The Lost Words for Cumbria Profile picture
Aug 23, 2020 8 tweets 6 min read Read on X
This week, everything lined up perfectly.
Spent a day in the Lakes national park without seeing a soul.
Found no litter. Not even a balloon.
Parked for free.

This has never happened, in a decade of living here.
It started with Mark, a young man (seen here in an old book). THREAD Image
As I packed my kit, an annoyed suit arrived and spoke to two roadside employees at double-espresso-for-breakfast speed. But they'd gone before I set off, so they don't count.

Fell pony views from a northern red-brick path.
A ladder 'hidden in plain sight'? Or an invitation? ImageImageImage
Something odd on the map...looked like a hideout for a felltop Bond villain.

Imagine having built the cairn. 50 years ago.
Still looked good. Surprised me, and I the spider.

Lousewort in bloom. Not sure where its name came from.
Sympathetic medicine or a lousy time for beasts? ImageImageImageImage
I'd missed a landmark from Wainwright's sketch.
Assumed it'd maybe fallen down?
Until I turned back for the view...

Always turn back for views.
People who only look down at the path miss all of this.
(Good excuse for a rest too). Image
I think you've to 'trespass' a bit, to have a closer look.
(There's a really important petition about trespass at the moment, that you really need to sign, for everyone's sake).

Caused no damage or harm.
Had a very nice bilberry though.
Saw an oak locked up for its own safety... ImageImageImageImage
Another of Mark's cairns. I could see the Coast to Coast from here. Heather's one of #thelostwords too.

A bit later, Hugh Laithes pulled a face at me.
Maybe as the bracken was over my head. Followed a tunnel made by a...pony? deer? cow? ImageImageImage
I actually stopped mid-stride, said "hello you!" and walked backwards to look at this.

Grass of Parnassus. "Bog-Star". Cumbria's county flower.

I've only seen it once before, when a school pupil called Isaac spotted it, (when I was meant to be showing him around Eycott Hill)... ImageImageImage
Got better than that. The rain started less than one minute after I got back in the car.

When I got home I'd been sent a lovely book by an artist I've never met. (Send someone a book. It's a good thing to do).

PS Shap Chippy was closed but you can't have everything, can you..? Image

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More from @TLWforCumbria

Oct 1, 2020
Recently, a well-meaning national park worker posted a photo of The Howgills. Got ten times the usual "likes" but also caused a PILE-ON due to the overgrazed, bare land it showed. No point repeating it.

Instead, I bought a book and went for a look.

a THREAD: LOVELY / DESOLATE ?
Alfred Wainwright understated most things in his guides. How hard these walks can be. How beautiful they can be. But he leaves plenty of clues.
Like his amazement at seeing a single tree here.

As he wrote "even God has been driven out"
Alfred found loveliness & desolation here.
Just after his visit, a film was made: "The Dale That Died". You can watch it for free here thanks to @BFIPlayer

(Watch the first 3 & last 3 mins if you're in a terrible rush).

player.bfi.org.uk/free/film/watc…
Read 15 tweets
Sep 23, 2020
Visit @farfieldmill near Sedbergh this week or soon!

There’s a brilliant contrast of beautiful and ‘terrible’ things to see.

But most of all, there’s this: “Through The Locking Glass” - a collection of work created during lockdown by dozens of Cumbria’s creatives.

SHORT THREAD Image
Here’s the ‘terrible’ in both senses... ImageImageImage
William ‘a young boy untroubled by any schooling’ worked at the mill. He ran away and was found by sniffer dogs. He was soon accidentally skinned by a waterwheel. Later, he survived the flu at 17 and finally retired. After 86 years of service. Image
Read 7 tweets
Sep 18, 2020
Fancy coming for a walk round ours? Tried something new...I took a photo (in any direction) every 100 metres.
You don’t need to go that far, or reach summits to escape.

Dog-friendly stile.
Two pairs of snipe? seemed as surprised as me.
Landmark trees.
Tractor ballet. ImageImageImageImage
I’ve finally mown mine. First time since Spring. Three small bales.

Himalayan Balsam. Bees might like it but no one else does.

I can see the woods from here!

The ‘Huttonwood’ Walk of Fame. They’ll be glad of that when they look back... ImageImageImageImage
Local stile.

(Glad I wore trousers).

Linescapes.

Must have rained a bit, whilst we were gone. ImageImageImageImage
Read 5 tweets
Sep 15, 2020
I’m back. (I know. You didn’t know I’d gone. It’s OK).

Had an unplanned adventure yesterday. It went meanderingly well. Looked for fungi first, for BBC radio.

Overheard one of this trio reading aloud. They told of the local ‘Grumbletrog’. I knew exactly what they meant.

THREAD ImageImageImageImage
I once read a story aloud outdoors about the Raven of Eycott Hill. Bit intimidating as the writer and her family turned up.
And she is very tall and beautiful. I am neither.

She writes & draws story maps for nature reserves.
They enjoyed their Grumbletrog tale trail.
Then this ImageImage
It felt like the government asking for donations to run their nature reserves? Well, I’d heard schools had been doing the same for ages. Natural England is ‘independent of government’ and skint?

I’d missed a nearby village’s exhibition but this cheered me up after that thought. Image
Read 11 tweets
Sep 4, 2020
First walk for weeks with John.
Neither of us had been before.
And I thought he’d been everywhere.

We sploshed east of Shap summit (Wainwright somehow missed this one) to Bretherdale.

A lovely little valley. Turned out to be filled with abandoned farms. Not sure why.

A THREAD ImageImageImageImage
The farms must have been tiny. And working incredibly hard, arguably against the nature of this wild place.
Bit of a change from Missing Cat.
Think we might have found it, anyway.

And a wall gap that might explain why you missed your turn off.

‘Here be dragons’... ImageImageImageImage
More former farms. Much more recently abandoned?
Still got glass windows. Taps.
And look carefully, I think that’s a satellite dish..? ImageImageImageImage
Read 6 tweets
Aug 30, 2020
Bank Holiday THREAD - part 2

After Windermere's sunshine and swallows over Claife Heights, I was feeling short of what Alfred Wainwright called "featureless desolation, and solitude, and silence"...

Welcome to Wasdale, near Shap.

Low cloud 'CLAG' was a bonus. AW had promised: Image
Terry Abraham was over in the other Wasdale that day filming handsome folk & fells. (Bet he'd have rather been over here with the wild Angelica).

Then the clouds lifted. I'd not noticed that the Shap Summit Memorial had it's own memorial before... ImageImageImageImage
Gordon's widow & friends came up to Shap in 2013, on this, his 1955 bus. To remember Gordon and everyone up there. It's a hard place.

I followed the Roman road, away from the traffic.
It soon gets quiet.
Never really gets dry. ImageImageImageImage
Read 8 tweets

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