
Trail Facts
Total distance:
70 miles (112km)
Duration: 7 nights, 6 days walking
Minimum/maximum daily distances: 8 miles (13km)/14 miles (22.5km)
Season: All year
Starting point of holiday: Ulverston
End of holiday: Carlisle
Code: CUMW2
Itinerary
Day 1:
Travel to Ulverston where your first nights accommodation has been booked.
Day 2: Ulverston to Coniston. 14 miles (22.5km).
Day 3: Coniston to Great Langdale. 12 miles (19km).
Day 4: Great Langdale to Rosthwaite. 8 miles (13km).
Day 5: Rosthwaite to Keswick. 8 miles (13km).
Day 6: Keswick to Caldbeck. 14 miles (22.5km).
Day 7: Caldbeck to Carlisle. 14 miles (22.5km).
Day 8: Depart Carlisle after breakfast
Extra nights/rest days
An extra night gives you
a chance to explore some of the villages and old market towns along the trail,
catch up with writing postcards or just relaxing and giving those weary legs
a rest.
There is plenty to see and do around Coniston; a walk to the summit of Coniston
Old Man, boat trips on Coniston Water on the elegant Victorian steam yacht 'Gondola',
the Ruskin Museum in the village and the home of John Ruskin, the author, critic,
artist and philanthropist who lived at Brantwood on the eastern side of the
lake. Another possibility would be a trip to the little 17th century cottage,
Hill Top, where Beatrix Potter wrote many of her books or the picturesque village
of Hawkshead. Among the interesting buildings in the village is Hawkshead Courthouse,
St. Michael's Church, the solicitors offices of William Heelis, husband of Beatrix
Potter, that contains an exhibition of the illustrations from her children's
books and the old Grammar school, where Wordsworth was educated; the desk on
which he carved his name can still be seen.
If you prefer somewhere quieter Rosthwaite is a good choice for a rest day.
There are many lovely walks in the hills around Borrowdale.
The old market town of Keswick is another good choice for an extra night. It
is a bustling little town with plenty of shops, inns and cafes. There are boat
trips on Derwentwater, or you could walk to the mystical Castlerigg Stone Circle,
the fine viewpoint of Friar's Crag or climb Skiddaw, the fourth highest mountain
in England.
Many people take an extra night at the end of the tour in Carlisle and visit
the award winning Tullie House Museum, the 12th century cathedral, the half-timbered
guildhall that houses a local history museum and the vast medieval castle, with
its ancient chambers, stairways and the dungeons that contain the infamous 'licking
stones'. Here, parched Jacobite prisoners found enough moisture to stay alive,
only to be brutally executed on Gallows Hill.
What's included?
Travel Information
Detailed instructions on
how to get to the start of the holiday and back from the end of it are sent
to you on booking. A summary is given below.
Most convenient major city and International airport: Manchester
Airport. There is a direct train service to Ulverston (2 hours 15 minutes).
Outward journey from London to Ulverston: Train from London
Euston to Lancaster or Preston, then change trains for Ulverston (4 hours 20
minutes). Your first night's accommodation in Ulverston is a 5-minute walk from
the station.
Return journey to London at the end of the holiday: Short
walk or taxi to Carlisle railway station. Train to London Euston (4 ½
hours).
Return journey to Manchester Airport at the end of the holiday:
Short walk or taxi to Carlisle railway station. Train to Preston or Wigan, then
change trains for Manchester Airport (3 ½ hours).