Many, many years ago Cairn Gorm and Ben Macdui were the
first hills I climbed in the Scottish Hills and the Cairngorms have been one of
my favourite places ever since. Having
lived in the area for over 25 years I know the mountains fairly well, though of
course there is much I’ve not experienced and much I don’t know, so I was
interested to read this book, which promised a secret history of the
Cairngorms.
The author describes a series of ventures into the
Cairngorms in search of long-gone shelters, traces of gem mining, the remnants
of aircraft crashes, the source of the River Dee, the Big Grey Man of Ben Macdui
and more. Are these stories secret? Not really. They appear in many sources
(quite a few are listed at the back of the book) and I’ve known most of them
for years and have visited many of the same places, though not in Baker’s
intentional way but more as part of my general wanderings. This is not to
detract from the book though, which is entertaining and very readable as Baker
mixes stories of his own explorations, not all of which are successful, with
the history of the various places and people and vivid descriptions of the
landscape. Baker has done much research too and provides many details I hadn’t
heard before, especially on matters like gem stone mining that I’ve never
looked into.
Exploring a landscape like the Cairngorms that doesn’t offer
many traces of human passing is an interesting exercise and having these
stories gathered together does show that there is a little more history here
than might be expected. Anyone interested in the Cairngorms or just human
involvement in wild landscapes should find this book interesting.
Hi Chris, if you've never looked into the gemstone mining, Crystal Mountains, by Roy Starkey is a great book to read. The making of the jewellery isn't of great interest to me, but there's fascinating stuff about the gem hunters and the diggings. https://cairngormwanderer.wordpress.com/2014/10/30/cairngorm-treasure/
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