In 1933, the eighteen year old Patrick Leigh Fermor set out in a pair of hobnailed boots to chance and charm his way across Europe, like a tramp, a pilgrim or a wandering scholar.
To discover for himself what remained of hospitality, kindness to strangers, freedom, wildness, adventure, the mysterious, the unknown, the deeper currents of myth and story that still flow beneath Europe\'s surface..
To slow down and linger in a world where we pass by so much, so fast.
His aim? To have an old-fashioned adventure.
Using Fermor\'s books as his only travel guide, he trekked some 2,500 miles through Holland, Germany, Austria, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and Turkey.
He walked across Europe through eight countries, following two major rivers and crossing three mountain ranges.
Aged eighteen, Nick Hunt read A Time of Gifts and dreamed of following in Fermor\'s footsteps.
In 2011 he began his own great trudge - on foot all the way to Istanbul.
The books he later wrote about this walk, A Time of Gifts, Between the Woods and the Water, and the posthumous The Broken Road are a half-remembered, half-reimagined journey through cultures now extinct, landscapes irrevocably altered by the traumas of the twentieth century.
In 1933, the eighteen year old Patrick Leigh Fermor set out in a pair of hobnailed boots to chance and charm his way across Europe, like a tramp, a pilgrim or a wandering scholar