| Great British walks
More ambitious walkers can take to the highlands of Scotland, or follow the Pennine Hills across the backbone of England, or scramble in rocky Snowdonia, North Wales, where the team that first conquered Mount Everest did their training. I prefer the walks that roll down off a grassy ridge into a picturesque village, which - unless you're very unlucky - will have its cosy country pub serving good beer and food. I also love the breezy coastal trails that track past untouched cliffs and beaches rich in wildlife. Take your binoculars on paths like these, and you'll catch sight of seals, dolphins and all manner of seabirds. Roman remains Opened last summer, the trail runs the entire length of the great fortification built by the Romans in the 2nd century to control their northern frontier. Today, it is still wild, remote countryside. My favourite stretch crosses the sharp escarpment of Great Whin Sill, where you're accompanied not just by Northumbria's big skies and wide, open spaces but also by some of the best-preserved sections of surviving wall which, in its prime, stood 15 feet high. There's another reason for choosing this particular part of the trail. On Whin Sill's slope there's Housesteads, the most complete Roman fort in Britain, its bare bones laid out to give a rare insight into life in this ancient outpost. The trail runs from the friendly city of Newcastle upon Tyne to Bowness-on-Solway on the west coast, passing close to attractive old country towns like Hexham and Brampton and the historic city of Carlisle - so there's a good choice of places to stay (from hostels, farmhouses and bed-and-breakfasts to stylish city hotels). Peninsula pilgrimage My favourite coastal walk takes in the peninsula around St Davids, the tiny cathedral city named after Wales's patron saint. Follow this particular stretch of the 186-mile (300 km) Pembrokeshire Coast Path and for the next few hours, you'll feel as though you're walking on air as the route takes you past golden beaches, remote coves, religious shrines and salty headlands. Although small and utterly peaceful, St Davids is blessed with a wide range of accommodation including country house hotels and farmhouses. Sea-cliff stroll This year you can help celebrate the 25th anniversary of the path, which winds its way for 630 miles around the southwestern finger of Britain to Poole Harbour in Dorset. And because it takes in the popular holiday counties of Devon and Cornwall you'll find plentiful accommodation en route. Walk down Britain's oldest road It is 'Britain's oldest road', which has existed for thousands of years: follow in the footsteps of prehistoric man, medieval farmers and 17th-century drovers. If you lack the time or confidence to plan your own independent walks, there are a number of operators who specialise in organised walking tours - luxury or budget, gentle-paced or energetic. Other useful websites:
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