Durham: City, Dales & Coast: Slow Travel

Durham: City, Dales & Coast: Slow Travel - Gemma Hall

Durham: City, Dales & Coast: Slow Travel

Travel writer Gemma Hall explored Durham extensively by bicycle and on foot to produce this brand new title in Bradt's award-winning series of Slow travel guides to UK regions. Walkers, cyclists, wildlife lovers, families, culture vultures and railway enthusiasts are all catered for, with coverage of a wide range of attractions. As the only comprehensive guidebook to Durham, it also contains all the practical information you could need to enjoy time in this diverse yet under-explored English county. Unexpected treats throng in a region home to rapper sword dancing, from railway trails such as Tanfield Railway (the world's oldest line), to fellside Methodist chapels accessed by remote footpaths crossing silvery burns. And even well-known sites offer surprises: famed for its cathedral, medieval streets, world-renowned university and 500 listed buildings, the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Durham city is also the birthplace of English mustard. Durham city may be fêted by up to 4.37 million tourists a year (2019 figures), yet few visitors venture into the county's wider countryside, with its unsung wooded valleys, old mining villages, Heritage Coast Path, and the rugged hills and valleys of Weardale and Upper Teesdale, where national nature reserves harbour thriving meadows filled with relict plants from the last Ice Age. Key heritage attractions such as Castle Barnard's medieval fort and High Force waterfall (one of England's greatest) are described in intimate detail - but so too are many places that have never made it into a guide on Durham: lesser-known museums, birdwatching sites and historical buildings (including Washington Old Hall, the family home of the first US president's ancestors, which lies just outside the county). Here too are more remote treats that need tracking down by cycling old railway trails, or on foot, following old packhorse trails to reach abandoned collieries, secluded bathing pools and the display grounds of the black grouse, a rare gamebird. Whether you are keen to experience Roman forts or England's industrial heritage, to wander the heathery uplands of Moor House or stride boldly along miles of coastline, discover Durham with Bradt's unique Slow guide.
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Travel writer Gemma Hall explored Durham extensively by bicycle and on foot to produce this brand new title in Bradt's award-winning series of Slow travel guides to UK regions. Walkers, cyclists, wildlife lovers, families, culture vultures and railway enthusiasts are all catered for, with coverage of a wide range of attractions. As the only comprehensive guidebook to Durham, it also contains all the practical information you could need to enjoy time in this diverse yet under-explored English county. Unexpected treats throng in a region home to rapper sword dancing, from railway trails such as Tanfield Railway (the world's oldest line), to fellside Methodist chapels accessed by remote footpaths crossing silvery burns. And even well-known sites offer surprises: famed for its cathedral, medieval streets, world-renowned university and 500 listed buildings, the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Durham city is also the birthplace of English mustard. Durham city may be fêted by up to 4.37 million tourists a year (2019 figures), yet few visitors venture into the county's wider countryside, with its unsung wooded valleys, old mining villages, Heritage Coast Path, and the rugged hills and valleys of Weardale and Upper Teesdale, where national nature reserves harbour thriving meadows filled with relict plants from the last Ice Age. Key heritage attractions such as Castle Barnard's medieval fort and High Force waterfall (one of England's greatest) are described in intimate detail - but so too are many places that have never made it into a guide on Durham: lesser-known museums, birdwatching sites and historical buildings (including Washington Old Hall, the family home of the first US president's ancestors, which lies just outside the county). Here too are more remote treats that need tracking down by cycling old railway trails, or on foot, following old packhorse trails to reach abandoned collieries, secluded bathing pools and the display grounds of the black grouse, a rare gamebird. Whether you are keen to experience Roman forts or England's industrial heritage, to wander the heathery uplands of Moor House or stride boldly along miles of coastline, discover Durham with Bradt's unique Slow guide.
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