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Andrew Bibby walks south from Edinburgh through the Scottish borders to the Cheviots and the English border and then carries on until he reaches North Yorkshire and the river Swale. His journey is one of discovery into the distinctive landscapes of the border lands,
This is a love letter to Loughrigg. It's one of the smallest fells in the Lake District, but Loughrigg is small in height only.
Guidebook to walking the whole of the England Coast Path from the River Exe to the River Severn, covering the coastlines of Devon, Cornwall, Somerset and Avon.
The free, weekly, 5k timed running and walking events known as parkrun are now a global phenomenon, operating in 23 countries worldwide. Within the community of participants are enthusiasts who have created a parkrun sub-culture of challenges, loved especially by those who can no longer improve on their personal best time week by week.
The years before the First World War saw the development of a widespread housing movement in Britain which delivered homes at affordable rents through co-operative and community endeavour.
This is an important book about one of England's most fascinating regions - Yorkshire. Colin Speakman explores Yorkshire's origin as an independent Anglo-Viking Kingdom whose capital was York, which for many centuries was England's second city.
British conservationist Laurence Rose travelled to India to hear stories that are rarely told: first-handaccounts of indigenous people's special relationships with the wildlife around them.
The Peak District's pub heritage is as rich as the beer that foams from the pumps, and via its inns, taverns and hotels we can trace centuries of social history in one of the most beautiful parts of Britain. This is the story of the evolution of the traditional Peak District pub from humble alehouse to the present day.
The third part of Andrew Bibby's Cumbrian Fells Trilogy, following on from 'In the Cold of the Night' and 'The Bad Step', where DI Chrissy Chambers and journalist Nick Potterton set out to uncover who has fire-bombed a local environmentalist's camper van. Set among the beauty of the mountains and lakes of England's most popular National Park.
This book by conservationist Laurence Rose is about the complexity and vulnerability of nature, and the unexpected connections between people and wildlife.
John Phillips (1800-74) was a geologist, cartographer, palaeontologist and passionate devotee of the Yorkshire landscape. This detailed biography of Phillips retraces his footsteps through Dales, Moor and Coast and suggests how Phillips was an inspirational force behind Britain's National Park and outdoor movement.
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