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2011 Writing and Photo Competitions Results

We are pleased to announce the results of our 2011 Travel Writing and Photography competitions, with £1,900 of prizes. We are delighted with the quality and imagination of the entries, and thank all entrants for their participation.

Travel Writing

We received a large number of very good pieces, which made selection of the winners difficult. Each of the judges had a different favourite, and three entrants were tied for second place.

There were several multiple entrants, including Liz Cleere (a winner), Eithne Nightingale, who was shortlisted, and Simon Andrewes, whose excellent pieces are referred to below. We also had people entering both the writing and the photography competitions.

Three entries were about the Inca Trail (not bad for a single path), and three each for Scotland and Wales; two each were about India, Beijing and about non-walkers’ sufferings in the Lake District on our shortlist; and many were set in cities as different as Jaipur, Beijing, Edinburgh and Milan.

And a couple of generalizations to be drawn: as if we didn’t know, mountain make you poetic; and cities make for great walking.


The winner is Jean McNeil, for her beautifully written, imaginative piece, The Skeleton Coast, about her 5 day, 150km trek in the Namib desert. She will receive a Daunt Books book token worth £500. (Jean was also shortlisted for our photography prize.)


Three entrants tied for the £200 runner-up prize. They were all excellent, but very different: we have decided to add another £100 to the prize money on offer, and award them £100 each. They are:

 

The £200 prize for the best under-18 entry went to Hannah Middlebrook, for Oh Shenandoah, her walk on the Stony Man trail in Virginia’s Shenandoah National Park. 

 

The rest of the shortlist:  here are the other pieces on our shortlist, which were all excellence, despite missing out on a prize.

Click here to see all these pieces

The winning First Story charity entries were:

We were also so impressed by Finn Weldin’s piece, A walk Down Death Row, that, although it was too much a work of imagination to qualify for the competition, it deserves special mention, and we are giving it a special £50 award for excellence.

Click here to see all these pieces

The excellent First Story charity was set up to nurture and inspire creativity, literacy and talent in British schools. See www.firststory.org.uk.

 

Some other favourites:  here are some other pieces which particularly caught our eye. Great writing!

Other entrants – we have not been able to mention here all the pieces we enjoyed, but we will be including many entries on Walkopedia where they relate to what look like “walks” as walkers would know them.

All the above pieces, and other entries we liked, will be given a permanent place on Walkopedia, although we are currently dealing with a technical problem and will have to wait for that to be resolved, so this will take some time. So, come back here, or search Walkopedia for the relevant walk, in a month or so, and you should find your piece!

Photography

Again, we struggled to decide a winner among some great entries, not least because of their huge variety – from a dusty dawn road in India to the pristine beauty of New Zealand’s Tongariro Crossing in winter, to the flatness of the Namib desert, to a hawthorn tunnel in Wales.

Brahmaputra River

Winner:  Jamie Furlong, for Early Morning Herding, his hugely atmospheric picture of an early morning track on Majuli Island in India’s Brahmaputra River. He will receive £400.

Runner-up:  Abigail Latham, for her arresting image of New Zealand’s Tongariro Crossing in winter, from the Red Crater down toward the Emerald Lake. (Abigail also has the distinction of being on the long list for our Travel Writing Competition.) She will receive £200.

Other favourites: the other photos on our shortlist, by Anne Patterson, Fabio Tomasetta and Jean McNeil, and other pictures we particularly liked, by Jackie Bond and Bernard Koh, deserve special mention and are shown on our dedicated page.

Click here to see all these photos

Tongariro