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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, 28 June 2019

It’s been another great week for online reads, on a variety of topics from Everest to haiku. Long-distance walking The case for hiking with a heavy pack – I agree with the conclusion of this piece and its general thrust, but I think the author is assuming a little too

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Went to mow the meadow

Is this an essay about solastalgia, automation, landscape, history, or just a little tale about a walker and an owl? I don’t know, but I hope you enjoy reading it. Nine o’clock on a midsummer’s evening, and I hike through farmland that had once been the grounds

Went to mow the meadow
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What I’ve been reading this week, 21 June 2019

One consequence of staying away from Twitter is that my to-be-read queue of articles is a lot smaller, but I’ve still picked up a number of interesting reads this week (largely via good old RSS, which has a better signal-to-noise ratio than Twitter). Enjoy. Long-distance walking Hiking in Finland

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Observations from the edge of the wood

At seven o’clock in the morning I emerge from the patchwork of woodland bordering Gunby Park. These stands of trees, interconnected by hedges and thickets, semi-wild, are undergoing a subtle metamorphosis as the early summer shifts almost imperceptibly to midsummer – a turning of the wood’s heart that only

Observations from the edge of the wood
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What I’ve been reading this week, 14 June 2019

Women who walk or run solo, death and power in the Highlands, mental health and mountains, and the value of close observation… Long-distance walking TGO Challenge 2019: the gear – Chris Townsend’s summary of the gear he took on this year’s TGO Challenge – a few old favourites, and some

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The summer 2019 Twitter burnout

I haven’t dropped off the face of the planet, although I have decided to suspend all personal social media activity for a while. It’s seven o’clock, and I’d usually be about halfway through my morning walk, but there’s a storm blowing out there and it’

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What I’ve been reading this week, 8 June 2019

It’s been an interesting week for online outdoor writing, skewed heavily by the UKWildCamp controversy – but I’ve picked up a few other nuggets on long-distance backpacking, mountaineering, environment and more. Outdoors Why are thru-hikers already in the High Sierra? – I follow a couple of PCT hashtags on Instagram,

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Three lessons I learned by going offline for a month on the Cape Wrath Trail

It isn’t really about technology at all. In January 2019, when attempting to explain why I felt compelled to leave the internet behind for my winter Cape Wrath Trail, I wrote that ‘For some years, I’ve been aware that I can’t think properly when my mind is

Three lessons I learned by going offline for a month on the Cape Wrath Trail
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What I’ve been reading this week, 31 May 2019

I seem to have read a lot of interesting things this week, so once again it’s a slightly longer entry. Enjoy. Long-distance backpacking Cape Wrath Trail trip report, southern half, May 2019 – Philip Werner hiked part of the CWT this month. Shame he had such a bad experience at

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Paper vs. digital journaling on a long-distance trail

When I go backpacking, keeping a journal is an important part of the process for me – as important as taking photographs. But should you keep a digital journal or record your thoughts in a real, physical notebook? Here’s what I’ve learned about the pros and cons of each.

Paper vs. digital journaling on a long-distance trail