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Troutbeck Tongue

Troutbeck Tongue
Troutbeck Tongue from Troutbeck.jpg
Troutbeck Tongue as seen from the approach along Ing Lane
Highest point
Elevation 364 m (1,194 ft)
Prominence c.70 m
Parent peak Froswick
Listing Wainwright
Coordinates 54°26′59″N 2°53′34″W / 54.44969°N 2.8929°W / 54.44969; -2.8929Coordinates: 54°26′59″N 2°53′34″W / 54.44969°N 2.8929°W / 54.44969; -2.8929
Geography
Troutbeck Tongue is located in Lake District
Troutbeck Tongue
Troutbeck Tongue
Location in Lake District, UK
Location Cumbria, England
Parent range Lake District, Far Eastern Fells
OS grid NY422064
Topo map OS Explorer OL7

Troutbeck Tongue is a small fell located in the English Lake District, three miles (five kilometres) ENE of Ambleside. It is one of 214 hills listed in Alfred Wainwright's Pictorial Guides to the Lakeland Fells, which makes it a popular attraction for walkers who are aiming to complete all the "Wainwrights". Because of its moderate height and proximity to a main road it is a pleasant half-day excursion that can be done when the higher fells are in cloud.

Troutbeck Tongue branches off south-westward from the main Ill Bell ridge, just north of Froswick. It separates Trout Beck from Hagg Gill, its main upper tributary. These two streams almost reconverge behind the fell, the col connecting to Froswick being at only 968 feet (295 m). This depression carries a number of ancient cairns at the base of the long grassy back-slope of the fell. The character of this side is in marked contrast to the southern tip of the fell, which drops steeply over rocky outcrops to Troutbeck Park.

The fell is usually climbed from the village of Troutbeck on the A592 road three miles (five kilometres) north of the town of Windermere. From the village it is a pleasant walk to the base of the fell, following the course of the Trout Beck along Ing Lane which leads to Troutbeck Park Farm. This 1,900 acre (7.7 km²) sheep farm was bought by the children's book author and illustrator Beatrix Potter in 1923; it was in danger of development and so she decided to purchase it. When she died in 1943, she left the farm and its land to the National Trust, along with 13 other farms she owned in the Lake District.

The ascent of the fell begins at the farm. It is quite a steep climb with several rocky outcrops and walls and fences to negotiate, but the modest height of the fell makes it a short ascent of less than 30 minutes. There is some evidence of quarrying near the top of the fell, and this is marked on the Ordnance Survey map.


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Wikipedia

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