Outdoor Focus Autumn 2017 | Page 13

The route owes much to the pioneering work of Dr Peter Clarke, whose 2006 book The Outer Hebrides: The Timeless Way was the inspiration for the creation of the new Way. It was not until 2012 that Clarke’s idea received official financial support, and work began on improving and waymarking the route. Highlights along the route include retracing parts of Bonnie Prince Charlie’s flight from Government forces after the Battle of Culloden in 1746; the magnificent, flower-filled machair meadows and dazzling white sand beaches of South Uist, and, just off route, the imposing standing stones of Callanish on the west coast of Lewis. WILD GUIDE: SCOTLAND Kimberley Grant, David Cooper & Richard Gaston Wild Things Publishing, £16.99 (pb) T he latest in Wild Things Wild Guides sets out with the ambitious intention of covering the whole of Scotland, home to what most people would regard as the wildest parts of wildest Britain. How well it succeeds really depends on whether you think that intention is actually physically possible within 312 pages of nicely designed but inevitably selective opportunities for adventure north of the Border. Apparently aimed at the cosmopolitan adventure seeker, the authors claim that exploring the wild landscapes of Scotland will make the reader healthier, happier and more open-minded about their connections to it. From the white sand beaches of Barra and Berneray to the forbidding heights of Suilven, Applecross, Torridon, Moidart and the Lairig Ghru, wild camping and swimming opportunities are thoroughly examined. But surely one of the joys of experiencing real wilderness is that you don’t have to be led by the hand to it, but to go out and find and live it yourself. But then, maybe I’m being a bit too purist myself… HADRIAN’S HIGH WAY PARTS ONE AND TWO; CASTLES OF EDEN, AND GREAT LAKES CONNECTION Mark Richards JR Nicholls Publishing, £6.99 each (pb) M ark Richards’ love affair with Hadrian’s Wall country continues with the publication of his two-part Hadrian’s High Way, a new 100-mile walking route linking Ravenglass on the Cumbrian coast and Bardon Mill on the Wall. This imaginative route links no fewer than ten Roman forts and is published to commemorate the 1,900th anniversary of Hadrian’s accession as Emperor. It is also claimed to be the world’s first Peace Trail and has a foreword by Mechtild Rossier, director of the UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Best moment comes when a delighted Richards discovers a 200m long Roman kerbed causeway crossing Melmerby Fell above Garrigill in the South Tyne valley, “untouched since the Roman legionaires (surely that should be legionaries?) held sway over the Brigantes.” described by the author as “A fabulous fantasia of Lakeland, afoot and afloat.” Castles of Eden is another new 42- mile, four-day heritage trail through the Eden, Lyvennet and Lowther Valleys. It visits the Norman castles at Brough, Appleby and Brougham, with an opening diversion to take in Pendragon Castle in Mallerstang, and concludes through the Lowther valley to pass Lowther Castle, e nding along a Roman road to Penrith. The Great Lakes Connection is a new 50-mile walk linking Windermere and Ullswater, alliteratively described by the author as “A fabulous fantasia of Lakeland, afoot and afloat.” Starting at Grange-over-Sands on Morecambe Bay, the route goes on to Windermere, and then via Brothers Water into Patterdale and Glenridding. Ullswater’s eastern shore is then followed to reach Pooley Bridge, then field-paths alongside the River Eamont to Penrith. Uniquely, you can shave 18 miles off the walking route by using the ferries that can take you the lengths of both Windermere and Ullswater. But you’ll miss, as the author so enthusiastically describes, “a fabulous mix of natural and human ingredients” on the main route. New and revised editions of the following books have also recently been published:- WALKING THE SOUTH DOWNS WAY Kev Reynolds, Cicerone, £16.95 TREKKING THE PACIFIC COAST TRAIL Brian Johnson, Cicerone, £16.95 pb WALKING ON THE ISLE OF WIGHT Paul Curtis, Cicerone, £12.95 pb autumn 2017 | Outdoor focus 13