Coledale Beck
Course
The beck rises north east of Eel Crag, where Pudding Beck meets Birkthwaite Beck. From there, Coledale Beck runs east north east through Coledale, between Grisedale Pike and Causey Pike. Emerging from the valley, the beck runs through the village of Braithwaite, before feeding Newlands Beck, on the way picking up Barrow Gill (running north from Barrow). Wainwright singled out the latter stream for its exceptional ravine,[1] which he described as “a gorge of amazing proportions for so slender a stream and deeper even than Piers Gill”.[2]
Literary associations
- David Wright in his poem ‘Storm’ (about the exceptional cloudburst of 1966) wrote of the Beck how “I didn’t expect the animal under our bridge...the livid rapid/ That lipped the bank and, reared on hind legs, battered/ the stone arch, hurtling missiles…. The beck had its dander up, and wonderfully….”.[3]
gollark: So if you arrange to immediately die upon nuclear war breaking out, you'll never experience nuclear war!
gollark: You see, you'll never perceive universes in which you don't exist.
gollark: You can prevent this using the anthropic principle, by living in a major, likely to be nuked city.
gollark: I don't know if it's been tested empirically, but my wild speculation is that most data storage would actually hold up basically okay.
gollark: IIRC EMPs mostly induce currents in longer wires.
References
- A Wainwright,Wainwright in the Valleys of Lakeland (London 1996) p. 209
- A Wainwright The North-Western Fells (Kendall 1964) Barrow 2
- N Nicholson ed., The Lake District (Penguin 1978) p. 154
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