1) The Lake District is about brilliant vistas and beautiful walks/sailings, not just hiking. Although - hiking is great!
2)Walk the Cat Bells - not too high for average adults - but a fun walk for you and older kids.
3) Walk around Buttermere for a great stressless fun easy walk with younger kids, and during summer there is often an Ice Cream van at the end!
4) If you want to do the mountains then buy an OS maps, you'll need them!
There are lots of mountains in the lakes - buy OS map OL7 (The English Lakes) Then you'll need OL5, probably OL4 too, and possibly OL19 and 31! You can count the hills and mountains then! Cheers, have fun ;-)
One - Bassenthwaite Lake ... the rest are 'waters' and 'meres'
lake district
Yes there are, but it depends how you define mountain. According to the ramblers Association there are 248 mountains in the lake District with Scafell Pike being the highest at 978 metres. The four tallest mountains in the lake district are Scafell Pike, Scafell, Helvellyn, and Skiddaw, all of which are well over 900 m (3,000 ft).
I said Lake District in the United Kingdom. How else do you want me to put it?
The Lake district (in Cumbria, England) is a natural phenomenon and has been called the "Lake District" because it has many lakes since ancient times. The "Lake District National Park" was established 1951 to protect the environment of the Lake District.
many many many people are murdered in the lake district!! however some just comit sucide.
The Lake District where? Many places have lake districts, please resubmit with a more detailed question
There are two mountains that surround Moosehead Lake: Longfellow Mountains and Mount Kineo. Moosehead Lake is the largest lake located in Maine.
STEPHEN HEBRON has written: 'SOLITUDE OF MOUNTAINS: CONSTABLE AND THE LAKE DISTRICT'
you have to make a rainbow in maple lake district and cross it to get to the mountains
Yes, England has many mountains. A mountain is defined as a peak of over 2000 feet. There are just over 200 in England, mostly in the Lake District in the North-West. The top three are (all in Lake District): Scafell Pike 3,209 feet Scafell 3,163 feet Helvellyn 3,117 feetThe highest mountain in England is Scafell Pike at 3000 feet.
The Cuillin (on Skye, and island off Scotland) Monadhliath Mountains (Scotland) Grampian Mountains (Scotland) Cairngorm Mountains (Scotland) Cambrian Mountains (Wales) - The Brecon Beacons - Snowdonia The Pennines (England) The Lake District (England) The Peak District (England)
The Lake District actually borders the Irish Sea at Ravenglass