Plus d’un million de livres, à portée de main !
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Ronald Turnbull

    Walking Loch Lomond and the Trossachs
    Walking in the Cairngorms
    Walking the Jurassic Coast
    Granite and Grit
    Walking in the Southern Uplands
    The Welsh Three Thousand Foot Challenges
    • Suitable for walkers and runners in the Welsh 3000s traverse, the Paddy Buckley Round, The Snowdon Horseshoe, Snowdon Ascents and the Welsh 1000 metres race, this title guides walkers through the route, and gives the necessary advice for runners, and for walkers who wish to step up the pace in the tradition of the greats like Joss Naylor.

      The Welsh Three Thousand Foot Challenges
    • Guidebook to 44 varied day walks and over 100 summits in the Southern Uplands of Scotland, stretching south-west from Edinburgh to the English border, including the Galloway and Pentland Hills. Between 2 and 29km, there is something for all seasons and all abilities in remote and rugged hill country.

      Walking in the Southern Uplands
    • A celebration of British geology - the most varied of any country in the world - from the perspective of a climber and hillwalker.

      Granite and Grit
    • This guidebook includes 30 walks on the Jurassic Coast of Devon and Dorset. Covering the coast between Exmouth and Bournemouth, these delightful routes range from 3 to 16 miles (5 to 24km), exploring and explaining the spectacular geology of this World Heritage area with clear, easily understood descriptions, cross-sections and timelines.

      Walking the Jurassic Coast
    • Walking in the Cairngorms

      • 320pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      4,0(1)Évaluer

      Guidebook describing a selection of over 100 walks in the Cairngorms National Park and Lochnagar, covering low-level, mid-level and mountain routes (including 18 Munro summits) and both day walks and multi-day treks. From gentle sandy trails to rocky scrambles, the routes suit most abilities, taking in mountains, forests, lochs and moorland.

      Walking in the Cairngorms
    • Walking Loch Lomond and the Trossachs

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,0(1)Évaluer

      A guide to walking and scrambling routes in the beautiful Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park. Over 70 graded low-level, mid-level and mountain walks taking in hills, glens and picturesque woodland, as well as all of the region's Munro summits. Highlights include Ben Lui, Ben Lomond, the Cobbler and the Arrochar Alps.

      Walking Loch Lomond and the Trossachs
    • NOT The West Highland Way describes alternative routes over mountains, smaller hills or high passes to all but one of the West Highland Way's nine stages, providing alternatives away from the main roads. With add-on day trips over Ben Lomond or Beinn Dorain. Includes 2 two-day routes for warm-up trips.

      Not the West Highland Way
    • The Book of the Bivvy

      • 139pages
      • 5 heures de lecture
      4,0(94)Évaluer

      A guidebook on bivvybag skills and expeditions. Accounts of bivvybag nights and expeditions, both nice and nasty, alternate with practical chapters on lightweight kit. Finally a selection of bivvybag expeditions. Hilarious (and informative) reading! An updated second edition.

      The Book of the Bivvy
    • Ben Nevis and Glen Coe

      • 320pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      2,5(2)Évaluer

      A guidebook to 100 graded routes including of the finest mountain walking in Scotland around Ben Nevis and Glen Coe, on either side of Loch Leven. This area offers the UK's greatest concentration of really magnificent mountains. From the Black Mount to the Grey Corries, from Ben Nevis to Buachaille Etive Mor, this is country for linking high peak to high peak along sharp and sometimes rocky ridges. Here too are low-level walks between, rather than over, these most spectacular of summits. Gentle footpaths from the Caledonian Canal to the Nevis Gorge and the birch woods of Kinlochleven are just the start. Beyond are great through-routes along empty glens by lonely bothies to the edges of Rannoch Moor. The area is notable for tent or bothy treks that are short (2-4 days), and well supplied with villages, railways and bus stops, but still serious in terms of remoteness and scenery. The region's 43 Munro summits are covered, including three scrambles. Low and mid-level routes are illustrate

      Ben Nevis and Glen Coe
    • Award-winning outdoor writer Ronald Turnbull follows John Muir from his birthplace in Dunbar to the Californian trail that bears his name. A perceptive, humorous companion over 210 miles of the Sierra Nevada (and 45 miles of East Lothian coast), Turnbull shares remote camps with some eccentric trail types.

      Muir and More