Walla Crag

Walla Crag is a fell in the English Lake District, near Keswick. The fell is a short walk from Keswick and overlooks Derwentwater. The crag is the terminal cliff on a short ridge running north west from Bleaberry Fell, dropping about 400 feet from the plateau above. Below this are further steep slopes before the gradient slackens on the shore of Derwentwa…
Walla Crag is a fell in the English Lake District, near Keswick. The fell is a short walk from Keswick and overlooks Derwentwater. The crag is the terminal cliff on a short ridge running north west from Bleaberry Fell, dropping about 400 feet from the plateau above. Below this are further steep slopes before the gradient slackens on the shore of Derwentwater. The face is heavily wooded — mainly with conifers — almost to the top. The trees continue down through Great Wood to the lake. Walla Crag has one major breach, Lady's Rake.
  • Elevation: 379 m (1,243 ft)
  • Location: Cumbria, England
  • Prominence: 24 m (79 ft)
  • Parent peak: Bleaberry Fell
  • Listing: Wainwright
  • Parent range: Lake District, Central Fells
  • OS grid: NY276212
Data from: en.wikipedia.org