Guardian readers share perspectives on risk and rural rambling
Vaughan Melzer asks if she is alone in being a woman who never feels safe walking in isolated and beautiful places (Letters, 16 April) . Sadly, no; I have met many women with similar beliefs. However, I’m now in my late 60s and have been walking alone in such country for over 30 years, during which I have always felt safe and been safe, apart from dangers caused by weather and terrain. I hope it is not insensitive to other women’s fears to suggest that these are the very places where you are least likely to meet with threats of the human kind.
Liz Fuller
London
• Can I reassure Vaughan Melzer? I have walked alone from Land’s End to John o’Groats despite being a woman. I was only frightened twice: once when chased by an angry swan and once when I met a bull. On both occasions I leapt over a nearby wall.
Mary Brown
Stroud
More Stories
I see my wife once a year. Can I question her on her love life?
Friendship, fitness and freedom: why LGBTQ+ Australians are turning to sports clubs to find ‘queer joy’
My partner and I argue constantly – and she puts all the blame on me | Ask Annalisa Barbieri