Out & About …

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

Category: Great Langdale

  • Wordsworth woz ere

    Wordsworth woz ere

    An outlook spanning Great Langdale to Stickle Ghyll, featuring Harrison Stickle and, adjacent on the right, Pavey Ark, its formidable crag wall softened by the mist. Wordsworth once found himself taken aback by the bleat of a lamb, resounding from Pavey Ark, while standing by Stickle Tarn. A recollection of that very sound inspired a…

  • From Pyroclastic Flows to Lapilli Tuffs — Navigating the Langdale Pikes

    From Pyroclastic Flows to Lapilli Tuffs — Navigating the Langdale Pikes

    On the first night back home in Cleveland, I awoke to a drizzle, low-hanging clouds, and, after a week in the Lakes, a slight feeling of dysphoria. My morning constitutional brought no relief as the weather remained dismal. So, I believe it’s only fair to share a photo taken a few days prior in Langdale…

  • Pike o’ Blisco

    Pike o’ Blisco

    O the month of May, the merry month of May, So frolic, so gay, and so green, so green, so green! O, and then did I unto my true love say: “Sweet Peg, thou shalt be my summer’s queen! A poem by Thomas Dekker (c. 1572–1632) Descending out of the mist and heading for Pike…

  • Loft Crag from Pike o’ Stickle

    Loft Crag from Pike o’ Stickle

    The Langdale Pikes is perhaps the best-known skyline in the Lake District. From Great Langdale, the towering pikes of Harrison Stickle, Loft Crag and Pike o’ Stickle are dramatic and majestic and were an early attraction for the first tourists. One such tourist was Joseph Budworth, a soldier and writer who travelled to the Lake…