The Lady Of Vision.
Just east of Killin, Ben Lawers rises above the north shore of Loch Tay in Highland Perthshire. Had it been just 17 feet higher it would have been able to join our elite band of hills over 4,000 feet high. As it is though, at 3,983 feet above sea level, it’s the highest in Perthshire and one of the county’s most popular climbs. Munroists are well rewarded for their effort in climbing Ben Lawers as to reach the summit the track first crosses the 3,619-feet high summit of Beinn Ghlas which is itself a separate Munro. That’s two for the price of one.
You want to pick a good, clear day to tackle Ben Lawers as the views over Loch Tay and the neighbouring range of the Tarmachans are quite exceptional. You can see across the whole country from the North Sea to the Atlantic simply by turning your head. Besides the distant views, lime-rich soils make these hills perfect for Arctic-Alpine plants. Alpine lady’s mantle, moss campion, mountain forget-menot and some, like the saxifrage cernua, that aren’t found in the wild anywhere else in Britain.
For a brief period, Ben Lawers did actually poke its head above the 4,000 feet mark. It’s not easy to improve on Nature but in the late 1800s one local man by the name of Malcolm Ferguson, along with some of his friends, decided to make up for Mother Nature’s shortfall by building a massive 20-feet tall stone cairn on the summit thus raising it to 4,003 feet. The cairn, however, is no longer there.
Lawers takes its name from the Gaelic for “the noisy one”, no doubt referring to the Lawers Burn that tumbles down the hillside to spill into Loch Tay at the village of Old Lawers. From the summit we’ve a fantastic view over Lochan nan Cat from which the Lawers Burn begins its journey.
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Esta historia es de la edición Spring 2017 de Evergreen.
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Rural Rides
How many of us search for a dream, and then spend a lifetime fulfilling it? Clough Williams-Ellis spent 20 years seeking the ideal location to build his Italianate village and 50 years building it. Originally he thought an island might be a possible location, but it was only when he came to an untamed peninsula on the breathtaking Traeth Bach tidal estuary that he realised he had finally found his chosen spot.
The Literary Pilgrim
Browsing recently in a charity shop, I came across a copy of a book I had at home on my shelf of treasured children’s books. I was young when I first read it and it proved to be a seminal book, one to which I have been indebted ever since. First published in 1937, it was written by a Wesleyan minister who roamed England in a horse-drawn caravan, writing as he went of the countryside and its wildlife. He called himself Romany.
Almanac
The Lady Of Vision.
Rural Rides
The Charm of the COTSWOLDS
Countrycall
I felt a strong affinity with the naturalist and writer Mary Gillham. I’d spent many years cycling and walking the Taff Trail — a Sustrans cycle route, stretching some 55 miles from Cardiff to Brecon — observing, recording and writing about the wildlife of the area. I had also spent many happy hours exploring Forest Farm Country Park, somewhere which Mary had got to know so well.
Animal Magic
Roger Redfern was a true countryman who enjoyed nothing more than wandering through the hills of England, Scotland and Wales in the weekends and holidays he wasn’t teaching in a Derbyshire school.
Snow At Christmas
Christmas — that most magical time of the year — and what signifies it most is snow falling gently from the sky and creating a magical white carpet on the ground. This image can’t help bring out the child in us all — remembering a childhood of snowball fights, sledging and building snowmen in the garden.
Our Christian Heritage
In Colsterdale, North Yorkshire, 10 miles from the cathedral town of Ripon and two miles from the tourist haven of Masham, lies the small village of Healey. In most respects a typical Dales community of picturesque stone houses along a single street, it boasts an unusual and striking place of worship, the parish church of St. Paul’s.