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Alex Roddie

Happiest on a mountain. Writer, story-wrangler, digital and film photographer. Editor of Sidetracked magazine. Machine breaker.

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What I’ve been reading this week, 7 November 2020

The value of human silence, cognitive navigation and GPS, wild camping in winter, and taking on Amazon. Nature and environment Our shared vision to restore nature on Exmoor — the Exmoor National Park Authority launch ambitious plans for landscape-scale nature restoration on Exmoor. Looks promising. ‘The proposals also include dedicating at

What I’ve been reading this week, 7 November 2020
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When Glen Coe resembled the Himalaya

The perfection of winter in a collection of images from ten years ago It’s easy to forget, when away from the mountains, just how good winter mountaineering can be at its best. There is nothing in the world like it. The anticipation, the planning, the failures, the gradual accumulation

When Glen Coe resembled the Himalaya
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What I’ve been reading this week, 31 October 2020

The trouble with pheasants, different perspectives on the Cairngorms, the transition month of October, and the campaign for free access to our landscapes. Nature and environment Pheasant and partridge classified as species that imperil UK wildlife — I think this can be cautiously welcomed as a step in the right direction,

What I’ve been reading this week, 31 October 2020
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Make a difference for wild places with Wanderlust Europe, Alex Roddie, Chris Townsend, and the John Muir Trust

Today I am launching a fundraiser to help the John Muir Trust by auctioning a copy of Wanderlust Europe and a day out on the hill with myself and Chris Townsend. Bid for a signed copy of Wanderlust Europe, the new book on Europe’s most inspiring long-distance hikes, and

Make a difference for wild places with Wanderlust Europe, Alex Roddie, Chris Townsend, and the John Muir Trust
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What I’ve been reading this week, 24 October 2020

A bumper instalment this weekend, as I didn’t publish last week. A landscape of hope, the impact of Coronavirus on outdoor education, traverse of the Mamores, an open-source fleece, and photographs from peak to shining peak. Nature and environment Red Backed Shrike And Vigo The Bearded Vulture — wonderful images

What I’ve been reading this week, 24 October 2020
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Sidetracked Vol. 19 shipping now

I’ve just received my copies. This one is breathtaking. Working on Sidetracked magazine continues to be a pleasure, and this issue contains some truly spellbinding stories. During the editorial process I was particularly enthralled by the piece ‘Leaning to Listen’ by Luc Mehl, about a long-distance ice-skating expedition in

Sidetracked Vol. 19 shipping now
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Five-minute storm

The sky knows more than we do, and it always did. As tier three creeps closer stormclouds queue over the marsh, a fire’s set and for five minutes arrowed droplets dance in Velvia haze. The moon tries to come up while light peels back, laserburned by the taproot of

Five-minute storm
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What I’ve been reading this week, 11 October 2020

Outdoor education in crisis, how to walk across Scotland, beating the winter blues, and travel in a time of Covid. Outdoors School’s out: the crisis facing outdoor education — ‘the ban on overnight school trips, gaps in the government’s coronavirus support offering and continued Covid restrictions has created a

What I’ve been reading this week, 11 October 2020
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Wanderlust Europe now available on sale from Sidetracked

Looking to get hold of my new book, Wanderlust Europe, while also supporting one of the best adventure magazines in the UK? Good news — in an exclusive promotion with gestalten, the publisher, you can now get hold of the book for £30 (£5 off retail price) with free postage in

Wanderlust Europe now available on sale from Sidetracked
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What I’ve been reading this week, 3 October 2020

Winter’s where it’s at, beyond the Nevis watershed, wildlife crime in 2019, and the West Highland Way at 40. Environment and nature Birdcrime 2019 report — this damning report from the RSPB into birdcrime illustrates why simply ‘protecting’ more areas is meaningless. Wildlife crime is happening right now in

What I’ve been reading this week, 3 October 2020