Winns, Bill Cole rented his cider farm in Cornwall to them at a knockdown rent. But they left him feeling confused and betrayed
In 2018, the illustrated cover of The Salt Path caught Bill Cole’s eye, and he found himself profoundly moved by the story. His wife had recently been diagnosed with breast cancer, so Raynor Winn’s struggle to come to terms with her partner’s condition resonated with him. As did the idea that the couple had been conned by a close friend. Bill had also been betrayed by someone, costing him both professionally and personally, so he felt sympathy with Winn and her husband, Moth. [...] Bill made the couple an offer to live on the farm for a very low rent with a small fee for helping out.
By this point, Raynor Winn was a bestselling author after the 2018 publication of her book The Salt Path, an account of her and her husband Moth’s 630-mile journey along the sea-swept South West Coast Path – a “true” story of two people in their early 50s forced out of their rural home in Wales and weighed down by the sudden diagnosis of Moth’s terminal illness. [...] Bill, who lived in Sussex but visited Cornwall often, says the couple told him they wanted to be involved in tending the orchards, producing cider and rewilding the farm. “They seemed happy there,” says Bill, who recalls that they often suggested that the farm was having a beneficial effect on Moth’s health.
But in October 2021, Bill says, Moth surprised him with an announcement. “He put his head in his hands and he said: ‘We went to the hospital this week and I’ve been told not to plan beyond Christmas.’” Bill was horrified. “I just went: ‘Oh my God!’ and gave him a big hug.”
Bill’s friend Richard, who asked us not to use his surname, was present for the conversation. “It was extraordinarily emotional,” he recalls. “Bill was close to tears. Moth also told him he thought he would already be dead if he hadn’t been living on Haye farm.”
Richard remembers that Bill had become close to Raynor and Moth, messaging them most days. Richard says he was concerned for his friend, however, because the farm was losing money. Cider was not being produced and the orchards were not being attended to.
“But he didn’t care,” says Richard. “He felt kind of responsible for them, and for Moth’s wellbeing.” [...] Medical letters disclosed by Winn last week in response to The Observer’s reporting confirm that Moth – also known by his legal name, Tim Walker – was diagnosed with a neurological condition, [...] [my note: The Observer gives a very generous interpretation of the published letters, which acknowledge symptoms but don't diagnose CBD]. But according to these letters, in 2015, 2019 and 2025 doctors said his specific presentation of the disease was “very mild”, “stable” and “indolent”, which means slowly progressing.
When Winn’s third book, Landlines, was published in September 2022, Bill read how, in the winter of 2021, soon after Moth had finished another long walk, a neurologist told him his brain scan was “normal”, implying that the walk had drastically improved the symptoms of his condition.
The timing in the book seemed to indicate that this was happening at around the same time as Bill recalls being told that Moth was dying.
“I was reading it on a train,” Bill recalls, “and I just went: ‘What the hell?’ It just makes no sense whatsoever.”
Bill couldn’t understand why, if Moth had had such a positive result from the doctor, the couple wouldn’t have shared the good news with him. Bill texted Raynor expressing his confusion. After a few days she responded to him but didn’t address his question about Moth’s illness.
A few weeks later, the chef Rick Stein was due to film an episode of his BBC series with the couple at Haye farm. Bill says he watched as they demonstrated the cider-making process, implying that they were involved in the farm’s production – something Bill says they had never done. “I felt I was being gaslit,” he recalls.
Not long after, Raynor and Moth terminated their tenancy at Haye farm, a year earlier than agreed. When Bill went to the farm to see them off, they were already gone.
“The key was under a plant pot and a message was left on the kitchen table,” he says. He has had almost no contact with them since.
13 July 2025 a further Walker scam uncovered by The Observer
Moth told me he was dying ... when a doctor had said his brain scan was normal
Moved by the plight of the Winns, Bill Cole rented his cider farm in Cornwall to them at a knockdown rent. But they left him feeling confused and betrayed
In 2018, the illustrated cover of The Salt Path caught Bill Cole’s eye, and he found himself profoundly moved by the story. His wife had recently been diagnosed with breast cancer, so Raynor Winn’s struggle to come to terms with her partner’s condition resonated with him. As did the idea that the couple had been conned by a close friend. Bill had also been betrayed by someone, costing him both professionally and personally, so he felt sympathy with Winn and her husband, Moth.
[...]
Bill made the couple an offer to live on the farm for a very low rent with a small fee for helping out.
By this point, Raynor Winn was a bestselling author after the 2018 publication of her book The Salt Path, an account of her and her husband Moth’s 630-mile journey along the sea-swept South West Coast Path – a “true” story of two people in their early 50s forced out of their rural home in Wales and weighed down by the sudden diagnosis of Moth’s terminal illness.
[...]
Bill, who lived in Sussex but visited Cornwall often, says the couple told him they wanted to be involved in tending the orchards, producing cider and rewilding the farm. “They seemed happy there,” says Bill, who recalls that they often suggested that the farm was having a beneficial effect on Moth’s health.
But in October 2021, Bill says, Moth surprised him with an announcement. “He put his head in his hands and he said: ‘We went to the hospital this week and I’ve been told not to plan beyond Christmas.’” Bill was horrified. “I just went: ‘Oh my God!’ and gave him a big hug.”
Bill’s friend Richard, who asked us not to use his surname, was present for the conversation. “It was extraordinarily emotional,” he recalls. “Bill was close to tears. Moth also told him he thought he would already be dead if he hadn’t been living on Haye farm.”
Richard remembers that Bill had become close to Raynor and Moth, messaging them most days. Richard says he was concerned for his friend, however, because the farm was losing money. Cider was not being produced and the orchards were not being attended to.
“But he didn’t care,” says Richard. “He felt kind of responsible for them, and for Moth’s wellbeing.”
[...]
Medical letters disclosed by Winn last week in response to The Observer’s reporting confirm that Moth – also known by his legal name, Tim Walker – was diagnosed with a neurological condition, [...] [my note: The Observer gives a very generous interpretation of the published letters, which acknowledge symptoms but don't diagnose CBD]. But according to these letters, in 2015, 2019 and 2025 doctors said his specific presentation of the disease was “very mild”, “stable” and “indolent”, which means slowly progressing.
When Winn’s third book, Landlines, was published in September 2022, Bill read how, in the winter of 2021, soon after Moth had finished another long walk, a neurologist told him his brain scan was “normal”, implying that the walk had drastically improved the symptoms of his condition.
The timing in the book seemed to indicate that this was happening at around the same time as Bill recalls being told that Moth was dying.
“I was reading it on a train,” Bill recalls, “and I just went: ‘What the hell?’ It just makes no sense whatsoever.”
Bill couldn’t understand why, if Moth had had such a positive result from the doctor, the couple wouldn’t have shared the good news with him. Bill texted Raynor expressing his confusion. After a few days she responded to him but didn’t address his question about Moth’s illness.
A few weeks later, the chef Rick Stein was due to film an episode of his BBC series with the couple at Haye farm. Bill says he watched as they demonstrated the cider-making process, implying that they were involved in the farm’s production – something Bill says they had never done. “I felt I was being gaslit,” he recalls.
Not long after, Raynor and Moth terminated their tenancy at Haye farm, a year earlier than agreed. When Bill went to the farm to see them off, they were already gone.
“The key was under a plant pot and a message was left on the kitchen table,” he says. He has had almost no contact with them since.