Saturday, August 30

Today we drove to Buttermere village for a walk around Buttermere Lake. The village and the lake derive their names from a 10th Century Norseman leader named "Buther" and "mere* meaning lake.  This walk has been popular since Victorian times (1837 to 1901).  To get there we drove across Honister Pass, the site of a slate mine.  Slate has been quarried from this area since Elizabethan times (1558).

Later in the day we visited Bowder Stone, a four-story tall rock that was a popular tourist destination during the Georgian Era (named after the reign of the kings George I, George II, George III and George IV from 1714 -1830). Tourists have been coming to the Lake District for a long time...



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