Outdoor Focus Winter 2018 | Page 14

Guide book Winner Vivienne Crow Walking in Northumberland / published by Cicerone Vivienne accepting her award from OWPG’s chair, Peter Gillman The ground drops away dramatically to the north of the dolerite ridge on which Hadrian’s Wall was built I ’d long been entranced by Northumberland’s beauty and isolation. Driving east from my home in Carlisle along the old military road, the largely uninhabited country north of Hadrian’s Wall was always alluring. (How can anyone who loves the outdoors resist the call of those places that appear, at least on the surface, to be relatively free of human interference? The call of solitude?) It was that ‘emptiness’ that first drew me. Over the years, I’d walked most of the wall, enjoyed several trips to the Cheviot Hills, explored much of the coast and spent many long, happy days in the North Pennines, but I still had lots more to discover. The county was only slowly revealing its secrets and I was delighting in the spell it had over me. So, when Jonathan Williams at Cicerone asked me if 12 Outdoor focus | winter 2018 14 I wanted to write a walking guide to the area, there was the briefest moment of hesitation... Writing a guidebook would mean getting to know the area intimately over a relatively short period of time. Did I want to break the spell that quickly? Or did I want to savour the slow reveal? The indecision didn’t last long though... What an opportunity! To be able to spend weeks on end in one of the most beautiful and fascinating counties in England – and call it work! Yes please! For those who haven’t yet got round to visiting England’s most northerly county, Northumberland sits right up against the Scottish border on the eastern side of the country. Its English neighbours are Cumbria, County Durham and Tyne and Wear. Stretching from Berwick-upon-Tweed in the northeast to the tiny South Tynedale village of Slaggyford in the southwest – two places that, even as the crow flies, are about 105km apart – it covers more than 5000 square kilometres. It’s not quite the biggest county in England, but it feels like it as you wander its hills, valleys, moors and beaches. Much of Northumberland receives statutory protection from unwanted development: Roughly 25 per cent of the county, including Hadrian’s Wall and the Cheviot Hills, is within the boundaries of the Northumberland National Park. The county also has two designated Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty – the North Pennines, which takes in the valleys and moorland to the south of Hexham and Haltwhistle; and the Northumberland Coast. So, what’s so special about walking here? And how is it that, despite immersing myself in the county to write a guide to 36 walks here, I’m still in thrall to its charms? As I explain in the introduction to the book, it’s got a lot to do with history. There are few places in England