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Border Country Cycle Routes - Scotland - England

Cover of Border Country Cycle Routes
Availability
Reprinted
Cover
Paperback - Laminated
Published
11 Dec 2009
Edition
First
ISBN
9781852843335
Expand
ISBN (10)
1852843330
Size
17.2 x 11.6 x 1.1cm
Weight
200g
Pages
160
No. Maps
41
No. Photos
33
Originally Published
1 Jul 2002

Border Country Cycle Routes

by John Brewer

A guidebook to cycling in SE Scotland and NE England in the Northumberland National Park and the Southern Uplands. The 40 circular cycle routes vary in length from 15 to well over 40 miles. Most have off-road sections, and they vary in difficulty from easy to more demanding mountain routes. They offer a blend of isolation and charm. More...

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Seasons

Year-round

Centres

Newcastle, Hexham, Bellingham, Langholm, Hawick, Galashields, Melrose, Kelso, Berwick, Edinburgh Read More... and Dunbar

Difficulty

All grades of route

Must See

Kielder Water, the Northumberland coast, the Cheviot hills, Hadrian’s Wall country
 
 

The Scottish Borders and Northumberland rank among the finest and most scenic parts of Britain, and this guide brings you detailed maps and descriptions of forty original cycle routes in the area, varying in length from 15 to well over 40 miles. Most, but not all of them, have off-road sections, but there is a wide variety, and if you enjoy cycling then you should be able to find something here to suit your tastes. Some of the routes are content to wander along leafy lanes and through quiet villages, while others are more demanding and will take you to wild and remote hills and mountains.

This part of the country is often overlooked by tourists, and yet its secrets are there to be discovered by those who take time to seek them out. The coastline varies from craggy cliffs, like those found at St Abbs Head, to the miles of golden sand that are Druridge Bay. Inland, the coastal plains give way to upland areas such as the Lammermuirs, the Southern Uplands, the Cheviots and the Pennines, all of which have their own characteristics and all of which offer their own challenges.

The Northumberland National Park, in particular, is in stark contrast to its neighbour on the other side of the country, the Lake District National Park. The scenery in both is quite stunning but whereas, in the Lake District it's often difficult to get away from crowds, in the Northumberland Park you can often cycle all day and seldom see a soul. The same can be said of parts of the Southern Uplands and this area has its own unique blend of both isolation and charm in equal measure.

 
 
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