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Buttermere with Fleetwith Pike behind, seen from the popular footpath around the lake. The Lake District, Cumbria, England, UK

Dry stone wall and gate on a trail that follows the southern shore of Ullswater, Lake District National Park, UNESCO Worl Heritage Site, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom, Europe

Newlands Valley Drive and Newlands Pass, near Buttermere in the Lake District, Cumbria, England UK. The pass reaches 1,093 feet and leads to Derwent Water..

The Neolithic Castlerigg Stone Circle dating from around 3000 BC, near Keswick, Lake District National Park, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom, Europe

The Neolithic Castlerigg Stone Circle dating from around 3000 BC, near Keswick, Lake District National Park, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom, Europe

Rydal Water, 2 km long and over 15 metres deep, Lake District National Park, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom, Europe

Rydal Water, 2 km long and over 15 metres deep, Lake District National Park, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom, Europe

The Neolithic Castlerigg Stone Circle dating from around 3000 BC, near Keswick, Lake District National Park, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom, Europe

Castlerigg Stone Circle, dating from the Neolithic era, around 3000 BC, near Keswick, Lake District National Park, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom, Europe

On Friday 11th July 2014, the Young Ospreys that nest on Bassenthwaite in the Lake District National Park, Cumbria, UK, are ringed and fitted with a satelite tracker. they are ringed by Pete Davis, a licensed bird ringer, and the satelite tracker is fitred by Roy Dennis. Roy is theonly person in the UK, licensed to fit satelite trackers to birds of prey. The tracing is part of the Bassenthwaite Osprey project, to see whereabouts in Africa the young migrate to, before returning hopefully to the UK to nest.Ospreys recolonized the Lake district in 2001, after an absence ovf over 150 years. In the last fourteen years of breeding over half a million people have visited the project to view these spectacular fish eating birds.

On Friday 11th July 2014, the Young Ospreys that nest on Bassenthwaite in the Lake District National Park, Cumbria, UK, are ringed and fitted with a satelite tracker. they are ringed by Pete Davis, a licensed bird ringer, and the satelite tracker is fitred by Roy Dennis. Roy is theonly person in the UK, licensed to fit satelite trackers to birds of prey. The tracing is part of the Bassenthwaite Osprey project, to see whereabouts in Africa the young migrate to, before returning hopefully to the UK to nest.Ospreys recolonized the Lake district in 2001, after an absence ovf over 150 years. In the last fourteen years of breeding over half a million people have visited the project to view these spectacular fish eating birds.

On Friday 11th July 2014, the Young Ospreys that nest on Bassenthwaite in the Lake District National Park, Cumbria, UK, are ringed and fitted with a satelite tracker. they are ringed by Pete Davis, a licensed bird ringer, and the satelite tracker is fitred by Roy Dennis. Roy is theonly person in the UK, licensed to fit satelite trackers to birds of prey. The tracing is part of the Bassenthwaite Osprey project, to see whereabouts in Africa the young migrate to, before returning hopefully to the UK to nest.Ospreys recolonized the Lake district in 2001, after an absence ovf over 150 years. In the last fourteen years of breeding over half a million people have visited the project to view these spectacular fish eating birds.

On Friday 11th July 2014, the Young Ospreys that nest on Bassenthwaite in the Lake District National Park, Cumbria, UK, are ringed and fitted with a satelite tracker. they are ringed by Pete Davis, a licensed bird ringer, and the satelite tracker is fitred by Roy Dennis. Roy is theonly person in the UK, licensed to fit satelite trackers to birds of prey. The tracing is part of the Bassenthwaite Osprey project, to see whereabouts in Africa the young migrate to, before returning hopefully to the UK to nest.Ospreys recolonized the Lake district in 2001, after an absence ovf over 150 years. In the last fourteen years of breeding over half a million people have visited the project to view these spectacular fish eating birds.