Outdoor Focus Winter 2018 | Page 7

original Seven Wonders but failed miserably to trace the elusive Ebbing and Flowing Well. Two: I nearly killed the redoubtable Joe Brown when I peeled off while attempting a new route on the intimidating limestone of Thor’s Cave – one of the author’s new Wonders – above the Manifold. That duo fits neatly into the first of four themes of Guild vice- president Roly Smith’s historically well-researched and mildly- provocative book. It may not ebb, but Buxton St Ann’s Well is now thronged with visitors flowing to fill huge plastic containers with the free, mineral- rich waters. That’s one of the original Seven, which are dominated by the timeless magnificence of Chatsworth. Here, the multi-skilled ‘Mr Peak District’ has persuaded the incumbent 12th Duke of Devonshire to supply his Foreword. future) you must surely buy, keep and treasure this inspirational and (dare I say) wonderful addition to Peakland literature. Tom Waghorn ...(an) inspirational and (dare I say) wonderful addition to Peakland literature Thor’s Cave joins Dovedale, Kinder Downfall and Woolpacks and the mysterious, verdant Lud’s Church near The Roaches, in his ‘magnificent seven’ Natural Wonders of today. It there had been a reserve competition, I would have suggested the curious gritstone Trinnacle Rocks at Ravenstones above Greenfield. Few will argue, however, with the author’s choice of the Seven Man-made Wonders, which include Peveril Castle, Haddon Hall and the Derwent Dams. The Millennium Walkway at New Mills might find challengers in Buxton’s revamped Great Stables Dome or the spa town’s art nouveau Opera House. Chapter Four – the Seven Wildlife Wonders – features the unique Derbyshire feather moss, thriving under a trickling waterfall in Cressbrook Dale, and the rare leek-coloured hawkweed beside the Monsal Trail. The book is beautifully designed with stunning photographs by the talented Chris Gilbert of a frozen Downfall and Chatsworth and Haddon, to name just two. To enjoy the Fab Four lists (and the author’s glimpse into the stravaiging spirit must surely have been influenced by his enforced childhood wartime travels round the Far East and Africa. East of West, West of East Hamish Brown Sandstone Press, £9.99 (pb) T his is a fascinating memoir from the distinguished Scottish walker, climber and author Hamish Brown’s early childhood, before and after the fall of Singapore, where his father had been a banker. Remarkably, when the Second World War broke out in 1939, their parents decided that young Hamish and his brother Ian should come out to Japan, where their father was then working, for safety and away from the possible bombing of their homeland in Scotland. But the most gripping passages relate to the Japanese invasion of Singapore, where the family had eventually settled, and their escape from the war to South Africa. It was here and in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco in the north which, despite his subsequent worldwide wanderings, Hamish admits, “stole his heart away.” At one time, Brown gave his profession on his passport as a “gangrel” – or a wanderer. This book suggests that his latter-day Walking in Cumbria’s Eden Valley by Vivienne Crow (Cicerone, £12.95) has also been published in a new and revised edition. Next time Photography for Writers In the second part of his ongoing series, Ronald Turnbull casts a 5500K light on the subject of white balance, what it is, and the effect that altering it can have on your photos. Does your mountain measure up? After a new mountain has been discovered in the Lake District, John Nuttall wonders how Miller Moss in the northern fells could have been overlooked until now. winter 2018 | Outdoor focus 7