Friday 10 August 2012

River Swale at Richmond

At Richmond in North Yorkshire the castle stands high above the River Swale as it has done for more than eight hundred years. When I was last there, in late-May this year, it was a glorious sunny day and the river level was low enough for youngsters to enjoy themselves in the water.
River Swale - Richmond - Yorkshire Dales
More at: http://around-england.co.uk/richmond-castle-and-the-river-swale/

Tuesday 19 June 2012

The Beautiful Eden Valley

The Upper Eden Valley is a gorgeous area for walking. If you take a holiday there you can choose between high fells and gentle pasture land. The River Eden flows down from the heights of Mallerstang, opposite Wild Boar fell, through Kirkby Stephen, and then on to Appleby.

Above Kirkby Stephen are the fells. From then on the river flows through rolling pastures, constantly twisting and turning, often tree-lined. This is majestic walking country, especially on a day like today when I took this photograph looking upstream from Musgrave Bridge near Warcop.

There's more about the Eden Valley on my Around-England blog.

Friday 2 March 2012

The Wordsworth House, Cockermouth

The Wordsworths, William and Dorothy, are most usually associated in people's minds with Dove Cottage, Grasmere. They were, however, both born in Cockermouth.

Wordsworth Birthplace - Cockermouth - Wordsworth House

Their parents came from the Penrith area and father was a lawyer. He managed in his early twenties to obtain a good appointment with the Lowther estates and acted as agent for a large section of Lord Lowther's properties, especially in West Cumberland (what we now know of as West Cumbria). With the job came a splendid house in Cockermouth, hence it was there that William and Dorothy, along with siblings, started life.

The property is now known as Wordsworth House and is in the keeping of the National Trust, and open to the public.

See more about the Wordsworth birthplace on the main Around-England site.

Wednesday 29 February 2012

Stamford and Burghley

A couple of weeks ago I was driving north on the A1 when I decided to take a break and divert into Stamford. First stop, though, was Burghley.

I blogged briefly about Burghley House on the main Around-England site in January but didn't have a very good photograph to show, so here's another.

Burghley House Stamford

Having driven back towards Stamford town centre I parked the car a little distance out and walked to the bridge over the River Welland.

River Welland at Stamford

Stamford is a lovely old town full of ancient stone-built houses, shops and churches - especially churches; for a small town centre there seems to be an enormous concentration of church buildings dating back many centuries. Unsurprisingly, maybe, there is also quite a concentration of antique and antiquarian book shops.


Stamford is a very nice place to spend an afternoon, but on this occasion after half and hour or so I had to get back in the car and continue the grind up the A1.

Tuesday 7 February 2012

Grasmere - in the heart of the Lake District

Grasmere is a very special place. It was the home of William Wordsworth during his best years as a poet in the early 19th century. It has stimulated artists of many kinds ever since. Today it is a popular destination for millions of tourists coming to enjoy this most beautiful corner of England. They come not only to Dove Cottage and the Wordsworth Museum but also to the village churchyard to see where the great poet and his family are buried.

The village itself is a pleasant place at all times of year, whether in Winter snow, with daffodils in the Spring, or at the height of Summer. In this post all three photographs were taken in winter (February 2011). On a new page I have just added to the main Around-England site the Grasmere photographs are from summer months.


Grasmere is a good starting point for many Lake District walks, and for the less-energetic there are things to do in the village. Sarah Nelson's Grasmere Gingerbread Shop is a perennial favourite. The Heaton Cooper Studio has an extensive display of work by several generations of the Heaton Cooper family. In the photograph below what was (at the far end of the row of cottages) a Storytelling Centre is now the Grasmere National Trust shop and information centre.


Grasmere and Lake District Accommodation


Grasmere village, not to mention the beautiful lake, attracts me back time after time. Living within driving distance is a great privilege but for many people such day trips will not be practicable. There is no shortage of accommodation. Cumbrian cottages are available in great variety for those who like to look after themselves, and there are hotels in the Lake District at many different price levels to suit every taste.

If you have never been to Grasmere you should start to plan your trip now.

Tuesday 24 January 2012

Appleby Castle in the Eden Valley

In past years it was possible to visit Appleby Castle, and thousands did so every year as they spent holiday time in the beautiful Eden Valley.

For some time now it has been closed to visitors and it is not easy to get a good viewpoint in Appleby town. Outside the town centre, however, at Bongate there is a small picnic area by the footbrige over the Eden and the old Bongate Mill (on the right by the tree). From there one can look up to the castle, high on its cliff looking more or less as Lady Anne Clifford, Countess of Pembroke, had it rebuilt in the seventeenth century. This was one of her four castles in the Eden Valley: Pendragon, Brough, Brougham and Appleby.

Appleby-in-Westmorland, as it is now correctly called, was the county town of Westmorland prior to the formation of Cumbria in the 1970s. It was here that justice was meted out to the county's criminals - although maybe by today's standards it might not all be seen as totally "just". While Kendal became the main administrative centre Appleby had the ceremony. Today its castle still stands proudly over the river.

Tuesday 18 October 2011

Pendragon Castle, Mallerstang

When I first mentioned Pendragon to my wife she thought we were going to Cornwall. But no, in spite of the Cornish-sounding name it is in Cumbria, in the upper reaches of the Eden Valley as it climbs up beyond Kirkby Stephen to the Pennine watershed (and beyond there is Wensleydale).

My last visit to Pendragon was on a rather dull day but Saturday was a beautiful clear sky and even warmish sun. Here then are the ruins of Lady Anne Clifford's Pendragon Castle on a nice clear day.