The Border Country. Alan Hall H.

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The Border Country - Alan Hall H.

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recent years the industrial base has widened to include industries such as plastics, chemicals, paper production, health care and electronics, all of which has, fortunately, led to the reversal of the population drift and, in the last 15 years, increased the numbers residing in the area. The Borders is also renowned in the field of sport, particularly rugby union.

      This Borderland has a character of its own, manifest not only in the green and rounded hills, the glens and bubbling burns, but also in Border legend, poetry and music. It is a subtle character, one that may not be fully understood by a single ascent of Cheviot or a walk in Ettrick Forest, yet as certain as the seasons.

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      Teviotdale and Hawick from Rubers Law (Walk 25)

      The region offers 68 mountains and tops in excess of 2000ft (610m), the highest being Broad Law 2754ft (839m), with only a smattering of rock climbs and several scrambles on scree or in rocky gullies. The highlights of the area, however, are the many long and exhilarating ridge walks, although some include the notorious peat hags of the upper Cheviots. No matter what your tastes, there are walks in this guide to suit all pedestrians and lovers of the countryside, whatever your abilities and secondary interests.

      The number of hours of sunshine depends to a certain extent on the height above sea level, in particular in the vicinity of Cheviot, Hart Fell and Broad Law, whose summits attract precipitation and cloud. Lower Tweeddale, the coastal plain and the more sheltered valleys enjoy up to 50 per cent more sunshine than the hills over 2000ft (610m), especially those in the west of the region.

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      The lapse rate, a reduction of approximately 3°C for every 1000ft (305m) increase in height above sea level, allows a simple calculation to be made in relation to the Border walks. However, sheltered inland valleys can be colder than the summits during the winter months, as cold air tends to drain into the valley floors and form frost pockets, while the converse is true during the summer.

      Visibility

      The Borders enjoys very good visibility, situated as it is well away from industrial pollution and heavy traffic. Evening and night fogs, should they occur, are formed from water droplets, and as such they invariably clear during the day with the increase in temperature. Sea haars (cold mists or fogs) can be experienced along the Berwickshire coast and may occasionally affect Walk 17 from April to September.

      Wind

      Based on readings taken at 1000ft (305m), the prevailing wind pattern governing the Border hills and the Southern Uplands is from the southwest – winds blowing from between south and west are at least twice as frequent as from any other point on the compass. Wind speeds for 85 per cent of the year are between 1½ and 18½mph, plus 5 per cent below 1mph (graded as calm). Records show that sustained wind speeds never exceed 46mph, although occasional gusts may do so. April to October are the calmest months to walk the Border hills, with January to March being the coldest and most windy. During the winter months the uplands can be sterilised by cold northeasters that ride in from the Arctic or the continental steppes on the edge of high pressure systems.

      Precipitation

      With the prevailing wind pattern from the southwest, and influenced by its journey over the Atlantic Ocean, it is the west of the area that receives most rain. The western bastion of the Tweedsmuir Hills has an average annual fall of 89in on Lochcraig Head, 85in on Hart Fell, 83in on Gameshope Loch and 82in on Garelet Dod. The eastern Cheviots (including the Cheviot plateau) by comparison only attract 45in, with the lower western tops receiving on average 36in, emphasising how dry this area is when compared with the annual deluges of 125in occurring in the more ‘fashionable’ areas of the Western Highlands and the English Lakes. At the lower levels in Tweeddale and Teviotdale and on the Merse of Berwickshire the annual rainfall ranges from a mere 26in to 30in. (To convert inches to centimetres multiply by 2.540.)

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      With showers in mind the peaks and troughs for walking in the Borders are as follows.

      The incidence of summer thunderstorms and hail showers in Scotland as a whole, and the Borders in particular, is low, much less frequent than in parts of England. In Edinburgh such phenomena appear on average 7 times a year, in areas of England on average 15 to 20 times a year.

      Snow in winter very rarely impedes the walker, even at heights in excess of 2000ft (610m). Any coverings that occur invariably enhance the scene and provide just that little extra challenge.

      Evidence from the weather patterns cited above, i.e. from records compiled over the last 20 years, would suggest that the month of June provides the Border walker with the brightest and driest days, the best walking temperatures, little or no wind, good visibility and, of course, long days and short nights. June is closely followed by April, May and July, with only a small reduction in either temperature or hours of sunshine, or an acceptable increase in precipitation. All in all, a very pleasant climate in which to walk.

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      Heatherhope Valley from Philip Shank (Walk 13)

      Upper Heaths and Moors

      This type of terrain dominates the Cheviots, Ettrick Forest and the Tweedsmuir Hills, where the dry heaths on the steep upper slopes change gradually into peat bogs on the flatter summits and plateaux. Such heathland contains heather (ling), cotton grass (Scotsman’s heids), and cross-leaved heath, all of which grow happily on the wet and acidic peat. Bilberry (blaeberry) and bell heather prosper on the drier slopes, while on well-drained summit ridges cloudberry, crowberry and dwarf cornal grow, and on the highest hills the rare alpine foxtail may occasionally be found. Grasses that thrive on the Border hills are mainly mat grass (which turns vast areas of the upper Cheviots white in late summer) and wavy hair grass, while in areas of water percolation tussocks of purple moor grass (molinia) make walking difficult. In poor visibility the varying vegetation at higher levels acts as a guide, giving indications of altitude, and warnings of wet and potentially dangerous conditions underfoot.

      Sixteen types of bird utilise this habitat to hunt, feed, nest and breed. This area remains one of the last strongholds for species such as the peregrine falcon (in the crags), the merlin (hunts over the heather), the hen harrier, dunlin and golden plover. On the higher craggy hills and gullies, such as Blackhope Glen and the Hen Hole, ravens may be found, although in small numbers, whereas carrion crows (the moorland scavenger) are much more common. Few if any animals and reptiles inhabit the summits and the tops, though summer visits may be made by the fox, the blue mountain hare (with its distinctive white coat in winter), and feral goats. Domestic sheep are to be found at all levels in the Border hills.

      Lower Slopes, Ridges, Cols and Open Moorland

      These are blanketed by bent grass, fescues and bracken (becoming a great threat) and, growing in the less acidic soils, patches of red fescue. Colour is provided by blaeberry, catspaw, wild thyme, heath bedstraw, rockrose (food for the rare northern brown argus butterfly, Walk 17) and the yellow mountain pansy. Any wet and badly drained areas are clearly indicated by an abundance of rushes and sedge – home to snipe, lizards, slowworms and frogs (newts prefer the lower rocks and burnsides).

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