Watendlath
Watendlath | |
Cumberland | |
---|---|
Packhorse bridge at Watendlath | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | NY274163 |
Location: | 54°32’14"N, 3°7’17"W |
Data | |
Post town: | Keswick |
Postcode: | CA12 |
Dialling code: | 017687 |
Local Government | |
Council: | Cumberland |
Parliamentary constituency: |
Copeland |
Watendlath is a hamlet and a tarn (a small lake) in Cumberland.
Watendlath is owned by the National Trust and sits high between the Borrowdale and Thirlmere valleys at 863 feet above sea level.
The name of the village is from the Old Norse vatn-endi-hlaða, meaning "water-end-barn".
Watendlath Tarn
Blea Tarn Gill, 700 feet above Watendlath Tarn, provides the tarn with its water. Water from Watendlath Tarn flows into the beck of the same name and eventually feeds Lodore Falls, and ends up in Derwent Water.
The tarn is 7 acres in size, with a maximum depth of 56 feet. It was given to the National Trust by Queen Victoria's daughter, Princess Louise, in memory of her brother, King Edward VII.
Watendlath Tarn is stocked with brown trout and rainbow trout and is a popular fly fishing water, with wading and boat fishing used.
Farm
The traditional Lakeland farm in Watendlath is rented out by the National Trust and, as is the case with Lakeland farms owned by the Trust, the herd of Herdwick sheep are owned by the Trust and not the farmer, changing hands with each tenant. This is part of the National Trust's policy aimed at ensuring this rare breed's survival.
Fold Head Farm house was used by Sir Hugh Walpole as the fictional home of Judith Paris in his Herries Saga of four novels published in the early 1930s
Watendlath in poetry
Edmund Casson's poem The Wise Kings of Borrowdale:
Watendlath's quiet nook.
A farm is there, and a slated barn,
And a waterfall, and a pebbly tarn;
And all the way to High Lodore
The banks of the beck are painted o'er
With red herb-willow and red loose-strife.
Packhorse bridge
- Main article: Watendlath Packhorse Bridge
One of the features of Watendlath is a traditional packhorse bridge, "perhaps the best-known and most photographed packhorse bridge in the whole of England".[1] It is a Grade II listed structure.[2]
In 2015 Watendlath's packhorse bridge was named 4th best bridge in England to play Poohsticks on.[3]
Access by road
Watendlath is reached by a minor road from the Borrowdale road (B5289). The single track unmarked road winds its way up over Ashness Bridge, which is a traditional stone-built bridge and a very famous landmark. Motorists encountering any traffic coming in the opposite direction on the single track road must use the passing places that are provided. Near the bridge is a cairn to the Lakeland fell-runner Robert Graham, who in 1932 set a Lakeland 24-hour record of 42 tops, which was not equalled for 28 years.
Dora Carrington
One famous painting of Watendlath is by Dora Carrington, which today hangs in the Tate Gallery.
During the period 1917-21 Carrington's subjects were mostly intimate portraits and landscapes. The painting depicts Watendlath Farm, where the newly-wed Carrington spent a summer holiday with her husband and their friends in 1921. Among the guests was her husband's friend, Gerald Brenan, with whom she developed a mutual attraction. The identity of the two figures in white is not known.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Watendlath) |
- Dora Carrington, Farm at Watendlath, Tate Gallery
References
- ↑ Hinchliffe, Ernest (1994). A Guide to the Packhorse Bridges of England. Milnrow: Cicerone Press. p. 53. ISBN 1-85284-143-5.
- ↑ National Heritage List 1119616: Watendlath Packhorse Bridge
- ↑ Visit England - Pooh-sticks