Ullswater
(See also Pooley Bridge and Glenridding)
Ullswater at 7.5 miles
in length, 0.75 miles in width and 205ft in depth is the second largest of Cumbrias
lakes. It twists and turns amongst craggy mountainsfrom the volcanic rocks of Helvellyn to
Skiddaws slate-covered slopes, all watched over by Place Fell at the lakes head. Wordsworth
called it a magnificent view.
Although edged on one side by the highway, its
other less accessible and more remote shore is rimmed by a narrow, dead-end road. This area was
another favourite haunt of Wordsworth. He considered settling here and went as far as buying
property in the area.
19th century steamers (now diesel) ply Ullswater in summer,
cruising from Pooley Bridge to Glenridding. A circular walk encompassing Goosebarrow Park and
Patterdale is rewarded, in the springtime, with the scene that Wordsworth wrote about in his
famous Ode to the Daffodils in 1802:
. . . A host, of golden daffodils;
Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering and dancing in the breeze. . .
William Gilpin wrote, in 1772, in The
Ullswater Echoes, of the lakes surrounded by rocks and mountains as being instruments of
sound, each with its own special note.
A rare species of fish, the schelly, is found
here. Boats can be rented for lake cruising. On the more remote side of the lake is Martindale
with its 1633 chapel.
Ullswater is located on the A592 north of the Kirkstone Pass. To reach the far
side, turn off to Pooley Bridge on the B5320 and thence onto a minor road that deadends at
Sandwick.
Ullswater Steamers
The Pier House
Glenridding, Cumbria
Tel. 017684 82229
Email: inquiries@ullswater-steamers.co.uk
Website: www.ullswater-steamers.co.uk
Photos courtesy of Ann Bowker , Tony
Richards and Charles Winpenny
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