Woodland Fell
Woodland Fell is an upland area in the south of the English Lake District, south of Torver, Cumbria. It is the subject of a chapter of Wainwright's book The Outlying Fells of Lakeland.[1] Wainwright's route is a clockwise circuit from the hamlet of Woodland, and includes the summits of Yew Bank at 678 feet (207 m) and Wool Knott at 730 feet (220 m), with Beacon Tarn (also visited on his Beacon Fell walk) between them. He describes the walk as: "a connoisseur's piece, every step an uninhibited joy, every corner a delight."
References
- ^ Wainwright, A. (1974). "Woodland Fell". The Outlying Fells of Lakeland. Kendal: Westmorland Gazette. pp. 102–107.
54°17′50″N 3°07′10″W / 54.29722°N 3.11944°W / 54.29722; -3.11944
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Wainwright's The Outlying Fells of Lakeland
for single summits
- Beacon Fell
- Bigland Barrow
- Black Combe
- Blawith Knott
- Boat How
- Brant Fell
- Burney
- Caermote Hill
- Carron Crag
- Cartmel Fell
- Caw
- Claife Heights
- Clints Crags
- Cold Fell
- Dunmallet
- Dunnerdale Fells
- Faulds Brow
- Finsthwaite Heights
- Hampsfell
- Great Worm Crag
- Green Quarter Fell
- Gummer's How
- Hesk Fell
- Heughscar Hill
- High Knott
- Howes
- Hugill Fell
- Humphrey Head
- Irton Pike
- Knipescar Common
- Latterbarrow
- Muncaster Fell
- Newton Fell
- Orrest Head
- Ponsonby Fell
- Potter Fell
- Reston Scar
- School Knott
- Scout Scar
- Seat Robert
- Stainton Pike
- Staveley Fell
- Stickle Pike
- Top o'Selside
- Walna Scar
- Watch Hill
- Whitbarrow
- Whit Fell
- Woodland Fell
for circuits, groups
and horseshoes
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