| THE LUNESDALE STUDIO TRAIL | ||||||
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| "The work is wonderfully varied and comprises paintings, textiles, prints, sculptures, mosaics, ceramics, watercolours, drawings and photography" | ||||||
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Beautiful Lunesdale
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The River Lune emerges at St. Helen's Well in a field close to the village of Newbiggin-on-Lune and sets off on its long trip to Glasson Dock in Morecambe Bay. From its underground birth in the limestone rocks north of Newbiggin it wends its way westwards beneath the limestone escarpment of Sunbiggin to the north, and the huge bulk of the Howgill Fells - geologically a part of the Lake District - to the south.
It passes the
tiny
hamlet of Firbank and the attractive market town of Sedbergh into a
more
gentle and fertile version of the Lune Valley, with the Barbon Fells to
the east and low lying hills to the west.
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Here are the hamlets of Killington and Rigmaden, and the villages of Barbon and Casterton (another name with a Roman connection) followed by the attractive small market town of Kirkby Lonsdale ("Church town (in the) Lune's Dale"). This is where it also meets the Lunesdale Studio Trail! The Lune now enters the heart of the Studio Trail, passing the villages of Burrow (site of another Roman fort), Tunstall, Melling, Hornby and Gressingham. At Hornby it joins forces with the river Wenning (more studios!), and proceeds down the valley past an increasing number of villages - Whittington, Arkholme, Wray, Augton, Claughton, Brookhouse, Caton, and Halton. The valley floor is now a flood plain, wide and flat.
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Top of page |
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Contact the Lunesdale Studio Trail |
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