• Powder House at Roseberry Mines

    Powder House at Roseberry Mines

    Had a wander down to the old Powder House to see how it’s faring. The pointing applied to conserve the gable wall facing Roseberry looks as though it’s doing its job. The rest of the stone walls, reduced to a few courses, are grassing over. The tramway down is a jungle of bracken. At this…

  • The Green, St. John’s in the Vale

    The Green, St. John’s in the Vale

    Mondays have always brought on a state of dysphoria after the euphoria of a weekend away. I think another post of St. John’s in the Vale is justified — a day late but heigh ho. The photo is taken looking south from Lad Knott overlooking the hamlet of ‘The Green‘, which, legend has it, was…

  • Who was Jim?

    Who was Jim?

    Jim’s Fold, on the Eastern Fells below Calfhow Pike and overlooking St. John’s in the Vale. This was used as checkpoint on this year’s Lake District Mountain Trial. Taken on Saturday, the day before the event, when the fold was occupied by two wild fell ponies and their foals. But the question remains — just…

  • Dunmail Raise

    Dunmail Raise

    A view down Raise Beck to Dunmail Raise.

  • Peat storage hut, Birker Fell

    Peat storage hut, Birker Fell

    I came across this ruin on the descent of Harter Fell. The Scafell range of fells provide a stunning backdrop. It is one of 35 huts that have been identified in the Eskdale area that were used for the storage of peat turves. Its date of construction is unclear, certainly post-medieval but it was still…

  • Burnmoor Tarn

    Burnmoor Tarn

    Described by Coleridge as “flounder-shaped” with “it’s Tail towards Sca’ Fell, at its head a gap forming an inverted arch with Black Comb & a peep of the Sea seen thro’ it“. He was on his ascent of Scafell in 1802, and took the direct route from Burnmoor Tarn, so he could well have passed…

  • Ulverston Canal

    Ulverston Canal

    I had it in mind to try to find the ‘Devil’s Chair’, a rock carved stone chair, on Hord Hill near Ulverston, and was intrigued to notice a canal from the town to the sea. A canal! In the Lakes! Perfectly straight, 1¼ miles long. It turned out to be a little gem, brimming with…

  • Devensian musings

    Devensian musings

    I have mentioned many times of the great Devensian ice sheet which flowed over the Pennines at the Stainmore Gap, spilling out into what would become the Vale of Cleveland. And it is also common knowledge that the glacier did not flow over North York Moors, which became an island in a sea of ice,…

  • Was this the site of the stronghold of the de Percys?

    Was this the site of the stronghold of the de Percys?

    On the Ordnance Survey map this raised mound is annotated as a ‘motte‘, a flat-topped mound normally associated with a motte-and-bailey castle.  John Walker Ord cites the Elizabethan antiquarian William Camden as being the only mention of a ‘castle’ at Kildale. it is now thought the mound is a naturally occuring knoll and the site…

  • High Lane, Little Fryup Dale

    High Lane, Little Fryup Dale

    The fields of the eastern side of Little Fryup Dale are accessed by the enclosed High Lane, which has only been designated as a Public Bridleway for about half its length. Looking down the valley towards the 299 metre high Danby Beacon.

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