Saturday, 9 July 2016
The Lake District, England
The precise extent of the
Lake District was not defined traditionally, but is slightly larger than that
of the National Park, the total area of which is about 885 square miles
(2,292 km2). The park extends
just over 32 miles (51 km) from east to west and nearly 40 miles
(64 km) from north to south, with areas such as the Lake District
Peninsulas to the south lying outside the National Park.
There are many paths over which the public
has a right of
way, all of which are signposted. Within the area of the National Park in 2012
there were 2,159 kilometres (1,342 mi) of public
footpaths, 875 kilometres (544 mi) of public
bridleways.
Many of these tracks arose centuries ago and
were used either as ridge highways or as passes for
travelling across the ridges between settlements in the valleys. Historically these
paths were not planned for reaching summits, but more recently they are used by
fell walkers for that purpose.
http://www.lakedistrict.gov.uk/
Thursday, 7 July 2016
America's First Eco Lodge
Even if you can’t stay overnight, be sure to visit the Old Faithful Inn in Yellowstone, perhaps the most beloved of all National Park historic accommodations: its soaring, 92-foot lobby, erected in 1904, is a marvelous thatch-work of gnarled and knotted tree trunks, evoking the sensation of being inside the primeval forest of Yellowstone.
Its architect Robert C. Reamer wanted to capture the wild, unruly essence of nature, arguing that the Inn should look as if it actually grew on the spot. (“I built it in keeping with the place where it stands,” Reamer wrote. “To try to improve upon it would be an impertinence.”)
Today, the Inn’s older rooms still have their original raw pinewood walls, marble sinks and claw-foot cast-iron baths; on cooler nights, the wind can sometimes whistle through old logs that make up the exterior walls. In 1959, an earthquake caused some structural damage, and its famous gabled roof is now sadly off-limits to the public – except for two individuals who are permitted to accompany a staff member raising and lowing the flags every dawn and dusk. (Not surprisingly, the ritual is hugely popular and booked up a year in advance, although it is worth asking at the reservation desk if someone has canceled).
Would-be roof-climbers should be aware that it’s not a trip for those leery of heights. Starting from the lobby, one ascends a series of rickety old stairs that seem to be suspended in mid-air as they sway underfoot like trapeze ropes. These pass by the precarious ‘Crow’s Nest’ – a tree-house for adults, where in the early 1900s a small musical ensemble would gather after dinner, to serenade the guests dancing below in formal dress. But for those lucky few visitors who make the climb, the view from the roof across the steaming fumaroles of the Upper Geyser Basin is magical. We design our journeys around the stories they will tell.
By Globus; OnTarget by Nexion
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