The Great Outdoors

England’s dreaming

THE RIVER CUCKMERE shimmered under broad sunlight as it swerved through grassy fields out to the English Channel. Just visible through glare from a sea as flat and bright as tin, ships drifted along the skyline under a scatter of cumulus clouds drawing grey veils of rain across the water. Ahead and to my left lay towering white cliffs, rolling hills and neat lighthouses; behind me, 90 miles of chalk downs, autumn forests and one of the finest hikes in Britain: the South Downs Way.

In all honesty, I had my doubts about the South Downs Way: it looks too easy, I thought; not as remote or challenging as ‘real’ hikes. The 100-mile footpath runs across the South Downs National Park from Winchester to Eastbourne – barely wild, let alone wilderness. At its highest point, below the summit of Butser Hill, the footpath reaches just 240 metres in elevation, with not a bog or fell

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Phillipa Cherryson has been a magazine, newspaper and television journalist for more than 30 years and has lived in Bannau Brycheiniog National Park for almost as long. She is Vice Chair of the park’s Local Access Forum, an OS Champion, South Wales o

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