The Great Outdoors – July 2019

(Ben Green) #1

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The Editor, The Great Outdoors, Kelsey Publishing,
Cudham Tithe Barn, Berry’s Hill, Cudham, Kent, TN16 3AG
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Letters may be edited for clarity or to fit the space available.

LETTERS


day hike with a 25l sack I prefer
not to use poles, but encourage
their use to anyone with worries
over a knee, hip or ankle. Some
prefer using one, some two, it is
individual choice. 
Few people use their poles
(the traditional ski pole style)
correctly, with the hand going up
through the strap, grasping the
pole and pulling downwards. 
My poles have often been lent
to a flagging youngster with
benefit to morale,  but taken
back when the youngster starts
using the pole to practise a golf
swing. Rubber stoppers should
be used for hard surface walking,
but removed  on soft ground,
ice and snow. The little pockets
on the waist belt of a sack are
a handy place for the stoppers
when not required. 
I can’t take the issue of
footpath damage by poles
seriously, when  aeration of
soil is a positive contribution
to drainage and plant growth,
especially in clay soils.
David Syme

High points of the NYM
Arguably, Stony Ridge at 434m
on Stockdale Moor could be
regarded as the second highest
point in the North York Moors
(Wild Walk, Urra Moor and

Wasted camping gear
I was interested to read the
editor’s comment in the latest
TGO, having for several years
been a member of one of the
post-festival salvage teams at
events such as Y Not and Leeds
Festivals (see photo, right)
Our aim is to salvage as much
useable gear – such as tents,
mats and sleeping bags – to ship
out to people who really need
them in areas where disasters
either natural or manmade have
occurred.
It’s a sad indictment of our
society when literally thousands
of perfectly good tents and other
gear are just dumped when other
humans in the world are literally
dying for want of these items.
We can only salvage a small
percentage in the one day we
usually get allocated by the
festival organisers. Everything
that’s not salvaged then goes
into landfill. The level of waste at
these big festivals never fails to
shock and enrage, no matter how
many times you see it.
If retailers stop marketing
‘festival tents’ then that’s a step in
the right direction.
Tim Mellor


The great pole debate
Mike Gibbons (Letters, TGO
May 19) may be 83 but is a
recent convert to pole use.  I
brought the two-pole habit back
from a year in Tirol in the 60s
(Lots of banter in Scotland then:
“Have you forgotten your skis?”)
and still use them when carrying
a heavy pack, when a sudden
lurch can be checked. 
On steep slopes – up or down –
the stability offered by two poles
is comforting. If a hand is needed
for another task, I stop. On a


Stark contrasts
at the edge of the
Brecon Beacons
National Park

Social Media
There was some lively debate on Facebook in response to UK
Wildcamp's brief trial exercise (see Roger's column, facing page)

Cold Moor, May issue). Then,
Drake Howe on Cringle Moor at
432m is equal third highest with
the Loose Howe triangulation
pillar at 432m on Glaisdale
Mo or.
Ray Horner

Plastic bags for mags
I subscribe to TGO which
every month comes in a single
use plastic wrapper. Your
editorial in the June edition talks
about the problems of single-
use plastic and the amount of
litter in the great outdoors. Isn’t
it time that TGO is delivered in
a biodegradable wrapper like,
for instance, BMC Summit
magazine?
Chris Wood

The true wild
Hi there. My friend recently
took this photo, which shows
the fence-line between the
Brecon Beacons National Park
and the highway verge.
Sadly, the one on the right is
the National Park. It shows the
devastation that sheep farming
had done to our upland area:
grazed to a tightly cropped turf.
When walking in the
National Parks of the UK
it’s extremely rare to see any
wildlife and when we do it’s
few and far between. With
the appalling decimation of
our wildlife by 56% in the last
50 years and numbers still
falling, it would be great if
your brilliant magazine could
include more on our wildlife,
make people aware of the
problem and maybe campaign
for the restoration of our
uplands back to its true wild
wilderness packed with wildlife
and adventure.
Keep up the good work.
Andy Wilkinson

Ian Price: “It wasn’t
bringing anyone into
the wild – not the sites
that had been made
available anyway. They
were just bits of land
with no facilities - so
you could pay £20+ for
a camping site without
facilities (although
one did offer toilets,
showers and even
firewood!) I think
UK Wild Camp need

some help regarding
what wild camping is
actually about (as does
DEFRA). The whole
thing was nonsense,
really.”
Becca Humphreys:
“So what would
happen if having paid
the fee, you arrive
at 'your' spot to find
someone else already
in place? Surely the
point of wild camping

is the spontaneity and
flexibility rather than
an overly pre-planned
affair?”
Dermot Breen:
“I want land reform,
in England and Wales,
which enshrines a
legal right to wild
camp. Not another
entrepreneurial
endeavor to relieve
me of my hard-earned
cash!”

July 2019 The Great Outdoors 29
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