Photographs taken around Loweswater, Lamplugh and Mockerkin in the English Lake District.
LOCAL GALLERIES: Crummock Water - Ennerdale - Cockermouth
St Michael's Church with a backdrop of Owsen Fell at Lamplugh on the edge of the Lake District in West Cumbria.
Designed by William Butterfield of London and built in 1870 on the site of a much older church. Many of the original features, such as the gargoyles were retained and incorporated into the new build. The church contains three windows by Charles E. Kempe.
Stained glass window by Charles Eamer Kempe in the Church of St Michael and All Angels at Lamplugh in Cumbria.
Saint Oswald and Saint Aidan window by C.E. Kempe and Co. Ltd in the Church of St Michael and All Angels at Lamplugh in Cumbria.
Archangels Gabriel, Michael and Raphael window by C.E. Kempe and Co. Ltd in the Church of St Michael and All Angels at Lamplugh in Cumbria.
The 1595 gateway to Lamplugh Hall in the village of Lamplugh, West Cumbria.
The gateway to Lamplugh Hall bears the coat of arms of John Lamplugh and is dated 1595.
Loweswater in the Lake District, Cumbria.
NB: There is a swarm of midges by the edge of the lake, visible when zoomed in.
Admiring the view from the slopes of Burnbank Fell over Loweswater and Crummock Water towards Whiteside and Grasmoor.
View from Burnbank Fell over Holme Wood, Loweswater and Crummock Water towards Loweswater Fell, Whiteside and Grasmoor in the Lake District, Cumbria.
The old corpse road running through Holme Wood on the shores of Loweswater in the Lake District, Cumbria.
The dead from Loweswater used to be carried via the ‘corpse road’ through Holm Wood, for burial at St Bees.
Walkers in Holme Wood on the shore of Loweswater in the Lake District, Cumbria.
The Goblin Tree in Holme Wood, Loweswater in the Lake District, Cumbria.
Highnook Tarn above the southern shores of Loweswater in the Lake District, Cumbria.
Fell walker and dog beside Highnook Tarn, a corrie tarn above the southern shores of Loweswater in the Lake District, Cumbria.
A northerly view from Loweswater Village Hall in the Lake District, Cumbria.
Crummock Water, Rannerdale Knotts, High Stile and Haystacks lie in the distance, with Mellbreak to the right of the photo.
The Millennium plaque naming the fells that make up the wonderful view from Loweswater Village Hall in the Lake District, Cumbria.
Crummock Water, Rannerdale Knotts, High Stile and Haystacks make up the backdrop with Mellbreak rising to the right of the photo.
A country lane at Loweswater in the Lake District, Cumbria.
Crummock Water and Rannerdale Knotts lie in the distance with Mellbreak rising to the right of the photo.
The River Cocker at Loweswater in the Lake District, Cumbria.
The Cocker rises at the head of the Buttermere valley then flows north through Buttermere, Crummock Water and Loweswater through to reach the town of Cockermouth, where it joins the River Derwent.