Your find Keswick in
northwest England at the heart of the Lake District situated on the edge of the
‘queen of the lakes’ Derwent Water. The area offers some good, but very busy,
walking country; in fact you can’t walk any distance without meeting other
people - unlike North of the Border. The market town it self was exceptional
busy because at the end of July and the beginning of August Keswick hosts a
Christian Conference and I was reliably informed that this brings in an extra
15000 visitors. The town is also famous for the amount of walking equipment
shops and it is said that if you can’t get a pair of walking boots/shoes in
Keswick to satisfy, you can’t get them anywhere.
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Our well organised base.... |
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.... on the edge of .... |
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.... Derwent Water. |
The very well organised Keswick Camping and Caravan Club
Site was our base for our three nights stay. The site had got over its flooding
and was back up and running but some of the shops and houses in the town were
still to have their renovations finished including The Pencil Museum which was
not due to be opened until the end of July which was a shame because it was one
of the places I particularly wanted to visit after seeing it in Ben Wheatley’s
Sightseers (2012).
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The Dandelion Cafe. |
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Nichol End Marina. |
After looking around the town and lunch by the Loch we
walked around the eastern edge of Derwent Water as far as Nichol End Marina via
coffee at the Dandelion Café, the banks of which form a beautiful garden down
to the waters.
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Theatre by the Lake. |
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Tours of Derwent water. |
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The view from Friar's Crag. |
On the Sunday we attempted the western side of the Loch.
Here you go past the Theatre by the Lake that must be one of the most
picturesque settings for any theatre. Each
year this modern looking building stages up to nine productions of its own on
its two stages. Presentations that have won it much critical acclaim. It also
plays host to literature, jazz, film and mountain festivals. Moving on past the
boathouse and landing stages where visitors can get trips around Derwent Water,
you get some splendid views of the countryside surrounding the Loch especially
from Friar’s Crag. After lunch at Strandshag Bay the circular walk was
continued back to the bustle of Keswick for ice cream and a sit in the town
centre to watch the world go by.
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