Close to the village of Temple Sowerby, in between Appleby and Penrith, is the Acorn Bank house and estate. Nowadays it is owned by the National Trust. It has delightful woodland walks plus a reconditioned operational watermill. At the reception area in the house visitors are able to purchase flour ground in the mill. At the opposite end of the estate are a few ruins of a small-scale gypsum mine, a reminder of just one of the extractive industries that supported the local people well before the holidaymakers came, and in fact even today provides employment in this area of the Eden Valley. Near the house is a delightful walled garden and an apple orchard. For many visitors, however, the top attraction is the remarkable herb garden. The Acorn Bank garden has in excess of 250 varieties of both culinary and medicinal herbs.
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I hope you found that interesting. If you didn't then don't give up on me. Just come back for more later. There'll be a lot of different stuff here.
Showing posts with label Cumbria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cumbria. Show all posts
Monday, 7 April 2014
Saturday, 8 March 2014
Beatrix Potter - Lover of the Lake District
Lake District holidays did not commence with the creation of the National Park. Even back in the late eighteenth century people who could afford the journey enjoyed relaxing in the beautiful "newly discovered" area of the Northwest. But the late-nineteenth century, with rail travel in full swing, families such as that of the young Beatrix Potter would rent a house for weeks at a time to get away from city life.
Lake District walks were her great pleasure. She fell in love with the Cumbrian countryside, and as the Beatrix Potter stories started to become well known and she began to prosper as a writer she bought a property which eventually became her main home - Hill Top Farm, now in the care of the National trust.
In early life she had fallen in love with her publisher. They became secretly engaged but he died at a young age before they could be married. Many years later she married William Heelis, a country lawyer.
Nowadays what was his office in Hawkshead is also a National Trust property operating as the Beatrix Potter Gallery. Many of her watercolours and sketches, originally produced for her books, are on display there. Other highlights of the gallery's displays are items relating to the film starting Renne Zellwegger, 'Miss Potter'.
She was an astute business woman. Not only the Beatrix Potter books but many other related products added to her wealth, much of which was put to use in purchasing land in the Lake District for conservation purposes. and especially to protect the traditional hill farming way of life and the area's distinctive Herdwick sheep.
The many books by Beatrix Potter are today popular around the world as is confirmed by the great numbers of international visitors who each year flock to see her old farmhouse. The gift of a Beatrix Potter complete collection
has become a treasured possession of thousand, children, teenagers and adults alike. And it's not only books
Hawkshead village is well worth a visit. It has the school that the 19th century poet laureate William Wordsworth attended, as well as the Beatrix Potter Gallery. Hill Top is not far away, on the road towards the Windermere ferry.
Lake District walks were her great pleasure. She fell in love with the Cumbrian countryside, and as the Beatrix Potter stories started to become well known and she began to prosper as a writer she bought a property which eventually became her main home - Hill Top Farm, now in the care of the National trust.
In early life she had fallen in love with her publisher. They became secretly engaged but he died at a young age before they could be married. Many years later she married William Heelis, a country lawyer.
Nowadays what was his office in Hawkshead is also a National Trust property operating as the Beatrix Potter Gallery. Many of her watercolours and sketches, originally produced for her books, are on display there. Other highlights of the gallery's displays are items relating to the film starting Renne Zellwegger, 'Miss Potter'.
She was an astute business woman. Not only the Beatrix Potter books but many other related products added to her wealth, much of which was put to use in purchasing land in the Lake District for conservation purposes. and especially to protect the traditional hill farming way of life and the area's distinctive Herdwick sheep.
The many books by Beatrix Potter are today popular around the world as is confirmed by the great numbers of international visitors who each year flock to see her old farmhouse. The gift of a Beatrix Potter complete collection
has become a treasured possession of thousand, children, teenagers and adults alike. And it's not only books
Hawkshead village is well worth a visit. It has the school that the 19th century poet laureate William Wordsworth attended, as well as the Beatrix Potter Gallery. Hill Top is not far away, on the road towards the Windermere ferry.
Friday, 7 March 2014
Peaceful Loweswater in the English Lake District - The Western Lakes
The western area of England's Lake District contains five main lakes, three of which (Crummock Water, Buttermere and Loweswater) are close together while Wastwater and Ennerdale Water are rather separate from them by mountains.
Of all the lakes in the National Park Loweswater is probably one of the least well known, Allong with with the better known Buttermere and Crummock Water it feeds the River Cocker which a few miles downstream merges with the Derwent. Mellbreak is the mountain that towers over the eastern end of the Loweswater. Carling Knott and Burnbank Fell rise above its southern shore. However, at the lake's western end the land becomes more gently undulating and pastoral. Loweswater is very small, even less in area than Rydal Water, being only about one mile long.
The National Trust owns both the lake and much of the land around it, just as it does in the rest of the Buttermere valley. They do permit rowing boats, and permits can be obtained for fishing. Most people, however, are more interested in the walking opportunities and there is a nice walk with a few possible variants that circuits the lake.
This is not a place that will resonate with people wanting slot machines and noisy bars, not even sailing trips on motor launches. It is a quiet place for calm reflection or simply to empty one's mind of all the hassles of everyday life.
Of all the lakes in the National Park Loweswater is probably one of the least well known, Allong with with the better known Buttermere and Crummock Water it feeds the River Cocker which a few miles downstream merges with the Derwent. Mellbreak is the mountain that towers over the eastern end of the Loweswater. Carling Knott and Burnbank Fell rise above its southern shore. However, at the lake's western end the land becomes more gently undulating and pastoral. Loweswater is very small, even less in area than Rydal Water, being only about one mile long.
The National Trust owns both the lake and much of the land around it, just as it does in the rest of the Buttermere valley. They do permit rowing boats, and permits can be obtained for fishing. Most people, however, are more interested in the walking opportunities and there is a nice walk with a few possible variants that circuits the lake.
This is not a place that will resonate with people wanting slot machines and noisy bars, not even sailing trips on motor launches. It is a quiet place for calm reflection or simply to empty one's mind of all the hassles of everyday life.
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