button to main menu   West's Guide to the Lakes, 1778/1821

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Page 270:-
well supplied with this article from Ingleton, it was soon deserted.- Being so near the top of Whernside, we ventured to ascend to the summit. The prospects were not diversified with many pleasing objects, being surrounded almost on all sides with brown and blue chaotic mountains. We had a peep into the pleasant vale of Dent beneath us, which made us wish to see it all. Pendle-hill appeared over the top of Ingleborough, which gave us a high idea of our own elevation, this latter mountain being much higher than the former. We were surprised to see four or five tarns, or pools of water, on a plain very near the summit of Whernside. Two of them were large, being two or three hundred yards in length, and nearly of the same breadth (for one was almost circular, but the other oblong.) There was a very thin bed of coal almost on the top of this mountain, and we were told another corresponded with it on the top of great Colm, a lofty mountain on the other side of that branch of the vale of Dent called Dibdale.- We were told some curious anecdotes of the vast cunning and sagacity of the sheep-dogs in this country, in discovering the sheep that had been buried under large drifts of snow for some days, and that must inevitably have perished with hunger, or been drowned with the melting of the that vapour, if not discovered by these useful animals.
We now shaped our course back to Winterscales, and from thence to a public-house called Gearstones, by the side of the turnpike road, at the bottom of the mountain Cam. Here we refreshed ourselves, and left our horses, while we went about half a mile to the south, to explore another subterranean wonder of nature called Catknot-hole. The entrance into it is at first not above three or four feet high, but almost immediately increases to as many yards. We had not gone out of sight of day before we were obliged to wade up to the mid leg a few yards, through a little pool made by the rill that comes out of this cave. The passage grew narrower, but wide enough to walk along with ease, except in one or two places, where we in danger of daubing our clothes with a red slime. We proceeded above a quarter of a mile, when the road grew wider, but the roof was so low that we could
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gazetteer links
button -- Cam (?)
button -- Dentdale
button --
button -- Great Coum
button -- "Greenside Cave" -- Greensett Caves
button -- Ingleborough
button -- "Catknot Hole" -- Katnot Cave
button -- "Pendle Hill" -- Pendle HillPendle Hill
button -- Whernside Tarns
button -- "Whernside" -- Whernside
button -- (Winterscales ...)

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