My Top 10 Favourite Lakeland Crags #4: Wallowbarrow Crag in the Duddon Valley

My Top 10 Favourite Lakeland Crags #4: Wallowbarrow Crag in the Duddon Valley

Wallowbarrow is a splendid valley crag providing a selection of routes to accommodate most tastes. Offering fast-drying wall climbing on clean and solid rhyolite, it is a popular refuge for climbers when the higher crags are wet. Called Low Crag on OS maps, it is anything but. An array of steep buttresses forming a mountain in itself, it has an appropriately precipitous skyline. It further enhances its impregnable air by overlooking woods of silver birch and oak carpeted with bracken.
Taken from the 1993 edition of the FRCC guide to Dow, Duddon and Slate

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My Top 10 Tips for Wild Camping

My Top 10 Tips for Wild Camping

Camping in the high fells is one of the best ways to get away from all the busyness that fills our lives. It gives me time and space to slow down and to reconnect with nature. One of the best things about running MLA courses is the time spent out on expedition in the mountains. I love having breakfast in bed in my tent and then snuggling back into my sleeping bag for 15 minutes – a great way to start the day.

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My Top 10 Favourite Lakeland Crags #3: Gimmer Crag, Langdale

My Top 10 Favourite Lakeland Crags #3: Gimmer Crag, Langdale

This huge barrel-shaped sweep of grey rock with its contrasting characters and fine situation is the jewel in Langdale’s climbing crown.

Thus opens the section in the FRCC about Gimmer, and I totally agree. Great rock, quick-drying routes, beautiful views – what’s not to like about Gimmer? With quality routes at a wide variety of grades, it’s hard to know where to start.

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What is the National Trust thinking of?

What is the National Trust thinking of?

The recent announcement by the National Trust of their intention to introduce an outdoor activity licensing scheme for users of their properties and land has ruffled feathers in the outdoor industry, to put it mildly. The scheme runs as a pilot until September 2016 across 21 sites, including all NT land in the Lake District (more than a quarter of the Lake District).

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My Top 10 Favourite Lakeland Crags #2: Dow Crag, Coniston

My Top 10 Favourite Lakeland Crags #2: Dow Crag, Coniston

For the fourteen years that we lived in Torver, Dow Crag was practically in my back yard. In the summer I could nip up after work and tick off a couple of routes, walking out by headtorch. I occasionally take a client to Dow, if the weather is looking good and we’re looking for lots of mileage. The crag has a special atmosphere, with steep scree sloping down to steely blue Goat’s Water, and views of the gentle lowland and estuaries of the southern edges of Cumbria

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