Читать книгу Trail and Fell Running in the Lake District. 40 runs in the National Park including classic routes онлайн
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It was only at the end of writing this book that I realised what a personal journey it had been for me. I sat atop Jenkins Crag at sunset one glorious June evening, the surface of Windermere as still as a mirror below me, as the fells beyond caught the last rays of the sun; Wetherlam, Cold Pike, Crinkle Crags, Bowfell and Loughrigg. Each ridgeline, each crinkle, each notch on those fellsides was as familiar as my own hands, and a cascade of memories flooded in with each area my eyes focused on. To be lucky enough to live in the Lake District is one thing, but to feel so connected to these fells and to have learnt to read the running lines over them forges a permanent bond.
There is a rich history of mountain running in the UK, with the first recorded fell race in Braemar around 1040. The Lake District became the spiritual home to fell running, with the Guide’s Race in each of the village fairs and sports days. These were first recorded in the 19th century, and one of the oldest events occurs each August in Grasmere. Keswick hotelier Bob Graham made a round of 42 fell tops within 24 hours in 1932, and this circuit has become a test piece for all fell runners.