Showing posts with label #LakeDistrictBid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #LakeDistrictBid. Show all posts

Thursday, 24 December 2015

#LakeDistrictAdvent Calendar Day 24 - Because...


You know, I know it and it's time the entire world knew it.

To learn more about the Lake District's bid for UNESCO World Heritage Site Status please click here - where you can also register your support for the bid with a couple of clicks of your mouse (or prods of your screen).

And if you've only just found this blog click here to go back to day 1 and catch up with all the other great reasons.


THANK YOU for reading this series of blogs - we both hope you have a very Merry Christmas and a peaceful and Happy New Year. x

Wednesday, 23 December 2015

#LakeDistrictBid Advent Calendar Day 23 - Because of The Force...

We all know The Force is strong with the Lake District.  There's something about it that pulls at your soul and keeps you coming back.  It gets inside your brain and entices you up snowy fells, lures you out on soggy wet days and convinces you to live here (well it did that to us anyway).

UNESCO World Heritage Site Status could offer A New Hope for the Lake District, and whilst the bid doesn't specifically mention The Force (though it probably should), it was strong enough to draw the makers of Star Wars here and put the dramatic fells around Derwentwater on the world stage (well, screen).  As I understand it JJ Abrams was originally headed for a remote hillside somewhere in Wales before he encountered an elderly gentleman in a cream tunic and a hooded brown coat who waved his hand and convinced him that "these are not the hills you're looking for".

You want more proof of The Force in the Lake District?

Jedi swan
Immense landscapes
Master Snowda
Children cannot resist The Force...
It watches you from the rocks...
Great Gable - centre of The Force & possible inspiration for
Darth Vader's helmet
Blea Tarn - gently forceful
The Force Awakens your inner child.
The Force is especially strong around Blencathra
Darth Horse
Ewok in Endmoor
It's everywhere...even the ponds have eyes...
C3P0 rock face
Snow only adds to the strength of The Force
Ready for Stormtroopers
Views of the Lake District from The Dark Side (Yorkshire) ;-)
Dagobah 
Scale (the) Force

Don't fight The Force - please click here to learn more about the Lake District's bid for UNESCO World Heritage Site Status. You can also register your support for the bid with a couple of clicks of your mouse (or prods of your screen).

And if The Force has only just bought you to this blog click here to take a Luke at day 1 and catch up with all the other great reasons.

Tuesday, 22 December 2015

#LakeDistrictBid Advent Calendar Day 22 - Because of the folklore...

Yesterday it was all about the history so today it's the arch enemy of history - folklore.  When we were researching the book one of the biggest headaches was figuring out where the truth ended and the folklore began.  If you take a story, any story, and only hand down verbal versions of it, pretty soon it's going to get embroidered with things that didn't happen while the things that did happen get lost in the mists of time.  To be fair writing a story down doesn't always do much to preserve it or ensure its accuracy, just take a look at most of the daily newspapers...

As there are, in most cases, small nuggets of truth hiding behind these stories, it's essential that we preserve them and the regions they relate to.

Let's start small with coin logs...  So far as I've been able to work out these are wishing posts - you push your coin in and make a wish.  Other versions suggest that they're for improving bad luck or curing ailments - if you push a coin in it will alleviate whatever has befallen you and, if you were to try stealing a coin, you will be struck down with whatever misfortune affected the person who originally put it there.  Don't say I didn't warn you.

Coin log & friend at Aira Force
Then there's Hugh's Cave in Riggindale where supposedly the first king of Mardale sheltered after fleeing from Kind John.

Riggindale valley - there are worse places to hide...

How about Buttermere and Rannerdale where a fearsome Norseman lead a battle against the Normans with the Rannerdale Bluebells springing from their spilled blood.

"Bloody" lovely.
And perhaps the most famous piece of folklore in the Lake District - Dunmail Raise - where stories abound about vast battles and King Dunmail casting his crown into Grisedale Tarn before his body was buried beneath the pile of stones that mark the summit of Dunmail Raise.  Took a lot of digging to get close to the truth on that one and, if you want to know what we found out you'll just have to buy the book. :-)

Looking along Thirlmere toward Dunmail Raise
To learn more about the Lake District's bid for UNESCO World Heritage Site Status please click here - where you can also register your support for the bid with a couple of clicks of your mouse (or prods of your screen).

And if you've only just found this click here to go back to day 1 and catch up with all the other great reasons.

Monday, 21 December 2015

#LakeDistrictBid Advent Calendar Day 21 - Because of the history.

Of course I have to mention the history - we wrote a whole book about the history - we could have written more (and we will!) - and I don't want to  give away everything in the book, but here are a few highlights of Lake District (and Cumbrian) history which deserve the recognition of UNESCO.

Castlerigg Stone Circle (Neolithic)
Hampsfell Hospice (Victorian)
Viking dug out boat - dug out of Kentmere tarn and now in Kendal Museum

The history behind St Bees

Old stone way markers
Fishstones - Cartmel (old market site)
Cartmel Priory
The ancient tradition of gurning!
Wray Castle (Victorian)
Shap Abbey (12th - 15th Century)
Site of Roman settlement Kentmere
Wrengill quarry - Longsleddale
Wainwright
To learn more about the #LakeDistrictBid  please click here - where you can also register your support for the bid with a couple of clicks of your mouse (or prods of your screen).

You can grab a mince pie and a glass of sherry and catch up on all the reasons starting from day 1 - just click here or scroll the column on the right to see what you've been missing.  :-)

Sunday, 20 December 2015

#LakeDistrictBid Advent Calendar Day 20 - Because of the food...

When folks originally settled here they didn't just come because it looked pretty, they came because there was a fresh water supply and some means of growing food.  Whenever I read the "new life abroad" books they always make good mention of the food - oranges and grapefruit dropping from trees all ready to be collected and taken home for a fresh batch of marmalade.

I'm not knocking that at all, but the Lake District is also dripping with fabulous wild foods and there are plenty of local food producers making the most of it.  (And if you're after a good "new life abroad" book you could take a look at this lovely book about life as an expat in Cyrpus by one of my fab friends).

In the Lake District the spring woodlands are alive with wild garlic; the freshly picked leaves are perfect for slipping into a cheese sarnie if you're out on a hike, or at home just chop them into a salad.


Throughout the summer keep your eyes open for wild raspberries and, occasionally, blackcurrants and down on the woodland floors you can often find tiny wild strawberries which although small pack a really sweet punch.

Come autumn and you need to take your big rucksack on any hike to make the most of all the goodies you'll find along the way.

Damsons
More damsons
Sloes
Blackberries
Marmalade is all very nice but with sloes, damsons and blackberries I can stock my liqueur cabinet ready for Christmas.  (I occasionally make jams and pies with it all too, honest!)


And there's no end of use for our apples - jams, pies, sauces, juice and, of course, home made cider.

Community apple pressing event
And if you know what you're looking for and are an expert in such things, there's plenty of fungi to choose from too.



We're not the only ones making good use of it all - there are plenty of shops and producers in the Lake District turning our local larder into fabulous tasty treats.

Fishers fruit & veg Grange-over-Sands
Higginsons Grange-over-Sands
Hazelmere bakery - Grange-over-Sands
Cartmel cheeses
And then there are the brewers and distilleries...

Unsworths micro brewery - Cartmel
The Lakes Distillery

There are also the ones I don't have photos of - Jennings, Hawkshead and Eden breweries to name but a few.

One of the requirements from  UNESCO is "to be an outstanding example of a traditional human settlement, land-use, or sea-use which is representative of a culture (or cultures), or human interaction with the environment especially when it has become vulnerable under the impact of irreversible change;" - well I reckon we've been making pretty good use of the land for traditional food production for some time now and gaining World Heritage Site Status would enable us to better protect the region and encourage more visitors to sample the edible delights of the Lake District and support all of our local food producers.

To learn more about the #LakeDistrictBid  please click here - where you can also register your support for the bid with a couple of clicks of your mouse (or prods of your screen).

If you want to put your feet up and catch up on all the reasons starting from day 1 - please click here or scroll the column on the right to see what you've been missing.  :-)