Outdoor Focus Autumn 2018 | Page 3

Book reviews Roly Smith I’d like to have seen a little more about the history of the area, for example the placename of Lorton, which may come from a mythical Norse lady called Hlóra or from the identical base of the Old English hlōwan, both of which, intriguingly, mean “the roaring one.” Highlights of the Cooley and Gullion routes are Eagles Rock to Foxes Rock from Greer’s Quay and Slieve Gullion (1,880ft/573m) itself, the highest point in County Armagh, which is approached from the Slieve Gullion Forest in an easy, nine-mile circuit. Illustrated throughout by the author’s fine photography and with clear, diagrammatic maps, this book will add to his reputation as Ireland’s most trusted and best read mountain guide. Walks around the Lorton Valley David Ramshaw P3 Publications, £3 (pb) T he 17th century Wheatsheaf Inn at Low Lorton, near the River Cocker near Cockermouth, is a popular hostelry with a caravan park and campsite, commanding panoramic views of the northern Lakeland fells. This book came about as a result of a conversation between the author and Mark Cockbain, mine host of the Wheatsheaf, and his partner Jackie, when Mark mentioned that many of his visitors asked him about the availability of local walks from the village. This attractive little 32-page guide is the result. But it is a walking guide with a difference, because every directional change is accompanied by a specially-taken photograph, making it almost impossible for even the non-map reader to get lost. The author points out that even children could have fun finding the next waypoint from the pictures. Most of the walks follow footpaths in the valley, but the author takes to the hills with easy ascents of Fellbarrow, Low Fell (with its beautiful views south across Crummock Water), The Bield, Kirk Fell and Graystones. Others start from The Green at Boonbeck, in the shadow of the famous Lorton Yew, immortalised by Wordsworth in his 1803 poem, The Pride of Lorton Vale. The Mourne and Cooley Mountains: A Walking Guide Adrian Hendroff The Collins Press, £12.99 (pb) T his book could have been sub-titled The Best of Northern Irish Hill Walks. Centred on the range which, in the words of William Percy French’s famous song “sweep down to the sea,” they also include six routes in the little-visited Cooley and Gullion hills. The Mournes are perhaps most famous for being the site of Northern Ireland’s highest peak – Slieve Donard (2,799ft/853m). Other rocky, tor-topped summits included in the book are Slievenaglogh, Slieve Bearnagh and Slieve Binnian, not forgetting the eponymous Millstone and Rocky Mountains. But the eastern, higher Mournes are also home to the monumental 22-mile Mourne Wall, constructed between 1904 and 1922 by engineers from the Belfast Water Commissioners to enclose the 9,000-acre catchment area around the Silent Valley Reservoir. Along the Divide: Walking the Wild Spine of Scotland Chris Townsend Sandstone Press, £9.99 (pb) T he author is described in the publisher’s blurb as “possibly the world’s most experienced long distance walker who also writes.” I suspect most long distance walkers are also able to write. But few, I would suggest, have the gift that Townsend has for seeming to take you along every step of the way with him on his marathon wilderness treks around the world, particularly in North America. His latest offering owes much to his deep-seated love of his adopted country of Scotland, and also to Peter Wright’s pioneering Ribbon of Wildness, his 2010 exploration of the watershed of Scotland, which he acknowledges throughout. Wright autumn 2018 | Outdoor focus 3