KESWICK & DERWENT WATER 141 Mirehouse Via Ferrata © Lonely Planet Publications Planet Lonely © Valley the Stars Motor Museum: 3 Batmobiles at the Cars of of Batmobiles at the Cars Lorton Valley „ Cockermouth ( p163 ) visitors in 2007: 85,000 Cumberland Pencil Museum Museum Pencil Cumberland „ Buttermere Buttermere ( p153 ) Via Ferrata Via ( p157 ) in Cockermouth p157 ( ( p156 ) ( p153 ) ( p163 ) Valley Wordsworth House Mirehouse Lorton Valley Bassenthwaite ospreys Bassenthwaite at the Honister Slate Mine Slate at the Honister

Hop on the 77 bus into the at beginnings Trace William’s literary Wander the gardens of marvellous your nerve on the Test Trundle through the little-visited the call of the wild watching the Feel Water): 2.05 sq miles Water): Area of largest lake (Derwent lake (Derwent of largest Area

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„ the National Trust after decades of neglect. decades the National Trust after devotees can wander the halls of his childhood home in Cockermouth, lovingly restored by restored home in Cockermouth, can wander the halls of his childhood lovingly devotees nections at the stately home of Mirehouse on the lake’s eastern shore, while Wordsworth shore, on the lake’s home of Mirehouse eastern nections at the stately skies since 2001, lies a few miles to the north. Bookworms can check out Tennyson con- miles to the north.skies since 2001, lies a few can check out Tennyson Bookworms lake of Bassenthwaite, famous for the wild ospreys that have been soaring across its summer been soaring across its that have famous for the wild ospreys lake of Bassenthwaite, west are the towering conifer forests and mountain-bike trails of . The peaceful The and mountain-bike trails of Whinlatter. forests the towering conifer west are and Buttermere, connected by the slate-strewn pass of Honister, while to the pass of Honister, by the slate-strewn connected Borrowdale and Buttermere, of all the area’s major sights. To the south and southwest of town are the twin valleys of the twin valleys are To the south and southwest of town major sights. of all the area’s where you’ll be better served. you’ll be better where more than cruising the waters or wandering the hilltops, there are few corners of the Lakes corners few are the hilltops, there or wandering than cruising the waters more sums up all that’s green and good about the Lakeland and good about landscape, and if you like nothing sums up all that’s green Derwent Water. Neither as touristy as or as wild as Wast Water, it’s a place that it’s or as wild as Wast Water, touristy as Windermere Neither as Derwent Water. the hulking dome of Skiddaw, there are few lakes with such an immediate wow factor lakes as with such an immediate the hulking few dome of Skiddaw, are there Pocked with islands, fringed by pebbled shores and overarching trees, and overlooked by overlooked and trees, and overarching Pocked by pebbled shores with islands, fringed Derwent Water Keswick & KESWICK & DERWENT WATER 142 spectacular spectacular joins thefirstbefore thefinalascent. Woodford, alocalresident andmuch-decorated veteran oftheBattleWaterloo –eventually road’, whichtracesazigzagging courseupthefell-side. This secondpath–engineered bySirJohn standard pathleadsstraightonorthere’s analternative alongtheold‘green trailalittlefurther right-hand trailleadsdownthroughthewoodspast via follow thetraildownhill,turningbacktowardslake is theBorrowdaleValley andthedistinctive pointofCastle Crag. Crag, BleaberryFell Seat;tothewestisNewlandsValley; andHigh whilefarofftothesouth to thewestandLonscaleFell eastern totheeast.Overonlake’s side,youcanspotWalla is themostimpressive, byCarl twinpeaks,flanked SideandUllockPike withviewsofSkiddaw’s from Keswick through from Keswick easiest waytogetthere Launchorthe 77bus;alternatively isaboardtheKeswick youcanwalk bield, but onceyou’re atthetopyou’llbetreated toastupendousoutlookacross mean it’swithoutitschallenges–thetrailissteep androckyinplacesfollowsaloftyridge, height. The summits,butthatdoesn’t is wellknownasoneofthemostfamily-friendlyLakeland The miniature mountainof CATBELLS WALK ITINERARY 1 EWC EWN AE • Iieay1 KESWICK & ••Itinerary1 The trailrunsover afalsesummitandseriesofsmalldepressions before climbingalongthe From HawesEndthepathcrossesa From thesummit,youcancontinueridgewalksouthwesttoMaidenMoor. Alternatively, The traditional starting pointupCatbells (thought tobeacorruptionoftheOldNorse The traditionalstarting orwildcat’slair)isat ridge

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