Outdoor Focus Winter 2018 | Page 24

Outdoor/Travel Feature Winner Vivienne Crow Autumn in the Valleys / published in The Great Outdoors What the judges said... ‘This article sums up how hard it is to be original when writing about the Lake District, but this honesty gives the article an original angle, and allows the author to weave in a history of writers and artists who’ve attempted to capture the essence of the lakes, alongside other observations on the changing seasons, the impact of human activity on the landscape. Fascinating examples and contemporary quotes add colour and back up points. And all this interwoven with a walk.’ Judges Carlton Reid, founder of On Your Bike magazine, and Elizabeth Multon, commissioning editor of Adlard Coles Nautical at Bloomsbury Publishing Vivienne accepting her award from Kevin Freeborn of Crimson Publishing Autumn in the Valley (excerpt) I 24 Outdoor focus | winter 2018 Great Langdale Beck in the autumn t’s too early in the day for the crowds. Later, as the forecast sunshine appears, Loughrigg Terrace will undoubtedly become a sedate stream of walkers enjoying a stroll along one of the Lake District’s most popular paths, but, right now, I have it to myself. I look down on the calm waters of Grasmere and the woods surrounding it. The autumn colours seem rather muted, an uninspiring jumble of browns and mucky yellows. I admit I’m disappointed: camera in hand, I’d been hoping for a dazzling early morning display. I wait... And I wait some more... Eventually, the high cloud begins to break, allowing rays of sun to briefly illuminate patches of woodland, bringing the colours to vivid life. The canopy of Penny Rock Wood is particularly rich: its dominant oaks still retain some of their greenery, but there are also shades of gold, orange, ochre, bright yellow... Not wishing to resort to Dulux-like terms such as ‘toasted terracotta’ or ‘honey mustard’, my vocabulary palette can’t do the scene justice. It’s a constant stumbling block over the next three days as I weave my way through the central Lakes: how to describe such magnificence, such beauty, without resorting to clichés – even though I’m surrounded by a landscape that’s been written about, painted and photographed so many times, it has itself become a cliché. Day One: Grasmere to Little Langdale The Lake District offers up many different types of beauty; its appeal doesn’t differ only according to the beholder’s eye. In winter, it has a savage kind of beauty, its snow-covered fells eliciting both a slack-jawed admiration and a shiver-down-the-spine sense of anticipation and fear. When the cloud is low, its beauty is more mysterious as crags and summits emerge and then vanish behind a veil of mist. On sunny October days, when the true brilliance of the autumn colours is revealed, it takes on a ‘chocolate box’ quality, a beauty that brings out photographers in their hordes, many hoping to frame the perfect picture postcard.