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Shipman Knotts

Shipman Knotts
Shipman Knotts from Goat Scar.jpg
Shipman Knotts seen from
the cairn on Goat Scar
Highest point
Elevation 587 m (1,926 ft)
Prominence c. 10 m / 33 ft
Parent peak Kentmere Pike
Listing Wainwright
Coordinates 54°26′58″N 2°48′57″W / 54.44934°N 2.81579°W / 54.44934; -2.81579Coordinates: 54°26′58″N 2°48′57″W / 54.44934°N 2.81579°W / 54.44934; -2.81579
Geography
Shipman Knotts is located in Lake District
Shipman Knotts
Shipman Knotts
Location in Lake District, UK
Location Cumbria, England
Parent range Lake District, Far Eastern Fells
OS grid NY472063
Topo map

OS Landranger

OS Explorer Outdoor Leisure OL7

OS Landranger

Shipman Knotts is a fell in the English Lake District in Cumbria, England. It reaches a height of 587 m (1,926 ft) and is situated in one of the quieter areas of the national park, two kilometres (1¼ miles) north-east of Kentmere village. Although not one of the best-known Lake District fells and strictly speaking it is just the southern shoulder of Kentmere Pike it earned a separate chapter in Alfred Wainwright’s Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells due to “Its characteristic roughness…rocky outcrops are everywhere on its steep slopes”.

The ridge from Shipman Knotts to Kentmere Pike climbs due north as far as the cairned top of Goat Scar (2,053 feet / 626 metres), before turning north-west to complete its journey. A wall follows the ridge although in places it zigzags abruptly off the watershed. The eastern face above Longsleddale is steeper and includes Rough Crags and Goat Scar itself. The western face is rough but, after the initial climb out of Kentmere, has shallower gradients. There are small areas of mixed woodland on both sides.

South of Shipman Knotts, across the unnamed walkers’ pass from Kentmere to Longsleddale, is a broad upland area between the two valleys. This continues for five miles (eight kilometres) to the confluence of the Sprint and Kent at Burnseside. There are a number of lower hills within this area, including Hollow Moor (1,397 feet / 426 metres) (described under "Green Quarter Fell" in Wainwright's The Outlying Fells of Lakeland) and Brunt Knott (1,400 feet / 427 metres) (described under "Potter Fell" in the same book). This ridge is also decorated by an unusual number of tarns for the south-eastern Lake District, the principal waterbodies being Skeggles Water, Gurnal Dubs and Potter Tarn.

The summit consists of three rocky hummocks on the east side of the wall. The middle one is considered the highest point and gives a good view of Longsleddale, although much of the view is restricted by nearby fells of a higher elevation.


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Wikipedia

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