Showing up to 15 places from this collection.
Buttermere LakeCumbria • CA13 9UZ • Other
Buttermere is one of the smaller and more perfectly formed lakes in the English Lake District, a ribbon of dark, clear water set in a valley enclosed by some of the most impressive fells in the district, including Red Pike, High Stile and Haystacks rising steeply from the southern shore and the lower but significant Mellbreak on the western side. The lake is fed by two valley streams and drains northward into Crummock Water, the larger lake downstream, and the combination of the two lakes in their mountain setting makes the valley one of the most consistently beautiful in the Lake District.
Buttermere's most famous devotee was Alfred Wainwright, whose seven-volume Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells devoted loving attention to the mountains surrounding the valley and who left instructions that his ashes be scattered on the summit of Haystacks, the fell he described as his favourite in all the Lake District. Wainwright's ashes were duly scattered at Innominate Tarn on the Haystacks summit, and the walk from Buttermere to Haystacks has become a pilgrimage for Wainwright enthusiasts, combining genuinely excellent fell walking with the emotional resonance of the landscape's association with one of the most beloved writers on the British countryside.
The village of Buttermere, at the northern end of the lake between Buttermere and Crummock Water, consists of two pubs, a church and a farm, which collective modesty gives the settlement a character entirely appropriate to the landscape it inhabits. The Fish Hotel, now a pub and restaurant, was at the centre of one of the more extraordinary human interest stories of the early nineteenth century when its landlord's daughter, Mary Robinson, attracted national attention through her beauty and was deceived into a bigamous marriage by the impostor John Hatfield, whose subsequent prosecution and hanging attracted enormous public interest.
The circular walk around Buttermere lake, approximately five miles and entirely manageable for most walkers, is one of the finest low-level lakeshore walks in the Lake District.
Hadrian's WallCumbria • CA8 7DD • Other
Hadrian's Wall is the most important Roman monument in Britain and one of the most significant surviving military frontiers of the Roman Empire, an eighty-mile barrier built across northern Britain between the Solway Firth and the mouth of the Tyne between approximately 122 and 130 AD on the orders of Emperor Hadrian during his visit to Britain. The wall, together with its system of milecastles, turrets, forts and the vallum earthwork to its south, represents one of the most ambitious military construction projects in Roman history and defined the northern frontier of Roman Britain for nearly three centuries.
The wall was built primarily from local stone in the central and eastern sections and from turf in the west, with the stone sections providing the most impressive surviving remains today. At its completion it stood approximately five metres high with a parapet walk above, backed by a ditch on the northern side and the vallum, a flat-bottomed ditch with earth banks, on the southern side. Forts positioned at regular intervals along the wall housed the garrisons that maintained the frontier, with the major forts at Housesteads, Vindolanda and Chesters among the most extensively excavated and best-presented to visitors.
The best-preserved sections are concentrated in the central sector where the wall runs along the dramatic Whin Sill escarpment, the hard volcanic rock that provides both ideal defensive high ground and, in some sections, the building material for the wall itself. The view from the high sections of the wall, with the open Northumberland landscape stretching to the horizon on both sides and the wall itself visible for miles in either direction, communicates the Roman achievement of this frontier with extraordinary clarity.
The Hadrian's Wall Path national trail follows the wall for its full eighty miles and the site museums at the major forts hold outstanding collections of Roman finds.
Hadrian's Wall PathCumbria • CA8 7DD • Other
Hadrian's Wall Path is one of England's sixteen National Trails and follows the route of the most significant Roman engineering project ever undertaken in Britain. The wall was commissioned by Emperor Hadrian during his visit to the province in AD 122 and stretched 73 miles from Wallsend on the River Tyne in the east to Bowness-on-Solway on the Solway Firth in the west. Its purpose was to define and defend the northern frontier of the Roman Empire, and it remained garrisoned for nearly three centuries. The walking trail runs for approximately 135 kilometres and is officially waymarked from coast to coast, allowing walkers to complete the full route in around seven to nine days depending on pace. The eastern sections begin at Segedunum Roman Fort in Wallsend, where an excellent museum and reconstructed sections of wall set the historical scene before the trail heads west into the open countryside. The central section, crossing Northumberland through some of the most dramatic landscape in northern England, provides the walk's most memorable miles. The wall's central section along the Whin Sill, a dramatic ridge of volcanic dolerite rock, offers the most iconic scenery. Here the wall follows the natural line of the cliff edge in great sweeping curves, with the Roman engineers exploiting the landscape's natural defensive potential to maximum effect. Housesteads Fort, perched on the Whin Sill, is the best-preserved Roman fort in Britain and gives a vivid sense of life on the frontier. The scale of the barracks, the granaries and the latrines is genuinely astonishing. Along the route, walkers pass through a remarkable concentration of Roman heritage: milecastles, turrets, vallum earthworks, bridges and garrison towns. Vindolanda, just south of the wall, has produced the famous Vindolanda Tablets, thin wooden writing tablets that preserve personal letters, shopping lists and military reports from the frontier garrison. They represent the largest surviving collection of written documents from Roman Britain and provide an intimate glimpse into daily life 1,800 years ago. The landscape itself shifts dramatically along the route. The eastern sections cross suburban Newcastle and pastoral farmland before the trail climbs onto the exposed moorland of Northumberland. The west brings a transition to gentler lowlands approaching the Solway Firth, with its wide tidal flats and distant views towards the Scottish hills. The variety ensures that even experienced walkers find fresh scenery throughout the journey. The path is accessible year-round, though the high central section can be challenging in winter weather. Luggage transfer services operate between the main stopping points, and accommodation options range from camping to comfortable guesthouses in villages along the route. Transport links at both ends make linear walking straightforward, and sections of the trail can also be enjoyed as day walks from the various visitor centres and car parks along the route.
HelvellynCumbria • CA11 0PU • Other
Helvellyn is the third highest mountain in England, rising to 950 metres above sea level within the Lake District National Park, and it is arguably the most dramatic of England's major peaks. While the summit plateau is broad and accessible in good conditions, it is the approach along Striding Edge that has made Helvellyn famous: a narrow, exhilarating arete of rock that requires confident scrambling and provides some of the finest mountain walking in England. Striding Edge extends east from the summit and drops sharply on both sides, with exposed sections of rocky crest that demand care and concentration, particularly in wet or icy conditions. Walkers who are comfortable on rough terrain and have a good head for heights find the ridge a thrilling experience; those less at ease can find an easier descent route that avoids the most exposed sections. The companion approach from the north, along Swirral Edge, offers a similarly impressive though slightly less severe ridgeline that gives access to the sharp subsidiary summit of Catstycam. The mountain holds a particular place in literary history. William Wordsworth and his friend Samuel Taylor Coleridge both climbed Helvellyn in the early nineteenth century, and their experiences fed into the wider Romantic engagement with the Lake District landscape. A more poignant story attaches to the summit plateau, where a memorial plaque commemorates a dog named Fido who remained beside the body of his fallen master on the mountain for three months in 1805 before either was discovered. The incident inspired poems by both Wordsworth and Sir Walter Scott. From the summit in clear conditions the panorama extends across much of the Lake District, taking in the full length of Ullswater to the east, the Helvellyn range stretching north and south, and on exceptional days the Isle of Man and the mountains of Scotland visible beyond. The eastern face drops dramatically into the deep bowl of Red Tarn, one of the most beautifully situated mountain tarns in the national park, and the angle of the corrie walls above it recalls the glacial forces that carved this landscape during the last Ice Age. Several approaches make Helvellyn accessible. The most popular start points are Glenridding and Patterdale on the shores of Ullswater to the east, with most walkers ascending via Striding Edge and descending by Swirral Edge or the Grisedale path to create a satisfying circular route. Western approaches from Thirlmere are gentler and longer. The mountain should be treated with respect; conditions on the summit can change rapidly and winter snow and ice make the edges genuinely serious mountaineering terrain.
UllswaterCumbria • CA10 2NA • Other
Ullswater is the second largest lake in the English Lake District, a ribbon of water extending nearly 12 kilometres through one of the most varied and dramatic lake landscapes in Cumbria. Unlike the more open, western lakes of the district, Ullswater is enclosed by substantial fells on all sides, its three angled reaches creating a sequence of views that change character as the lake bends, each turn revealing a new arrangement of wooded shoreline, open hillside and mountain skyline that has been drawing artists and tourists to the lake since the eighteenth century. The western shore of the lake between Glenridding and Aira Force is the most celebrated section, carrying the traditional tourist route with views across the water toward the eastern fells of Hallin Fell and Place Fell. Aira Force itself, a spectacular waterfall in a wooded gorge managed by the National Trust, draws large numbers of visitors independently of the lake and the combination of the falls, the adjacent woodland and the shoreline walks makes this section of the lake one of the most rewarding in the district. William Wordsworth's encounter with the daffodils on the shore of Ullswater near Gowbarrow Park in 1802, shared with his sister Dorothy whose journal account provided the material for the poem, produced one of the most celebrated lyric poems in the English language. The daffodil colonies on the western shore are still visible in spring and the association with the poem gives a literary dimension to the lakeside walking that the poem's enduring familiarity has made peculiarly powerful. The Ullswater Steamers have operated on the lake since 1859, providing scheduled passenger services between Pooley Bridge at the northern end and Glenridding at the south. The vessels, some of which date from the Victorian and Edwardian periods and have been carefully maintained, provide a relaxing way to experience the changing character of the lake and connect the main walking routes along the shoreline. The fell walking above the lake, particularly the circuit of Helvellyn from Glenridding, represents some of the finest high mountain walking in England.