The Lakes and winter’s delights

The Larches has been full of people and fun over the festive period and though the weather hasn’t been brilliant, there’s been plenty of good walking and good company. The picture above taken on Boxing Day from the route up Cat Bells – a favourite of ours – shows just how intriguing the views in the Lakes can be, whatever the season.

We are always surprised how quiet the Lake District is in the first three months of the new year. Just a few people know about the area’s treasures and attractions in winter, so don’t spread the word too widely!

There may be snow on occasions on high ground – to try out your crampons and ice axe techniques if you wish – and you have the fells to yourself for much of the time, quite often with sun and blue skies.

As the weeks go by after darkest December 21st, the daylight hours expand rapidly, gaining an extra 2¼ hours by mid February. So why not get your friends to join you for an early break at low season rates?

For us it’s also a time for clearing up in the garden and removing stacks of leaves, dead bracken and of course old Christmas trees (see photo opposite of ours being trimmed down for more effective composting).

This year we’ve bought a new ceramic sculpture, High Point, by Gordon Cooke, (see below) which now sits on its plinth below the Belvedere, displayed against the background of an ancient slate gate post, found in the garden.

The two small holes at the gate’s top mimic the larger holes of the stoop stone we have beside the breakfast terrace (photo above). High Point is already starting to look a natural part of the environment and will encourage us to keep the long grass and ferns down over the summer. Its lava flow form reminds us of our daughter Chloe’s time researching the eruptions and pyroclastic flows of the Soufrière Hills on the island of Montserrat.

Keswick & shopping in 2012

Keswick centre has been full of lights and decorations over Christmas and New Year, as the photo of the Moot Hall shows.

It has brightened up the town, but the view of shopkeepers and others has been more gloomy. Trade and visitors have been down on last year, despite the mild weather with none of the deep freeze conditions of December 2010, when even Derwentwater froze over for days.

With job cuts and wage freezes, an economy in recession and now a euro zone crisis affecting Europe and wider, it’s hardly surprising that Cumbria is taking some battering.

But there are other signs councils and planners need to take account of. Britain’s high streets and shopping practices are changing – and changing fast. An Ofcom report (December 2010) showed we are leading the way in Europe in moving over to online shopping.

79% of us buy goods online compared with Germany (73%), France (70%) and Italy (27%) and it showed in our streets. There’s been an army of delivery vans and drivers knocking on doors up to Christmas. No longer is the Royal Mail the only show in town.

More than 30 national companies like UPS and DFS offer national parcel services. A driver I spoke to had to make 80-90 drops a day. The scale of this change over the last decade is startling and rapid.

No wonder Mary Portas in her recent report for the Government (Daily Telegraph, 12 December 2011) has warned that the high street could disappear for ever unless we take action now. Some areas already have almost 40% of empty shops and Keswick is not immune to this. There are too many competing cut price sports shops in the town, with Blacks announcing on Christmas Eve that it was likely to go into receivership in early 2012. Others could follow.

Keswick has a wider base of shops than some areas with stalls on market days too, but it should not rest content. The council must explore with others what more needs to be done to ensure that the town remains a vibrant and exciting place for visitors and shoppers beyond 2012.