"I went to the northwest of Scotland to travel the sea roads. I spent parts of several summers in those islands talking and walking with the people who know it best or know them best" "Ian Steven has devoted much of his life to not in a rabbinical sense but just in an excited sense to following the sea roads," he says. 'The idea of a sea path is slightly offends our sensibility'
For several years and more than a thousand miles, celebrated travel writer Robert Macfarlane has been following the vast network of old paths and routes that criss-cross Britain and its waters, looking at their connections to countries and continents beyond.
In this event, recorded at the Tabernacle in London On the 12th of June 2012, Macfarlane tells us his enthralling accounts of the ghosts and voices that haunt old tracks, of songlines and their singers, of the stories our tracks keep and tell, and of rights of way and rites of passage.
This event was produced by Executive Producer Hannah Kaye with editing by Executive Producer Rowan Slaney.
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