Peak District (Slow Travel)
Publication Date: 04th Jul 2025
£16.99
Peak District Slow Travel guide. Holiday tips and tourist advice including the Peak District National Park, walking, cycling, Pennine Way, farmers’ markets, restaurants, bus routes and local food. Covers the White Peak, Southwest Peak and parts of Cheshire and Staffordshire. Features Bakewell, Matlock, Chatsworth House and lesser-known attractions.
Available on back-order
ISBN: 9781804692509
Published: 04th Jul 2025
Size: 20 X 198 mm
Edition: 3
Number of pages: 288
About this book
Part of Bradt’s distinctive, award-winning series of ‘Slow’ travel guides to UK regions, the new, thoroughly updated third edition of The Peak District (Slow Travel) offers a wider, more personal selection of places to explore than any other guidebook. Slow down and let expert local author Helen Moat not only guide you around all the well-known places in this much-loved area, but escort you off the beaten tourist track to uncover the hidden corners of the Peak District, teasing out its special qualities. The author’s love of interesting and colourful stories about people and places draws her to highlight quirky and unusual places, from secret gorges, historical ruins and abandoned mills to strange follies and irresistible pubs. The result, for the reader, is a privileged understanding of what makes this stunning region tick – and why it deserves repeat visits.
Although mostly in the county of Derbyshire, the Peak District extends into parts of Staffordshire, Cheshire, Greater Manchester and both South and West Yorkshire – putting it within easy reach of millions of people. Its small surface area harbours unexpectedly diverse landscapes, including deep-cut dales, rocky escarpments, weathered tors and far-reaching moorland. From the characterful mill towns of Holmfirth, Marsden and Uppermill to the historic stone-built settlements that lie the heart of the national park; from the elegant spa town of Buxton to the colourful market towns of Matlock, Ashbourne and Leek, the Peak District is filled with story and history – and great beauty.
Bradt’s The Peak District (Slow Travel) helps you connect with the people who work and live in the national park through the author’s first-hand accounts of their experiences, and helps you discover great places to cook, eat and drink – with a particular focus on tasty, local and good-quality food in atmospheric venues and locations. An emphasis on car-free travel throws up a range of options for getting around, from walking, cycling, boating, buses and trains to more surprising modes of transport that form as much part of the sightseeing experience as they do simply getting from A to B. This is Slow Travel at its finest.
About the Author
Helen Moat (helenmoatsite.wordpress.com) is a freelance landscape and travel writer, writing regularly for BBC Countryfile, Wanderlust and Derbyshire Life. She grew up in Northern Ireland then moved to England as a young adult. After spells in Germany and Switzerland, she settled down in the Peak District, which has become her adopted home. A keen walker and cyclist, she is happiest when outdoors and on the move. When not peddling alongside Europe’s rivers and seas, camping in the East African bush or trekking in the Thai rainforest, she is likely to be found wandering on the Peak’s moorland or spinning her wheels through the dales. Having learnt that ‘slow travel’ is always the best, she is constantly inspired by the landscape, and by the people and places shaped by the Peak. Moat is always on the hunt for a good local story: the Peak District offers her plenty of material.
Additional Information
Table of ContentsGoing Slow in the Peak District
1 The Dark Peak
2 The Eastern Moors
3 The Northern White Peak
4 The Southern White Peak
5 The Southwest Peak, Cheshire & Staffordshire Fringes
6 The Derbyshire Peak Fringe & Lower Derwent
Index