Out & About …

… on the North York Moors, or wherever I happen to be.

Category: Cumbria

  • Thirlwall Castle

    Thirlwall Castle

    An excess of photographs from the recent walk along Hadrian’s Wall. However, not all remnants were of Roman origin. This ruin is distinctly medieval. Erected in the 1300s, Thirlwall Castle served as a fortified home for the Thirlwall family. Built from robbed stones from the Wall, its stout walls shielded them from Scottish incursions during…

  • Bleatarn

    Bleatarn

    Day 2 of our six day crossing of the north of Britain isthmus following the route of that wonderful piece of Roman civil engineering that stretches across North Britain isthmus from the Solway to the Tyne, Hadrian’s Wall. Yesterday we had caught the bus from Carlisle to Bowness, with the intention of walking back to…

  • Port Carlisle

    Port Carlisle

    In the early 18th century, there were high aspirations to transform the Solway coast into ‘a second Liverpool.’ A canal was built, connecting the coast to Carlisle, and what was once a smattering of houses burgeoned into a flourishing village. This canal facilitated maritime navigation into Carlisle. The photo shows the entrance to the canal…

  • Wishing Trees and Megger Stones

    Wishing Trees and Megger Stones

    A quandary with today’s photo, taken yesterday because I’m still a day behind. A walk from Dent village in the “hidden valley” of Dentdale up the looming Great Coum. Take your pick: a manmade feature with no history I could find, or a natural attraction draped in a legend supposedly centuries old. I’ll include both.…

  • The Stone House

    The Stone House

    You would have thought that a structure dating back to at least the 18th-century and of sigifnicant historic value to be Grade II listed by Historic England would be cherished and looked after. But not so, this manmade cave on Ash Fell overlooking Ravenstonedale is being used as a dump for redundant fencing and other…

  • Lammerside Castle

    Lammerside Castle

    In the Mallerstang valley overlooking the River Eden, the ruined Lammerside Castle dates from the 14th-century. It is a Peel-house, a fortified house built by a lesser landowner to protect his family, livestock, and retainers against predatory raids. Life in the Middles Ages was hazardous, particularly so in Northern England where a state of insecurity…

  • “Pinfold Cone” by Andrew Goldsworthy

    “Pinfold Cone” by Andrew Goldsworthy

    Inspired by the Nine Standards cairns above Kirby Stephen, the artist Andrew Goldsworthy constructed nine cones in a pinfold over the four years he lived at Brough. The nine sculptures are located in various villages around. We found two others, in Warcop and Bolton, but this one in Church Brough must have been one of…