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Newlands Valley Walk
Newlands Valley Walk You can start this walk from virtually anywhere in the Newlands valley; I started from a couple of our Lake District cottages at Birkrigg on the Newlands Pass. Walk down the road in the direction of Keswick, you will soon come to a tight bend at Rigg Beck where the ‘Old Purple House’ used to stand. There is now a Grand Designs style house on the site but the purple colour remains on the roof garden and the front door. Carry on along the pass till you come across a gate on the right hand side and a finger post indicating a footpath beyond the gate. The path leads down into the valley fields and across a minor road. A track climbs up the other side of the valley and emerges at Skelgill. Walk through the farmyard and turn immediately back on yourself to join the path that runs alongside Catbells, towards the old mines at Yewthwaite. After about half a mile, the path descends into Little Town where you can enjoy a well earned cup of tea at the farm tea room. Now there are two options from Little Town. For a longer walk, go back up onto the track and carry on down the valley. This will take you to the old mines at Goldscope where you can peer into the open shafts on the side of Hindscarth. Alternatively you can walk along the road towards Chapel Bridge and stroll down the lane to the pretty little church. The church serves tea and cake on weekends and during the summer. -
My 214 Story Name: Christopher Taylor Membership Number: 3812 First Fell Climbed
My 214 Story Name: Christopher Taylor Membership number: 3812 First fell climbed: Coniston Old Man, 6 April 2003 Last fell climbed: Great End, 14 October 2019 I was a bit of a late-comer to the Lakes. My first visit was with my family when I was 15. We rented a cottage in Grange for a week at Easter. Despite my parents’ ambitious attempts to cajole my sister Cath and me up Scafell Pike and Helvellyn, the weather turned us back each time. I remember reaching Sty Head and the wind being so strong my Mum was blown over. My sister, 18 at the time, eventually just sat down in the middle of marshy ground somewhere below the Langdale Pikes and refused to walk any further. I didn’t return then until I was 28. It was my Dad’s 60th and we took a cottage in Coniston in April 2003. The Old Man of Coniston became my first summit, and I also managed to get up Helvellyn via Striding Edge with Cath and my brother-in-law Dave. Clambering along the edge and up on to the still snow-capped summit was thrilling. A love of the Lakes, and in particular reaching and walking on high ground, was finally born. Visits to the Lakes became more regular after that, but often only for a week a year as work and other commitments limited opportunities. A number of favourites established themselves: the Langdale Pikes; Lingmoor Fell; Catbells and Wansfell among them. I gradually became more ambitious in the peaks I was willing to take on. -
Langdale to Keswick 15 Miles / 24 Km - 6.5 to 7.5 Hours Walking Striding out Along Mickleden Valley
STAGE Langdale to Keswick 15 miles / 24 km - 6.5 to 7.5 hours walking Striding out along Mickleden Valley Latrigg er Greta Riv Braithwaite Castlerigg Portinscale *Stone Circle Keswick Stair Derwent Water Cat Bells Barrow Falls Littletown * This stage gives you a real Look out for ... Lodore* High Seat Falls taste of Lakeland’s rugged Grange Watendlath The distinctively craggy volcanic rock R i and scenic splendour, and of central Lakeland. v e r the walking is consequently Borrowdale harder for a time. Secluded The Stake Pass watershed. Water D Watendlath flows south into Morecambe Bay e Grange Mickleden and Langstrath r Tarn w Fell and north into the Solway Firth. e valleys sandwich this stage’s n t Blea highest point at the top of Fellow explorers on the excellent Rosthwaite Tarn Stake Pass (about 480 Coast to Coast Walk (St Bees to metres). Under the bluff of Robin Hoods Bay) which also goes Gallery Eagle Crag the rough, by Stonethwaite Beck. Force The jetty sometimes wet paths by The more elevated Allerdale Ramble at Hawes End Seatoller * Langstrath and or Cat Bells paths west of Derwent k c Stonethwaite Becks Water. e B converge. The trail follows h t Brandlehow Park on the lakeshore - a r the crystal-clear waters of t the first Lake District property s g the River Derwent as it n acquired by the National Trust in a Britain’s smallest bird L meanders through lovely 1902. of prey, the Merlin flies Borrowdale and finally the low and fast over wooded western shore of remote moorland Derwent Water towards Tips searching for small High birds, lizards Keswick at its northern end. -
Complete 230 Fellranger Tick List A
THE LAKE DISTRICT FELLS – PAGE 1 A-F CICERONE Fell name Height Volume Date completed Fell name Height Volume Date completed Allen Crags 784m/2572ft Borrowdale Brock Crags 561m/1841ft Mardale and the Far East Angletarn Pikes 567m/1860ft Mardale and the Far East Broom Fell 511m/1676ft Keswick and the North Ard Crags 581m/1906ft Buttermere Buckbarrow (Corney Fell) 549m/1801ft Coniston Armboth Fell 479m/1572ft Borrowdale Buckbarrow (Wast Water) 430m/1411ft Wasdale Arnison Crag 434m/1424ft Patterdale Calf Crag 537m/1762ft Langdale Arthur’s Pike 533m/1749ft Mardale and the Far East Carl Side 746m/2448ft Keswick and the North Bakestall 673m/2208ft Keswick and the North Carrock Fell 662m/2172ft Keswick and the North Bannerdale Crags 683m/2241ft Keswick and the North Castle Crag 290m/951ft Borrowdale Barf 468m/1535ft Keswick and the North Catbells 451m/1480ft Borrowdale Barrow 456m/1496ft Buttermere Catstycam 890m/2920ft Patterdale Base Brown 646m/2119ft Borrowdale Caudale Moor 764m/2507ft Mardale and the Far East Beda Fell 509m/1670ft Mardale and the Far East Causey Pike 637m/2090ft Buttermere Bell Crags 558m/1831ft Borrowdale Caw 529m/1736ft Coniston Binsey 447m/1467ft Keswick and the North Caw Fell 697m/2287ft Wasdale Birkhouse Moor 718m/2356ft Patterdale Clough Head 726m/2386ft Patterdale Birks 622m/2241ft Patterdale Cold Pike 701m/2300ft Langdale Black Combe 600m/1969ft Coniston Coniston Old Man 803m/2635ft Coniston Black Fell 323m/1060ft Coniston Crag Fell 523m/1716ft Wasdale Blake Fell 573m/1880ft Buttermere Crag Hill 839m/2753ft Buttermere -
The North Western Fells (581M/1906Ft) the NORTH-WESTERN FELLS
FR CATBELLS OM Swinside THE MAIDEN MOOR Lanthwaite Hill HIGH SPY NORTH Newlands valley FR OM Crummock THE Honister Pass DALE HEAD BARROW RANNERDALE KNOTTS SOUTH Wa Seatoller High Doat Br FR te aithwait r OM CAUSEY PIKE DALE HEAD e HINDSCARTH THE Buttermer GRASMOOR Rosthwaite WHITELESS PIKE EAS BARF HIGH SPY e SALE FELL CA FR T HINDSCARTH S Sleet How TLE OM High Snockrigg SCAR CRAGS CRA ROBINSON WANDOPE Bassenthwait THE LORD’S SEAT G MAIDEN MOOR ROBINSON LING FELL WES EEL CRAG (456m/1496ft) GRISEDALE PIKE Gr e SAIL T ange-in-Borrowdale Hobcarton End 11 Graystones 11 MAIDEN MOOR Buttermer SAIL BROOM FELL ROBINSON EEL CRAG BROOM FELL KNOTT RIGG SALE e FELL LORD’S SEAT HOPEGILL HEAD Ladyside Pike GRAYSTONES ARD CRAGS Seat How WANDOPE CATBELLS LING FELL Der SAIL HINDSCARTH (852m/2795ft) High EEL CRAGS went GRASMOOR SCAR CRAGS Lor Wa WHITESIDE 10 Grasmoor 10 CAUSEY PIKE ton t DALE HEAD WHINLATTER er GRAYSTONES Whinlatter Pass Coledale Hause OUTERSIDE Kirk Fell Honister Swinside BARROW High Scawdel Hobcarton End HOPEGILL HEAD Pass Harrot HIGH SPY GRISEDALE PIKE Swinside Dodd (840m/2756ft) Ladyside Pike GRISEDALE PIKE Br Seatoller High Doat 9 Eel Crag Eel 9 HOPEGILL HEAD aithwait Hobcarton End WHITESIDE CASTLE CRAG e Whinlatter Pass Coledale Hause WHINLATTER THE NORTH- Whinlatter WES GRASMOOR FELL Crummock Seat How (753m/2470ft Forest WANDOPE four gr Par TERN Wa Thirdgill Head Man 8 Dale Head Dale 8 projections k LORD’S SEAT S te of the r r BARF WHITELESS PIKE BROOM FELL aphic KNOTT RIGG ange RANNERDALE KNOTTS Bassenthwait (637m/2090ft) LING FELL -
Frog Graham Round : Sunday 30Th August 2020
Frog Graham Round : Sunday 30th August 2020 I decided to do the Frog Graham Round after completing the Puddle Buckley Round in Wales earlier in August of this year. I did the Puddle Buckley with my friend, Natalie Hawkrigg, who had done the Frog Graham last year and currently holds the fastest ladies time. She fancied having a stab at the Puddle Buckley after our friend, Paul Wilson, was the first to complete it in 2019. We thought we would have a go at being first ladies and the second and third completers. After doing the Puddle Buckley it seemed silly not to do the Frog Graham as I live in Cumbria! So, I decided to try and fit it in before the end of the summer. Natalie and I did the Puddle Buckley unsupported, just stashing wetsuits and some additional gear and food at various strategic points on the Round. Hence, I decided to try the same approach for the Frog Graham and initially planned no support at all. However, I was slightly anxious about doing the Bassenthwaite and Derwentwater swims unsupported if they were potentially going to be at dawn and dusk with limited light and probably rather colder than I would have liked given the amount of recent rainfall. I therefore opted for a swimmer for support on Bassenthwaite and Derwentwater - Natalie on Bassenthwaite and my son, Robin, on Derwentwater. The plan was a 3:30 am start with the goal of being at Church Bay, Bassenthwaite for 6 am to start the swim. In the end due to the logistics of cars and transport I met Natalie at Beck Wythop where she left her car and we headed to the Moot Hall together in my car. -
Inn Way to the Lake District
Walking Holidays in Britain’s most Beautiful Landscapes Inn Way to the Lake District The Lakes Inn Way is a 90 mile circular walk starting and finishing in the popular tourist town of Ambleside. This trail takes in some of the more remote corners of the Lake District, and takes you through the Lake District’s stunning deep sided valleys, along lake shores and over remote mountain passes – as well as past over 40 traditional Lakeland inns. The full route takes you through the popular tourist towns of Ambleside, Coniston, and Grasmere (site of Dove Cottage, former home of the Romantic Poet Wordsworth), as well as through a few of the Lake District’s most impressive valleys – Borrowdale, Ennerdale, and Great Langdale, linked together with paths over high mountain passes, with great views of the surrounding fells. A highlight is a visit to remote Wasdale Head, in the shadow of Scafell Pike, the highest mountain in England. Why is the route known as the Inn Way to the Lake District? Because it is devised so that at each day the route passes a pub at lunchtime and there will always be one nearby – or you will be staying in one – at each overnight stop. There are many traditional Lakeland Inns to choose from, – so you can plan your trip looking forward to log fires, local ales and good food, often made with local produce. Mickledore - Walking Holidays to Remember 1166 1 Walking Holidays in Britain’s most Beautiful Landscapes Summary you will need to read a map and use the route path and pass between Barrow and Outerside Why do this walk? description. -
Dove Crags ‘Cirqueform’ and Gasgale Gill Asymmetric Valley, English Lake District, Attributed to Large-Scale RSF of Pre-LGM Origins
Proceedings of theYorkshire Geological Society 2015 Anomalous terrain at Dove Crags ‘cirqueform’ and Gasgale Gill asymmetric valley, English Lake District, attributed to large-scale RSF of pre-LGM origins David Jarman and Peter Wilson slides are grouped thematically, Supporting Information ppt not by order of appearance in the text SI-02 - 04 Lake District RSF distribution, site locations; Northwestern Fells locus; Dove Crags RSF causes* SI-05 - 09 Gasgale Gill valley SI-10 - 21 Dove Crags cirque and slipmass; moraines SI-22 - 24 Hause Crag scar and slipmass SI-25 - 30 Liza Beck cutbank sections, springs, dry channels SI-31 - 35 reconstruction – pre-RSF Gasgale valley, Grasmoor plateau, Whiteside ridge SI-36 - 39 the vicinity – Coledale Hause; Hope Gill; cirque pattern and seeding* SI-40 - 45 comparator sites (Lake District) : Clough Head / Cotley / Robinson / Revelin Crag / Fairfield / Kirk Fell / Whelter Crags SI-46 (Snowdonia) : Pen yr Helgi-du SI-47 - 50 (Highlands / Sweden) : Cobbler / Streap, Karkevagge / Sgurr an Fhuarail / Tullich Hill SI-51 - 52 alternative interpretations – cirque floor rebound* (B an Fhidhleir); parafluvial RSF* (B Buidhe Arnisdale) SI-53 - 54 general diagrams - RSF typology; Lakes RSF:geology; non-exploitation of RSF cavities by glaciers SI-55 - 58 - measures of RSF depth; cataclinal slopes; zone of crush : Beinn Fhada; Norway drill logs SI-59 - 60 Gasgale Gill diagrams - volume calculations – long sections SI-61 - 62 - sequence of events : spatial / temporal SI-63 comparator reconstruction - Clough Head * -
2008 'Alerts' Are Now Included Among the List of Incidents - for General Interest and As a Result of a Change in National Reporting Policy
KMRT Rescues, 2008 'Alerts' are now included among the list of incidents - for general interest and as a result of a change in national reporting policy. These 'alerts', however, are not added to the tally of 'rescues'. 2 walkers phoned in for help when they got lost as it got 1 1 January 18:05 Whinlatter Forest dark. Fortunately they managed to find themselves as the team was departing. 2 walkers encountered the body of a man who had failed to return from his walk in the Windermere area the day before. Skiddaw - At the time of reporting this incident, it is not possible to say 2 5 January 11:23 Bakestall path how the man succumbed, but he must have experienced extreme weather conditions on the mountain the day before. We were called by the police to assist a female, whose partner had fallen off a crag while trying to rescue their dog from a precarious position. She had made her own way off the fell, in conditions of failing light, to raise the alarm. When speaking to her, she was unable to give us an accurate location for the incident. As a result, we spent all night searching the fells with no success. During the early 6 January 19:30 Honister area hours of the following day a find was made. We then preceded to set up belays and lower a team member and stretcher to the casualty, who, after treatment was airlifted to hospital by an RAF Sea King helicopter. His injuries were noted as cosmetic and the whole event happened to be caught on television cameras. -
Explore Keswick and Borrowdale by Electric Car Welcome to Keswick Twizy Charge Points
BORROWDALE KESWICK Explore Keswick and Borrowdale by Electric Car Welcome to Keswick Twizy Charge Points This busy market town is the perfect place These local businesses offer electric car charging: to start exploring Cumbria and the Lake • Castlerigg Caravan Park, CA12 4TE, Tel: 017687 74499 District. • Field Studies Council Blencathra, CA12 4SG, Tel: 017687 79601 • Hazel Bank Country House, CA12 5XB, Tel: 017687 77248 This itinerary will help you to explore by • Keswick Brewery, CA12 5BY, Tel: 017687 80700 electric car, taking you off the beaten track • Kings Head, CA12 4TN, Tel: 0500 600 725 to some amazing viewpoints, secret walks • Lakes Distillery, CA13 9SJ, Tel: 017687 88857 and spectacular sites. Just one day without • Littletown Farm Guesthouse, CA12 5TU, Tel: 017687 78353 a conventional car will help look after the Lake District. Lakes Distillery Bassenthwaite Lake Your electric car has a range of around 40 miles. Driving conditions and style may affect the driving range of the Twizy but the days out in this itinerary are less than 30 miles round trip. Why not try: Mirehouse and Dodd Wood Field Studies 1. Bassenthwaite for Nature Lovers and Council, Blencathra Culture Vultures 2. Beautiful Buttermere Keswick Brewery Keswick Castlerigg Stone Circle 3. Outdoor Adventures Whinlatter Forest 4. Borrowdale and Castle Crag by Boot Castlerigg Caravan Loweswater Park Derwentwater Explore more by Littletown Farm Kings Head Crummock Guesthouse electric car! This Water car is part of a flock of electric vehicles Buttermere Bowderstone #twizyflock Hazel Bank Country House Honsiter Slate Mine Rosthwaite Your Renault Twizy is charged using a 13 amp (domestic) power point. -
Frog Graham Blog
Frog Graham blog As the fantastic summer slipped away and I always seemed to be too busy doing something else I kept finding more and more reasons to put it off – too hot, family holiday, triathlon club relays, too windy – but it wouldn’t go away and on Friday 14th September I knew I had to have a crack or go bonkers over the winter thinking about it. I had intended to go a week earlier but the high winds had put me off. I’m not sure I would have got round if I had tried as I reckon I would have been pretty cold coming off the hill and even colder getting out of the water. Hats off to those who were braver than me and got round safe and sound a couple of days before and after. Stuart and Carol had been all set up to swim and canoe the lake sections with me last week but with 18 hours to kick off I had no-one to help on the hills or in the water. A quick text to Martin, “Are you free tomorrow?” and swim support was sorted. No-one available to run though, but with a decent chance of clear tops and not too much wind forecast I was good to go. On Friday night it was still breezy but the forecast was consistently saying that it would calm down on Saturday and that the cloudbase would lift to well above the tops for most of the day so it looked safe enough to go for it. -
Route-Guide-10In10-2
From... [Grid Ref.] To… Bearing* A to B TOTAL 10in10 (A) (B) (A to B) Distance Distance Route Guide/Features /miles /miles Leg 1 (Swinside Inn to Buttermere) START - Swinside Inn [243218] Causey Pike 246° 2.0 2.0 From the Inn, walk along the road, via Stair, then up good paths to Causey Pike. Care is required on the final short steep ascent. ESCAPE ROUTE 1 - Exits from a Stoneycroft 2° 2.2 4.2 Exit down a well defined col (A) between Causey Pike and (Stair). Grid Ref: path to your right Sail [Exits from 204205] 232214 (bearing = 2°) on a col just BEFORE the very obvious zig-zag path (17 bends) going up to Sail. Head down the valley via Stoneycroft Gill returning to Stair near Braithwaite in a generally NE then E direction. Causey Pike [219209] (1 in 10) Sail 310° 1.6 3.6 Easy walking via Scar Crags and then up the very obvious zig-zag path (17 bends). As the path levels out, the summit is 10m to the right of the path with a small cairn on top. Continue along path towards Crag Hill. Sail [198203] (2 in 10) Crag Hill 274° 0.4 4.0 Well defined path up to Crag Hill via The Scar. Crag Hill has a Trig point on the summit. ESCAPE ROUTE 2 - Exits from a Lanthwaite 230° 2.9 6.9 Head down main path col (A) approx. 0.5 mile SW Green Farm. from Crag Hill (bearing = beyond summit of Crag Hill [Exits Grid Ref: 159208 230°) then exit on the col from 186202 - indicated on OS (approx.