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Hull Pot, Yorkshire Dales, England

·228 words·2 mins
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After two weeks of illness kicking both me and Lisabet hard in the dick, it was nice to have a weekend where we were both well and the weather looked good.

We took full advantage—of a lie in—then made our ways towards Horton-in-Ribblesdale, a small village in the heart of the Yorkshire Dales. It was here that we would take a glorious hike along the Pennine Way towards Hull Pot and Pen-y-ghent.

Hull Pot is essentially the remains of a cave, of which there are many in the Yorkshire Dales, where the “roof” has collapsed, leaving a giant chasm in the surrounding moorland underneath Pen-y-ghent. It’s the largest natural hole in England, measuring 300 ft long, 60 ft wide, and 60 ft deep.

But arguably the main showstopper of the area is Pen-y-ghent (694 m/2,277 ft), the fell that dominates the skyline all around the Ribblesdale valley. It’s an unusual name as it sounds very Welsh; that’s because the name survives from ancient Cumbric, which is related to Welsh. Pen means “top” or “head” and y is usually the definite article. Ghent could mean “edge” or “border”, giving the fell’s name as “Hill on the border”.

Shots taken on a Fujifilm X-T2 using the Fujinon XC 16-50mm f/3.5-5.6 OIS lens. Also an extra one or two with my Google Pixel 3XL using a Moment 18mm v2 wide lens.

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