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|  | Page 30:- the panorama. In short, Wast Water affords many peculiarities 
well worth visiting once, but scarcely sufficient to yield that 
increased degree of pleasure in a second or third inspection, 
which would be experienced on Derwent, Ullswater, or Windermere.
 
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| fish inns
 
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|  | The fish of Wast Water are chiefly trout, with which it is well 
stored: it also contains a few char. Boats are kept by 
neighbouring gentlemen for the diversion of angling; and the 
appearance of the Screes from the lake is magnificent. At Nether 
Wasdale, about a mile and a half from the foot of the lake, there 
are two public houses where travellers may have refreshment for 
themselves and horses: there is no other between this and 
Rosthwaite in Borrowdale, a distance of fourteen miles, one third 
of which is very difficult mountain road. 
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| inns houses
 
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|  | Wasdale Head consists of about half a dozen dwellings sheltered 
by trees, and a small Chapel, in the midst of an area of arable 
land, encircled by the loftiest mountains. A public house here is 
much wanted by travellers; on which account the hospitality of 
the inhabitants is not unfrequently drawn upon by strangers. 
Bowderdale has a single farm house, in a lateral valley opening 
near the middle of the lake. At Crook Head, near the foot of the 
lake, Stansfield Rawson, Esq. of Halifax, has a neat Gothic 
summer residence. 
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|  | gazetteer links 
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|   | -- Bowderdale | 
 
 
|   | -- "Crookhead (?)" -- Crook Head | 
 
 
|   | -- Nether Wasdale | 
 
 
|   | -- Screes, The | 
 
 
|   | -- St Olaf's Church | 
 
 
|   | -- Strands Hotel | 
 
 
|   | -- Wasdale Head | 
 
 
|   | -- Wast Water | 
 
 
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