I’m taking my vacation at home this summer, but by coincidence and good fortune, the book I’ve been reading is Walking the Woods and the Water by Nick Hunt about his recent solo walk from Holland across Europe to Istanbul. So I got to mentally accompany him and travel anyway.
If Nick’s course sounds familiar, it’s because he was retracing the same walk that Patrick Leigh Fermor—Paddy to his friends—made 70 years earlier. Paddy’s three books about his trek were magnificent, and the good news is that Nick is every bit the writer he was. He gives us a vivid, often poetic account of where he went and who he met, with a ton of adventure and humor thrown in. This morning, Nick finally reached Istanbul, and my fantasy travel ended along with the book.
Nick concluded, “Walking itself became a source of happiness, something to be enjoyed in its own right, bringing an intensity of experience and a sensual awareness of surroundings that grew more addictive by the mile.” On the other hand, this on a friend’s cycling blog: “Cycling is possibly the greatest and most pleasurable form of transportation ever invented. It’s like walking only with one-tenth of the effort” (Daniel Pemberton, The Book of Idle Pleasures). Distance walking—as Nick’s account makes clear—is an incredible, sometimes excruciating effort. But I find that cycling can be a bit too fast.
Can I find a happy medium?
--Julian
Running, of course.
Posted by: Only a Blockhead | 08/22/2015 at 03:14 PM