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The Windermere Way is an unofficial route and mostly follows footpaths and bridleways. There are short stretches of road walking. The route can be broken down into four easy stages with an easy return to your starting point using the Windermere Ferry or the Lake Steamers.
The walk to the summit is usually from the road at Astley's Plantation car park, itself at over 200 metres above sea level, and only 700 metres from the summit. Although short and easy by most standards, and popular with families, it has many of the characteristics of a walk in the higher Lakeland fells, with some (short) steep slopes, rocks to ...
One of the Lake District’s most well-known lakes, Windermere is an enormously popular place to visit due to its myriad water-based activities and walking options. This route is one such walk: a ...
East–west route across Staffordshire, designed for easy walking. Weavers Way: 61 98: Norfolk: Cromer: Great Yarmouth: Can be combined with the Peddars Way to make a circuit around Norfolk; links with the North Norfolk Coastal Path and the Angles Way. [75] Wherryman's Way: 35 56: Norfolk: Norwich: Great Yarmouth: Follows the River Yare for the ...
The fifth series of Walks Around Britain was originally aired on Horse & Country TV during the winter of 2018/2019. Some of the walks featured product placement from Ford of Britain using a new Tourneo Custom. This series featured a walk on each of the islands of Jersey and Alderney, but there were no walks in Scotland or Wales.
The Dales Way is an 78.5-mile (126.3 km) long-distance footpath in Northern England, from (south-east to north-west) Ilkley, West Yorkshire, to Bowness-on-Windermere, Cumbria. [2] [3] [4] This walk was initially devised by the West Riding Ramblers' Association with the 'leading lights' being Colin Speakman and Tom Wilcock (Footpath Secretary). [5]
1st ed, 1974. The Outlying Fells of Lakeland is a 1974 book written by Alfred Wainwright dealing with hills in and around the Lake District of England.It differs from Wainwright's Pictorial Guides in that each of its 56 chapters describes a walk, sometimes taking in several summits, rather than a single fell.
An easy way up Loughrigg is from the White Moss car park, on the A591 between Grasmere and Rydal Water. This simple walk entails only around 700 feet (210 metres) of ascent over a distance of 1 + 1 ⁄ 2 miles (2.5 kilometres). From the car park a trail leads through woods onto Loughrigg Terrace.