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Graham
05-08-2014, 07:44 PM
Blencathra sale: Community groups bid to buy mountain (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cumbria-27313889)
BBC NEWS 7 MAY 2014http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/74701000/jpg/_74701246_blencathraindex.jpg
Blencathra was described by writer Alfred Wainwright as "one of the grandest objects in Lakeland"Community campaigns have been launched to buy a Lake District fell put up for sale by its owner who needs to settle a £9m inheritance tax bill.

Blencathra has been put on the market by the Earl of Lonsdale with an asking price of £1.75m.

The Friends of Blencathra group and Buy Blencathra are aiming prevent the mountain being sold to a foreign bidder.

Also known as Saddleback, it has been in the Earl's family for 400 years.

More than 1,500 people have become members of Friends of Blencathra on Facebook while the group's @helpblencathra Twitter account has more than 200 followers.

It is being led by Debbie Cosgrove, of Allerby, who works as a project manager for Allerdale Council in west Cumbria.

'Iconic' mountain

She said: "We're getting such a lot of interest with people pledging money.

"It would be a very sad day [if someone from overseas buys it]. They will have it on a piece of paper in their portfolio, but they may never come and walk on it.

"Blencathra is iconic. This is an opportunity for people in the local area to own a little piece of the Lake District."

The team behind it are holding a public meeting at Embleton Village Hall on Sunday which will be attended by co-operative enterprise experts.

The Friends are looking to establish a trust with community ownership.

Buy Blencathra, meanwhile, has more than 400 'likes' on Facebook. It is proposing donating the fell to the National Trust.

The Earl of Lonsdale, Hugh Lowther, said he placed the 2,676 acre plot on the market to settle the tax bill following his father's death rather than evict tenants and sell the properties.

The closing date for sealed bids is 2 July.

John Robson, of sales agent H&H Land and Property, said: "We've had an awful lot of hits on the website and the phones have been red hot.

"It will be interesting to see whether that turns into real interest in buying the mountain."

Graham
05-08-2014, 07:45 PM
Blencathra area is where my Grandad and great grandparents are from, Penrudduck area. It would be preferable for a community group buy-out.

Graham
05-08-2014, 07:58 PM
Blencathra sale: Who owns Britain's mountains? (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-27294829)
BBC NEWS 8 MAY 2014http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/74707000/jpg/_74707397_178455296(1).jpg
Most of Tryfan, in Snowdonia, is owned by the National TrustOne of Britain's most famous mountains is up for sale, with a price tag of £1.75m.

The Earl of Lonsdale, Hugh Lowther, is looking to offload Blencathra, in the Lake District, to help settle a £9m tax bill.

The peak, which stands at 2,850ft (869m), was voted number seven in a recent poll of Britain's 10 favourite mountains.

But who owns the other nine?

The National Trust owns most of the top-rated mountain, Tryfan, in Snowdonia, and at least a share of two more in the top 10. The National Trust for Scotland, which is a separate organisation, owns two of the Scottish peaks.

The National Trust was gifted a number of fells in 1923 by the Fell and Rock Climbing Club of the English Lake District.

The top 10 UK mountains (Trail magazine poll)


Tryfan, Snowdonia, north Wales
Helvellyn, Lake District, England
Snowdon, Snowdonia, north Wales
An Teallach, northwest Highlands, Scotland
Buachaille Etive Mor, central Highlands, Scotland
Great Gable, Lake District, England
Blencathra, Lake District, England
Ben Nevis, central Highlands, Scotland
Suilven, northern Highlands, Scotland
Liathach, northwest Highlands, Scotland

Second in the poll, carried out in January by Trail magazine, was Helvellyn, England's third highest peak, which is shared between the Lake District National Park Authority, on the east side, and United Utilities, on the west.

The summit of Snowdon, which came third in the poll, is jointly owned by the Snowdonia National Park Authority, the National Trust and a private estate, the park authority said.

Two of the other Scottish peaks in the top 10 are owned by charitable organisations.

Suilven, in the northern Highlands, was bought in 2005 by community group The Assynt Foundation, while the upper slopes of Ben Nevis, Britain's highest peak, are owned by the John Muir Trust, named after the Scot who was credited with helping to establish the US's national parks.

http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/74689000/jpg/_74689396_457388859.jpg
One side of Helvellyn is owned by the Lake District National Park Authority and the other by United Utilities
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/74689000/jpg/_74689402_103958297.jpg
Ownership of Snowdon is split between the National Trust, the national park authority and a private trust
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/74675000/jpg/_74675612_179813349.jpg
An Teallach, a Munro standing at 3,400ft (1,036), was sold in 2000 to a private buyer
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/74675000/jpg/_74675611_464770095.jpg
The National Trust for Scotland owns Buachaille Etive Mor, in Glencoe
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/74675000/jpg/_74675610_176813674.jpg
Great Gable, in the western Lake District, belongs to the National Trust
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/74653000/jpg/_74653306_74653305.jpg
Blencathra: On the market for £1.75m
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/74675000/jpg/_74675900_74674894.jpg
Ben Nevis, Britain's highest peak, is owned by the John Muir charitable trust
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/74692000/jpg/_74692101_93440591(1).jpg
The Highland estate containing Suilven was bought by a community group in 2005
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/74693000/jpg/_74693304_liathach(1).jpg
Liathach, in the Highlands: Owned by the National Trust for Scotland

The John Muir Trust is considering bidding for Blencathra, its chief executive Stuart Brooks confirmed (https://twitter.com/StamfordBrooks/status/463664504862429184)on Twitter.
But the National Trust will not be adding the mountain to its portfolio, writing on Twitter (https://twitter.com/nationaltrust/status/463699749154349056)that this was because of the "existing high levels of protection and public access".

Trail magazine editor Simon Ingram said Blencathra was, for many people, "the perfect Lake District mountain", and the idea of it being sold was "surreal".

But whoever owns the mountain tops in years to come, climbing up there shouldn't be a problem - the Countryside Rights of Way Act 2000 covers mountains and moorland in England and Wales, while Scotland's "right to roam" laws allow widespread access to walkers.