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How do you deal with a broken relationship? Unable to afford a shrink-or the amount of wine he was consuming-the author thought making other parts of his body hurt may take his mind off the ache in his heart. To this end he rather haphazardly set out to walk the Bibbulmun Track, one thousand kilometres of beautiful path through the southwest corner of Australia. This is not a guide book to the Bibbulmun Track. It's not a guide book to anything. This is simply an account of why one man chose to walk that track and how he did it; his experiences, thoughts and impressions from along the way. It's…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
How do you deal with a broken relationship? Unable to afford a shrink-or the amount of wine he was consuming-the author thought making other parts of his body hurt may take his mind off the ache in his heart. To this end he rather haphazardly set out to walk the Bibbulmun Track, one thousand kilometres of beautiful path through the southwest corner of Australia. This is not a guide book to the Bibbulmun Track. It's not a guide book to anything. This is simply an account of why one man chose to walk that track and how he did it; his experiences, thoughts and impressions from along the way. It's about places and people and wildlife and walking. It's about life.
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Autorenporträt
Raised in rural Scotland Colin Valentine developed a keen interest in wild places and wild animals from a young age. These have been constants throughout his life and are now main themes in his writing. He's a firm believer that the only way to truly experience anywhere is by travelling slowly, on foot. For the past two decades he's split most of his time between Australia where he's lived out of the back of a Subaru, and southern Africa where he lives out of a Land Rover. During these decades he's indulged his interests while attempting to give something back through commitment to wildlife conservation projects and working as a field guide. He has no official home of his own, relying on the generosity of friends and family when he needs a roof over his head and somewhere to write. Colin also believes we should be here for a good time as it's unlikely to be for a long time; and nobody should have to work for more than six months in any one year. He's made it a personal goal to prove this is possible. So far so good.