Ullswater is the second largest lake in the English Lake District, being approximately nine miles (14.5 kilometres) long and 0.75 miles (1,200 m) wide with a maximum depth of slightly more than 60 metres (197 ft). Many regard Ullswater as the most beautiful of the English lakes. It is a typical Lake District narrow “ribbon lake” formed after the last ice age when a glacier scooped out the valley floor and when the glacier retreated, the deepened section filled with meltwater which became a lake. A total of three separate glaciers formed the lake. The surrounding mountains give Ullswater the shape of a stretched ‘Z’ with three distinct segments that wend their way through the surrounding hills.
Address
Plan My Route
Your browser does not support geolocation
Could not determine your location, check if geolocation is enabled for this site
Start address is missing, please fill start address or use geolocation
Destination address is missing, please fill destination address
No route to this destination, change the travel mode or use another start address
Can't find the address you entered
There was an error during the request. Try again later or contact administrator
Leave a Review
Price
Location
Staff
Services
Food
Publishing ...
Your rating has been successfully sent
Please fill out all fields
Recent Comments