BRITAIN’S MOUNTAINS are natural wonders in themselves. But within them are remarkable features – rock formations, rare flora, wild forests – that can turn a ‘mere’ hike into an excursion into the extraordinary; where you return home exhilarated after feeling connected to something much bigger.
Of course, lists like this should always be taken with a pinch or two of salt; we all have our own treasured places. But here is our take on the Top 10 most mind-blowing natural wonders of our hill, mountain and upland landscapes. Think we’ve missed something that absolutely ought to be included? Let us know!
10. The wind-sculpted Millstone Grit of the Pennines
Nature and industry go hand in hand in much of the southern Pennines; even the name given to the underlying rock – Millstone Grit (also known as gritstone) – reflects its use in the water-powered mills of the early Industrial Revolution. But as Carey Davies writes in his Kinder Scout feature on p46, “upon the moors gritstone is a wild, playful shapeshifter which freely impersonates food, clouds, animals, people – anything it feels like, really.” They may be surrounded by modernity, but spectacular outcrops like the Roaches, Stanage Edge, the Wool Packs and Brimham Rocks are proud-standing marvels of nature.
Picture shows: A ‘fish head’-shaped rock on Ringing Roger, Kinder Scout
9. The waterfall country of the Brecon Beacons
Esta historia es de la edición November 2019 de The Great Outdoors.
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Esta historia es de la edición November 2019 de The Great Outdoors.
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