Crummock Water

Thorn Of Crowns

The Rites of Spring & the Secret of Crummock Water

May 12th, 2019

In 1988, divers made a grisly discovery in Crummock Water: they recovered the body of a woman, chained to a car cylinder head. Her name was Sheena, and she has become the forgotten Lady of the Lake. Thirty one years later, I walk from Ennerdale Water over Great Borne, the air filled with the song of the cuckoo and the fragrance of hawthorn blossom. These traditional harbingers of spring are the stuff of folk ritual, but as I reach Red Pike and look down on Crummock Water, I recall Sheena’s story, and I wonder whether ancient beliefs may yet have something to teach us.

“I have a friend who’s a radio announcer. He stops talking when he walks under bridges”—just one in a rich seam of dry one-liners from the skewed imagination of US comic, Steven Wright. It’s a joke that may be lost on anyone who’s grown up with digital radio, unless, of course, they drive over Corney Fell. Here invisible bridges eat digital radio signal at regular intervals, so I miss most of what Radcliffe and Maconie are saying about the harbingers of spring, but I do catch something about superstition and the May Tree.

The radio show might have dissolved into stuttered fragments, but the view is unswervingly impressive. We’ve not been starved of sunny days recently, but the light has often been hazy, rendering the landscape as a washed-out impression. Today is different. Everything is in high definition. The pepper pot of Stainton Tower is pin-sharp and the Irish Sea bluer than I’ve ever seen. The Isle of Man rises in the distance like a mythical kingdom from a skirt of sea-mist. The rites of spring are afoot, and the staccato radio reception seems somewhat appropriate, for what are superstitions if not stuttered fragments of once coherent beliefs.

Ennerdale Water from Herdus
Ennerdale Water from Herdus

Before long, I’m edging down the single-track lane to Bowness Knott on the shore of Ennerdale Water with Herdus’s western ridge rising impressively ahead. As I step out of the car, another harbinger of spring reaches my ear: the slow repeating call of the cuckoo. In days gone by, people believed the cuckoo morphed into a hawk during the winter or took refuge in the faery kingdom. When it returned in its familiar form, it brought the spring with it. It’s the first cuckoo call I’ve heard this year. There are many half-forgotten customs you are supposed to enact in response. I seem to remember one about placing a stone on your head, running as far as you can, and launching it into the air. Wherever it lands, a stash of money will await when you return the following day. I think better of it. I’m in a car park after all. Knowing my luck, it’ll fly through someone’s windscreen and end up costing me a great deal more.

Another old belief says that every repeat of the first cuckoo’s call marks a year of your life. I’m encouraged that it shows no sign of abating as I stroll back along the track toward Rake Beck.

A pungent natural perfume reaches my nostrils from the white blossom of the hawthorn trees. This is the May Tree of Radcliffe and Maconie’s mention, so called for its May flowering. In Celtic tradition, it is the tree of Beltaine, the ancient festival that celebrates the start of spring and the coming of summer; like Beltaine, the hawthorn symbolises fertility and rebirth.

The fair maid who, the first of May,
Goes to the fields at break of day
And washes in dew from the hawthorn tree,
Will ever after handsome be”

Crag Fell from Bowness Knott
Crag Fell and hawthorn trees

Hawthorn boughs were cut and woven into May Day crowns or placed in the porches of houses to bring luck, but bringing them inside the house was taboo:

“Hawthorn bloom and elder-flowers
Will fill a house with evil powers”

The tree contains trimethylamine, a chemical found in decaying animal tissue. In medieval times, its blossom was said to smell like the Great Plague, and its presence indoors was associated with death. But this is perhaps a later superstition based on an unsavoury aromatic association. In earlier times, hawthorn was the tree of new life; it was her sister tree, the blackthorn, that was the tree of death.

In witchcraft, the blackthorn belongs to black magic, while the hawthorn (or white thorn) is the tree of the white witch. Blackthorn is the Celtic tree of Samhain, the festival that marks the coming of winter. Its bitter fruit, the sloe, sweetens after the first frost.

In Ireland, it was considered unlucky to chop down hawthorn trees as they were said to be home to faery folk. Indeed, thirteenth century Scottish mystic, Thomas Rhymer, met the Faery Queen by a May Tree. She gave him a brief tour of the underworld. It only lasted a matter of hours, but when he returned, he discovered he’d been gone a full seven years. By contrast, the blackthorn is a gateway to communing with the dead. This is not as macabre as it sounds. In ancient belief, communing with the dead helped the living prepare for what must come to us all eventually. 

Hawthorn near Bowness Knott
Hawthorn near Bowness Knott

The same dichotomy applies in traditional healing: blackthorn is an astringent and a purgative; it heals by bringing your pain and darkest thoughts to the surface; it intensifies suffering in order to banish it. Hawthorn is a balm; it soothes pain and eases troubles.

Blackthorn and whitethorn; winter and summer; death and rebirth; the perpetual cycle of life; and here on the shore of Ennerdale Water, in the warm sunlight, with the tang of new growth, the scent of tree blossom and the call of the cuckoo, all things more likely to trigger a hard-wired religious impulse (in me, at least) than psalms and psalters and thorny theological concepts of original sin.

Crag Fell over Ennerdale Water
Crag Fell over Ennerdale Water

During WWI, large amounts of wood were needed for the war effort. In 1919, the Forestry Commission was established to ensure the UK always had a steady supply of timber. In its early years, the Commission adopted a utilitarian approach, planting vast amounts of fast growing conifer. In Ennerdale, dense sitka spruce plantations blighted the natural landscape, replacing the indigenous flora. Wainwright called this “dark funeral shroud of foreign trees” an act of vandalism. But in 1968, the Commission refocused on conservation, and since 2003, it has been a partner in the Wild Ennerdale project, which is rewilding the valley, thinning the conifer and allowing the old woods to reassert themselves. Perhaps some of the ancient magic is returning.

I leave the road by a stile, cross Raise Beck and follow a path that climbs the fell side to gain the western ridge of Herdus. Across the valley, Crag Fell sprawls: a gargantuan beast in slumber—its shadowed crags an elephantine hide, its sunlit slopes a pink underbelly, and Anglers Crag its wrinkled snout. The lake is a plate of polished lapis lazuli. As I gain height along the ridge, I look down on Bowness Knott, its rounded top a fishbone pattern of forest green and stone white clearings.

Looking over Bowness Knott from Herdus

Traditionally, Herdus is the name for this whole fell, with Great Borne a name for the summit only, but the OS map assigns Herdus its own summit. This is marked on the ground with a cairn and acknowledged as a Birkett. The classification may confuse boundaries, but it does at least do justice to this remarkable viewpoint.

Great Borne’s summit lies east across a boggy depression. The circuitous path keeps to firmer ground, crossing the head of Rake Beck and joining the path that climbs beside it. As I approach the trig point and shelter that crown the top, the muscular mass of Grasmoor, Whiteside, Wandhope and Whiteless Pike rises in the northwest, dark and shadowy, like an angular edifice of chiselled granite.

Grasmoor range from Great Borne
Grasmoor range from Great Borne

Two fell runners are tracing a route with their fingers. It circuits the whole valley: Starling Dodd, Buttermere Edge, Haystacks, the Gable Girdle, Kirk Fell, Pillar, Scoat Fell, Haycock, Crag Fell.

“Are you going to run all that?” I ask, incredulous.

“Not today,” the girl replies, “but it’s what we’re in training for.”

I follow their dust down to the col and up the gentle grassy slope to Starling Dodd. They’re long gone by the time I reach its twin cairns, one of stones and one a twisted twine of rusted iron fence posts.

Summit cairns on Starling Dodd
Summit cairns on Starling Dodd

Ahead, the slanting pyramid of Red Pike is a sharp end to the High Stile ridge, and to the north,  Crummock Water is glimpsed, an indigo lustre beneath Grasmoor. Grasmoor itself, now free of shadow, is painted chocolate with veins and crests of cinnamon. Southwest, over Ennerdale Water, the Irish Sea is a band of pale blue beyond the green flatlands of the coast.

Grasmoor and Crummock Water
Grasmoor and Crummock Water

Buttermere over Bleaberry Tarn
Buttermere over Bleaberry Tarn
Crummock Water
Crummock Water

Between here and Red Pike, Little Dodd is a mere hummock, but its modest summit reveals more of the unfolding panorama, Loweswater now peeking coyly between Melbreak and Hen Comb. The peerless grandstand, though, is Red Pike. I eschew the path and scramble an easy gully to get there. As I reach the parapet, there’s a woosh of air and a paraglider takes flight. I watch it soar westward then arc round over Crummock Water. What a perfect day to have a hawk’s eye view. I look over at the small band of walkers assembled on the summit—everyone is rapt, everyone is smiling, all is well with the world.

Paraglider takes off, Red Pike
Paraglider takes off, Red Pike
Paraglider
Paraglider
Paraglider and Ennerdale Water
Paraglider and Ennerdale Water
Paraglider heading for Crummock Water
Paraglider heading for Crummock Water

~

But all was far from well in the world of Kevin Owlett when he stepped from his car by Crummock’s shore and dragged his wife’s body from the boot. He’d wrapped her in chains to which he’d tied a car cylinder head and an open plastic barrel. He waded out into Crummock Water, pulling her corpse behind him. When she began to float, he swam out further and submerged the barrel so it filled with water and dragged her under. He nearly joined her. His foot had become snagged in the electrical wire he’d used to secure the barrel. But he managed to struggle free. So it was just his wife’s body that members of a sub aqua club discovered in 1988.

Her name was Sheena. She is the forgotten Lady of the Lake. The names of Margaret Hogg (found in Wastwater in 1984) and Carol Ann Park (found in Coniston in 1997) are better known. In 1988/1989, the Piper Alpha oil rig disaster and the Hillsborough stadium tragedy conspired to keep Sheena’s story from the front pages.

The Wastwater case had been an uncanny precedent. When he was tried for murder, three years earlier, Peter Hogg claimed his wife had been having an affair which she made no effort to disguise. On the fateful night, she tired of merely taunting him and physically attacked him. In a fit of rage he grabbed her by the throat and squeezed too long. He hadn’t meant to kill her.

Kevin’s defence was remarkably similar: Sheena had mocked his sexual prowess, boasted of having an affair and accused him of sleeping with a work colleague. When the shouting stopped, she’d attacked him with a wine bottle.

I’m not convinced a modern jury would have shown leniency in either case, but in 1985, jurors at the Old Bailey found in Peter’s favour and acquitted him of murder. He served three years for manslaughter and an additional year for perjury.

It didn’t work for Kevin. Even in the 1980’s, the apparent degree of planning that had gone into Sheena’s disposal made it impossible to believe her death had not been premeditated.

What degree of pain and desperation drives someone to go that far? How screwed up do you have to be to kill someone you presumably loved once. It’s tragic when a relationship breaks down, but there should be life beyond a broken marriage for both parties. Sitting here now, I can’t help but wonder what would have happened if Kevin had simply come here first. Just wandered, breathed this in, taken time out to think.

Crummock Water
Crummock Water

Doctors are increasingly waking up to the mental health benefits of the great outdoors; some prescribe country walks ahead of anti-depressants. Modern living divorces us from natural rhythms. Cities never sleep; they are places of perpetual light, heat and noise, where everything is always available, no matter what the season. It’s artificial and it disconnects us from who we really are. It makes us forget something that we have always known; something deep in our DNA: that we are children of nature, and nature works in cycles. Pain is an inescapable part of living, but however intense, and however great the effort to overcome it, it passes. And when it does, it gives way to joy, just as night gives way to day, and winter gives way to spring. Death and rebirth. Samhain and Beltaine. Blackthorn and hawthorn.

When I arrive back at the shore of Ennerdale Water, the cuckoo is still calling. I’ve a good few cycles left, it seems.

Ennerdale Water
Ennerdale Water

For more on Wastwater and Margaret Hogg, see my blog, A Walk on the Wild Side

Further Reading:

The hawthorn & the blackthorn

Trees for Life: Mythology and folklore of the hawthorn

Druidry~Tree Lore: The Blackthorn

Druidry~Tree Lore: The Hawthorn

Cuckoos

Legendary Dartmoor: Cuckoos

BBC Guersey: A few cuckoo superstitions

Sheena Owlett/Lady of the Lake murder

Ladies of The Lakes, case three: Sheena Owlett


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    29 thoughts on “Thorn Of Crowns”

    1. I remember my own version of this walk, or rather two: Great Borne and Starling Dodd from Ennerdale/the High Stile ridge from Buttermere. But I remember most my own experience of perfect clarity off Corney Fell. It was late October, the air like crystal, the Isle of Man so near you could almost see the sea behind it and further along the coast a silver coin laid on the sea by Ravenglass that I finaly deduced was the fresh water pouring out of the triple estuary, a different colour from the turquoise of the salt water. Amazing.

      1. I love your description of the silver coin. It’s so rare that it’s that clear. There’s usually a haze. Wonderful when it is, though.

        1. It was a Sunday morning and I’d driven up from Manchester to climb Yewbarrow, which I did via Stirrup Crag. Had I realized it was going to be that clear, I’d have been up three hours earlier set on the Pike: if Ireland wasn’t visible from the summit that day, it never would have.

    2. Another interesting (and educational!) post.
      I know very little about hawthorn but remember very well that when I was young, before we moved when I was 12, our back garden was surrounded by a hawthorn hedge. I recall that it was not exactly easy to trim and keep under control.

      1. Ah, but it would have done wonders for your spiritual well being (just so long as you didn’t bring the cuttings into the house) 🙂

      1. It’s easy this time of the year. The hawthorn has red berries (haws) and the blackthorn blue sloes.

    3. I’ve been trying to come up with specific comments on the parts of the story and photos you’ve given us here. There are too many. Suffice it to say that I think this is one of your very best.

      1. Thank you, Linda. I am really chuffed you said that. It’s the one I think I’m most proud of.

    4. Hello, George. The countryside in all of your essays is astounding. Do you live in the wilderness, in a village, in a city?

      1. Thank you Neil. We live in a tiny village, or as we would call it over here, a hamlet. Ennerdale and Crummock Water are about 1.5 hours drive from here, but my last post, Rhiannon, is about the small hill I look out on from my bedroom and kitchen windows.

    5. This post is excellent start to finish. When you started, with a body found in the lake, I expected a story of ghosts or old-time skullduggery, but this is much more than that, not just the beautiful writing, but so well-constructed, smooth sailing, the way you weave the old superstitions into an account of nature, walking, history, and murder. Starting with superstitions as static-y fragments of old religions.
      (I was thinking about these bits of folklore, being passed down, like that game “Telephone,” where you whisper something in someone’s ear, pass it along, until the final muddled message at the end. Still played in college dorms sometimes, maybe “disjointed” would be a better term than “muddled.” It would be fun to try passing along Gable Girdle, Crummock Water, and some of those other place names.)
      I didn’t know any of these hawthorn/blackthorn associations, very interesting! The hawthorn trees you’ve got in England look bigger and showier than the big thorny shrubs we’ve usually got here, and there’s plenty of buckthorn, but I don’t think we have blackthorn. (That’s the one used to make walking sticks and shillelaghs? And I also wondered, are all these slopes treeless, from grazing, or is that just natural?)
      Congrats on a really solid article and excellent photos.

      1. Thank you, Robert. Your kind words are always much appreciated. I’m especially pleased you liked this one as I’m quietly quite proud of it.

        Yes, blackthorn is the one used to walking sticks and shillelaghs. Its fruit, the sloe, is also used to make sloe gin. I was going to say Kiss wrote a song about soe gin there must be blackthorn somewhere in the USA, but now I check, it turns out the Kiss song is Cold Gin.

        The slopes have been deforested over many centuries for grazing sheep. There are rewilding initiatives underway to replant some of them as the lack of trees has been identified as a factor in the flooding we’ve suffered in recent years. The problem is finding the right balance between traditional fell farming and environmental concerns.

        Thanks again!

    6. George, your posts are such a pleasure to read. I love the way your intertwine the sad history of the area with beautiful views, information about faeries and your thoughts.

      p.s. those fell runners are amazing aren’t they! I would love to try it, but I’m sure I’d fall and twist my ankle on that kind of epic loop!

      1. Thank you Josy, that’s very kind. Yes, fell runners are a breed apart, what amazing fitness. I’m sure you would do much better than me at it. You are, of course, already a “fell jumper” as your many action photos testify.

    7. my gran had kniptions around may blossom, if ever anyone came near the house with any; and my MIL, from deepest darkest Norfolk always intones ‘don’t cast a clout till may is out’ if any of her grandchildren think about going out without a coat any time during the spring. I’m never too sure if the ‘may’ is the month or the blossom but I suspect the blossom. And I love your dark and sinister interludes of humanity’s attempts to scar such beauty with death, deception and dastardly deeds. Oh and the pictures are, as ever a cruel reminder of my covid restrictions… sigh…

      1. Thank you, Geoff. It will all still be here when the restrictions are well and truly over. Good to hear
        fragments of old Celtic beliefs have been alive and kicking so recently!

    8. This is one of my favourites George. I love the way you weave the journey together with the folklore of the trees and the sad story of Sheena Owlett. Oh and if you’re a witch it’s ok to bring Hawthorn inside 🙂

      1. Thank you, Andrea. I’m really pleased you like this one as it’s one of my favourites too. Good to know about the hawthorn.

    9. Moving about in nature, choosing a favourite month is hard for me.
      But after enjoying your post, the month of May comes into my mind as a sure winner.
      The spring is beauty, hope and renewal. The month of May fulfil these conditions and the crowning glory is the hawthorn with all its poetry.
      Refreshing to think about spring!! Thanks for that welcoming thought.

      1. Thank you, Hanna. Glad you enjoyed it. I used to the love the autumn most, but nowadays it’s the spring, absolutely for the hope and renewal.

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