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42073 among the Autumn colours at the south end of Lake Windermere during a PVC charter. Saturday 2 November 2019.
A fantastic trip away spending Christmas and the New Year in The Lake District. Loughrigg Fell is surrounded by an unusual amount of open water. To the north the River Rothay flows through Grasmere and Rydal Water before bending around the eastern side of Loughrigg.
A farm surrounded by outstanding beauty. High Rigg in the middle ground and Clough Head in the background.
Today was a great day for walking the fells of Cumbria. Loughrigg Fell, 335m (1099ft) but what a stunner of a mountain it is! This picture is looking north towards Grasmere and Dunmail Raise just to the left of the trig. It's days like these that fill the soul...
In the stunted conifer belt near the top. Steady drizzle all day so these larch provided welcome shelter.
Some of the views from the slopes of Muncaster Fell in South Cumbria. Muncaster Fell is covered with a number of rhododendron bushes which give the hillside some beautiful colour in late spring and early summer.
Cockfield .County Durham , UK .
I never get tired of photographing these wonderful horses on Cockfied Fell .
Winter solstice is also our birthday. Here we are soaking up the magic hour light last Saturday in Fells Point.
A "fell" (from Old Norse "fjall") is a word used in north west England for a hill or moor. Evidence of Vikings settling here a millennium or so ago. Photographed on Shap Fell, Cumbria.
Bloom and Mira looking especially adorable and just in time for Valentine's!
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This is a milestone for me, to be able to get two ladies with different features in the same shot.
It took a couple of weeks but I think I'm on the right path to being able to more easily render more than one person in a shot.
Just gotta keep on practicing!
Wild Boar Fell overshadows the proceedings at Ais Gill on the very welcome reopening day of the Settle-Carlisle Line on Friday 31st March 2017, following closure since the February 2016, due to a serious landslide at Eden Brows near Armathwaite. Viewed by many, 60103 'Flying Scotsman' approaches the summit at Ais Gill heading the 1Z74 15:35 Carlisle to Kirkstall 'Settle and Carlisle Reopening Special'.
© Gordon Edgar - All rights reserved. Please do not use my images without my explicit permission
This hill (if you can't tell already) is just to the left of C-hill. The logging here hasn't been finished yet.
Nine Standards
Nikon FE
Nikkor-H 2.8cm f/3.5
Yellow filter
Ilford FP4 (100)
Caffenol CMrs modified / 45g/L Sodium Carb.
11'00" 20.5c
Baugh Fell is a large, flat-topped hill in the northern Pennines of England. It lies in the north-western corner of the Yorkshire Dales National Park, immediately to the east of the Howgill Fells and to the north of Whernside, the highest of the Yorkshire Three Peaks. Formerly in the West Riding of Yorkshire, since 1974 it has been part of the county of Cumbria.
Lonscale Fell is a hill in the English Lake District. Its pointed second top is instantly recognisable, standing at the eastern end of the Skiddaw massif. The fell is easily climbed from Keswick or from Skiddaw House to the north. Although now primarily a sheep pasture, it once saw considerable mining activity beneath the long eastern wall of crag.
The long south east ridge of Skiddaw descends over Little Man and Jenkin Hill to the depression of Flag Pots. Beyond this is the final upthrust of Lonscale Fell before the craggy descent to the Glenderaterra Beck,
The southern flanks fall gently over acres of sheep pasture in the manner of the Skiddaw range. At the base of the slope is the wooded valley of Whit Beck, separating Lonscale Fell from the east ridge of Latrigg. Here also is Lonscale, the farm which has given its name to the fell. Whit Beck is a tributary of the Glenderaterra, a stream which forms the eastern boundary of Lonscale Fell. This flows due south from Skiddaw Forest between the Skiddaw massif and Blencathra, before joining the River Greta and running on through Keswick. The eastern face of the fell above the Glenderaterra is a mile long scarp of crags, a singular feature in the Skiddaw range.
To the north of the fell is Skiddaw Forest. Confusingly this forest contains no trees, —other than the windbreak of Skiddaw House — but is a marshy upland area at around 1,300 ft surrounded on all sides by higher fells. Three streams flow from Skiddaw Forest, dividing the Northern Fells into three sectors. Dash Beck runs north west, the River Caldew north east and the River Glenderaterra south. The single building in Skiddaw Forest is Skiddaw House, which has variously seen service as a shepherds' bothy and a Youth Hostel.
The northern boundary of Lonscale Fell is Salehow Beck, a tributary of the River Caldew, its waters bound for the Solway Firth by way of Carlisle. Beyond the river is Great Calva, the first of the Back o'Skiddaw fells. The feeders of Salehow Beck and Whit Beck flow from the col of Flag Pots, completing the western boundary.