Mark Cocker’s article (Country diary, 16 June) took me back many years. Just after the war we lived in Rochdale, and as transport became available again, my parents took me as a very young child on holiday to Wharfedale, where we stayed at the Tennants Arms, just under Kilnsey Crag. We had several walks through Grass Wood, and my outstanding memory is finding what I thought was a snake – actually a slowworm. It gave me an abiding interest in wildlife, and Grass Wood has remained in my mind for nearly 90 years as a most beautiful and enchanted place.
Patricia King
Brixham, Devon
Michael Bulley wonders if there is “a preferred direction of turning round when you go to sit on the lavatory bowl”, and if it depends on handedness (Letters, 16 June). Yes, if you are right-handed, you turn counterclockwise to sit on the loo, and if you are left-handed, you turn clockwise. Or at least that is what my research has shown.
Judith Steiner
London
On the rare occasions that I have found myself sitting on the lavatory bowl, I was either drunk or half asleep, and hadn’t noticed the seat was upright.
Chris Batchelor
Sheffield
Surely our innate left-leaning, anticlockwise inclination is definitive proof that any bias to the right is a human aberration.
Paul McGilchrist
Cromer, Norfolk
Humanity might be going round in opposite circles. Buddhist stupa walking has a clockwise tradition, as do many other pilgrimages.
Peter Nias
Bradford
Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.



