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Walkers' Navigational Needs–Steam or the Chip?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2009

Julian Tippett
Affiliation:
(Ramblers' Association)

Extract

Surveys reveal that walking is by far the most popular leisure activity in the UK, and still growing. Each year some half a billion ‘leisure day visits’ specifically involve walking in the countryside and over 60 percent of the adult population claim to participate in walking as a ‘sport’. These statistics serve to confirm our own experience that enormous numbers of walkers go out to enjoy the countryside, but when we say ‘walker’ we include Sunday afternoon strollers in Windsor Great Park, a rambling group following the coastal path in Dorset, strong fit youths doing the Pennine Way, or Munro baggers in the Scottish highlands. Walkers come in many a hue.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1996

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References

REFERENCES

1The Countryside Network, Network News, Vol. 2, No. 1, Feb. 1994.Google Scholar
2Social Trends 1994.Google Scholar
3 The use of 'him' does not imply an inequality of the sexes. Navigators are as likely to be female as male, as evidenced by the fact that about half the students on the author's map and compass courses are women.Google Scholar