The Fascinating Geology of the Lake District
The Lake District is dominated by mountains and steep-sided valleys of volcanic rock, resulting from a series of submarine eruptions 520 million years ago. As underwater volcanoes erupted, volcanic rocks were formed from the ash and lava and these became some of the highest mountains in the region. Later, earth movements would move different rocks to create the craggy landscape of Lakeland. Glacial activity during the last Ice Age then shaped and carved valleys, creating the lakes and other landscape features that have made the region so famous. It is because of this geological history that the lakes (or ‘meres’ as they are also known) lie in broad U-shaped valleys framed by knife edge ridges such as Helvellyn’s Striding Edge. Exploring the Lake District you can spy these glacial features and see traces of how the land was sculpted by water. As the climate became warmer and wetter, deciduous forests grew, creating the verdant green rolling hills. In the Lakelands north, the high fells (the local term for the hills and higher mountains) are composed of old sedimentary rocks including slates; the central regions to the south of Keswick but north of Ambleside are mainly tough volcanic rock; and to the south around Coniston and Windermere, softer sedimentary rocks are exposed.
Until the mid-19th century, the Lake District was not the travellers’ haven it is today. In 1724, Daniel Defoe famously described the area as ‘barren and frightful’ but the interest of other writers in wild landscapes soon drew attention to Lakeland. In 1847, railway was introduced to Windermere and this soon brought tourists to the region. Windermere village grew around the railway station and today it remains the entry point many visitors and a base for sightseers. The namesake lake is around two and half kilometres away and a great way to see the region is a cruise down the lake, often described as the spine of the Lake District.
Lakes and Literature: The Villages and Sights of the Lake District
As the name suggests, the region abounds with lakes. Windermere may the best the largest but all of the lakes could vie for the title of most glorious. West of Windermere you will find Coniston Water and Wastwater; Derwent Water and Lake Buttermere are both impossibly scenic with multi-hued water and lovely wooded islands. However, potentially the most majestic lake is Ullswater, the second largest lake of the region and spellbindingly clear. It is thought have inspired William Wordsworth’s most famous poem ‘Daffodils’ and Wordsworth is, in part, responsible for the Lake District’s fame today. In 1799, Wordsworth made the village of Grasmere is home and many other Romantic poets soon followed such as Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey.
Grasmere is a village around 30 minutes by bus from Windermere and was described by Wordsworth as ‘the loveliest spot that man hath ever found’. Today, it is home to many Wordsworth attractions including Dove Cottage. Dove Cottage began its life as The Dove and Olive Bough Inn in the early 17th century but was later converted into a residence and became the home of William Wordsworth, his sister Dorothy and, later, his wife, Mary until they moved to Rydal Mount nearby. The cottage is now a museum commemorating Wordsworth’s life as well as providing an excellent example of a small rural home from the time. Many interesting items and writings pertaining to Wordsworth’s life are on display at the Wordsworth Centre next door. Wordsworth, his wife and Dorothy, as well as Coleridge’s son, are buried in the graveyard of the beautiful 13th century St. Oswald’s Church, a short walk from Dove Cottage.
North of Grasmere you will find Keswick, a quiet town that lies beside the 5 km long Derwent water which Southey called the most beautiful of English lakes. An old market town, it became home to the world’s first pencil factory and the famous Derwent coloured pencils which used graphite from nearby Borrowdale. Here you can visit the Derwent Pencil Museum, a quirky way to discover the history of Keswick and pencils! Just a few kilometres southeast of the village, you will find the standing stone circle at Castlerigg, evidence that the people of the Neolithic Age lived and settled in Lakeland.
Wordsworth and the Romantic poets are not the only literary legends of Lakeland. The region was also home to the much-loved children’s author Beatrix Potter and you can visit Potter’s old home, a 17th-century cottage called Hill Top that is a short drive from the village of Hawkshead. Hill Top inspired much of Potter’s work and she adored the Lake District, purchasing additional farms throughout her lifetime to preserve not just the places of extraordinary beauty but also those heads of valleys and low grazing lands that would be irreparably ruined by development.
If you’re looking for a holiday where you can see a treasure trove of natural beauty, from rocky cliffs and dramatic peaks, to rolling green hills, country lanes and quaint villages, then the Lake District may be the perfect destination for you. An experience like no other, you will be following in the footsteps of Romantic poets and millions of other curious travellers, curious to wander through the most amazing pocket of nature. There are many tours of England but a holiday to the UK would not be complete without the chance to see one of its most glorious heritage sites.
Updated September 2021.