Skip to page content |

Tiscali Quicklinks. Please visit our Accessibility Page for a list of the Access Keys you can use to find your way around the site, skip directly to the main navigation, to the page content, or to more links within travel.

Advertisement starts



Advertisement ends

Content Starts Here


Sponsored by - Haven

Peak district

eyam tideswell bakewell ashford in the water peak district
Weather
Don't miss out. Check the weather before you go.

Peak District

Ringed by large industrial cities, the Peak District is a hallowed stamping ground. Its well-trodden valleys (always called dales) and hills nurtured are virtually loved and walked to bits, though here and there you still find pockets of real solitude.

There's a vast amount of interesting walking and sightseeing here - the latter including some choice country houses and industrial sites. Scenically there's a striking divide between the Dark Peak and the White Peak. The Dark Peak (in the north, and along the west and east edges of the Peak National Park) is an area of bleak, rather forbidding gritstone moors, with some blustery (if often boggy) viewpoints and some exciting roads for driving. The White Peak is a hundred times more gentle in character, with high, flat pastures of bright green grassland enclosed by dry stone walls, clusters of photogenic farm buildings and small old-fashioned villages all the buildings in a uniform silvery stone. Deep dales cut into the White Peak plateaux, revealing dramatic gorges such as Monsal Dale and Dove Dale.

This tour focuses on the eastern side of the area, including Chatsworth House, the caves district around Castleton, the moorland of the Dark Peak above Hathersage and the plague village of Eyam.

 

Advertisement starts



Advertisement ends

Sponsored by - Haven

Page Footer