Great crested grebe

TERRY MARSH
WRITER : PHOTOGRAPHER : HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHEr


geographical areas covered


My travelling days are over-ish. I had a long love affair with France, but these days I get the mental refreshment I found there out among the Scottish islands and Cumbria.


England

I have travelled extensively throughout England, and written books and features about all the countries notably walking guides to the Lake District, the Yorkshire Dales, North York Moors, Oxfordshire, the Chilterns, Peak District and the Pennines.

Beyond my home county of Lancashire, my specialist area is the Lake District about which I have written ‘The Lake Mountains’ (2 volumes), the ‘Official Guide to the Lake District National Park’, the ‘Towns and Villages of Cumbria’, and various smaller walking guides. I have recently completed a guide to 'Exploring Lake District Dales'/


Scotland

Although I have walked and travelled extensively around Scotland my specialist areas are the islands. Recently published has been my guide to 'Exploring Scotland's Islands'.


Wales

My first two books were about Wales: ‘The Summits of Snowdonia’ and ‘The Mountains of Wales’; these two books were revived, in a sense, with the publication of ‘Great Mountain Days in Snowdonia’ (2010).

For a time I lived and worked in North Wales, where I was Deputy Town Clerk with Bangor City Council, and during this time and for some years afterwards I was a Voluntary Warden with Snowdonia National Park. 


Isle of Man

I have been visiting the Isle of Man since 1947, when as a family we spent our holidays there, travelling out on the passenger ships from Liverpool.

Later I returned as a journalist, and visited regularly over the years culminating in a walker’s guide to the island, and a position as the Director of the Isle of Man Walking Festival, which I pioneered.


Ireland

The beauty of Ireland came to my attention when first I attempted to climb the mountains of County Kerry in 1979, and it was mountaineering and the exquisite landscape and its people that always took me back, until I got the chance to write a family guide to Ireland. And then I was all over the place ... enjoying every moment.


France

I first visited France in 1974, when I went, optimistically, to climb Mont Blanc (but failed), and I regularly returned to France every year, sometimes several times in a year.

I gained an A level in French, and speak passable French (if you pass quickly). I wrote for Living France magazine on a fairly regular basis for several years, and found excuses to visit the country repeatedly. My particular fondness is for Languedoc Roussillon, the Pyrenees and the Loire valley.

For many years I edited the Michelin Green Guides to France (English language versions), notably the Auvergne, the French Alps, the Chateaux of the Loire, Paris and Northern France, Provence, Alsace-Lorraine, the Dordogne and Languedoc Roussillon...and others.


Madeira and the Azores

Madeira and Porto Santo

It was 2003 when I first had a chance to visit Madeira, doing research for a radio programme with regional BBC. So, when the chance came to write a narrative guidebook to the islands – including Porto Santo – I jumped at it.

When my contract with the Isle of Man Walking Festival came to an end, I was looking for somewhere else to stage a festival. Why not Madeira? And so, 2008 saw the first Madeira Islands Walking Festival, of which I was the Director and Project Manager. I subsequently went on to write a narrative travel guide to Madeira.

The Azores

With the guide to Madeira completed, I was invited to write a new guide to the Azores, another part of the Portuguese empire, but one that is less well known, and deserving of greater attention. Many weeks spent flying around the nine islands were hugely enjoyable and informative. Nine islands; nine passions; nine ways of life.


Australia

My 1967 plans to emigrate to Australia were frustrated, and it was many years (1998), before I had the chance to visit the country. Love at first sight is an understatement, and I have returned as often as work would allow ever since.

I have visited all states, but have a particular fondness for Western Australia and Tasmania. Perth is my favourite city, closely followed by Adelaide, and I do think there is something quaintly idiosyncratic about Canberra, but I can’t find anyone else who shares that view.

Rightly or wrongly, I have climbed Ayers Rock three times, and have an odd-ball love affair with wacky Alice Springs ... that and travelling on The Ghan and the Indian-Pacific railways ... not to mention the wines of McLaren Vale, and the rock lobster at Kalbarri.




Mull, Coll and Tiree
15 Short Walks on the Isle of Mull
15 Short Walks on the Isle of Skye