Stars of the screen
Find out which historic houses and dramatic landscapes you can see on-screen, from popular TV dramas to brand new films.
No family visit to the Lake District is complete without a nod to the Walker children’s famous summer holiday – camping, sailing, fishing or thrilling adventures with piratical Amazons. Take a trip on a Victorian steam yacht to spy out all the best locations from the 2016 film, and discover the real inspiration for Wild Cat Island. Swallows and Amazons for ever!
Arthur Ransome’s ‘great lake in the north’ wasn’t based on a single location, but he did assure his readers that ‘all the places in the books are to be found, but not arranged quite as the ordnance maps’.
The eastern shore of Coniston Water inspired many of Ransome’s fictional places, so it’s no surprise that the 2016 film version of Swallows and Amazons used many nearby places as a backdrop. The crew also shot scenes on Derwent Water near Keswick.
This latest adaptation of Swallows and Amazons (2016) was faithful to Ransome’s enchanting childhood adventure stories, with some added espionage for good measure. Coniston’s towering fells and intimate lakeshore coves set the scene for much of the action.
The mooring point for the houseboat of Captain Flint, confirmed pirate, was shot at Low Peel Near – a rocky promontory that juts out into the lake.
Among the trees above Low Peel Near, scenes of the Walker and Blackett children’s canvas encampment were filmed.
The Swallows’ secret mooring – key to their triumph over the Amazons – was filmed at High Peel Near. You don’t have to sail the high seas to follow in the wake of John, Susan, Titty, Roger, Nancy and Peggy. This spot is reachable on foot and is great for paddling and a picnic.
Near the north of the lake is the National Trust tenant farm Boon Crag, transformed for filming into Holly Howe Farmhouse, where the Walkers stay for the summer. You can walk to the farm near Monk Coniston, and spot other scenes from the film, on your way up to Tarn Hows from Coniston.
To get the best view of the film’s locations and the places that inspired Arthur Ransome, take the Full Lake Cruise around Coniston Water aboard Steam Yacht Gondola, thought to be the original inspiration for Captain Flint's houseboat.
You can take in the sights from the water, and hop off at Gondola’s jetties to paddle, picnic or explore the lakeshore and woodland trails. The Parkamoor trail is highly recommended for sweeping views of Coniston.
As well as film locations, Coniston Water is home to many places that inspired Ransome’s original books. You can see them all on the Full Lake Cruise, or pack your knapsack with rations for a day of exploring from the lakeshore.
Bank Ground Farm on the eastern shore was immortalised as Holly Howe, where the Walker children stay during their visits. Nearby is the Victorian boathouse that would have been Swallow’s fictional home.
Over on the north-western side looms the Old Man of Coniston – the mighty fell that became another great mountain in the second book, Swallowdale.
Peel Island lies at the southern end of Coniston Water, and served as the inspiration for Wild Cat Island. Also in this area, where the lake drains into the River Crake, lie the treacherous waters of Octopus Lagoon in the books.
Two Lake District museums (not National Trust) bring you face-to-face with the Walker and Blackett children’s trusty craft.
At Windermere Jetty Museum you’ll find the two 1950s wooden sailing boats used as Swallow and Amazon in the 2016 film. They were chosen because they’re small enough for a child to sail, but can hold a camera crew and their equipment. From nearby Bowness you can take a ferry across to Windermere’s west shore, for lakeshore walks to Wray Castle and Claife Viewing Station.
The sailing dinghy Mavis – Arthur Ransome’s inspiration for the fictional Amazon – is on display at Coniston’s Ruskin Museum. It’s a 15-minute walk from Steam Yacht Gondola’s pier on Coniston Water, and is a great way to begin or end a lake cruise.
Please check with the museums that these boats are on display before making a special visit.
As well as showing off beautiful locations, filming directly benefits the places in our care that star in the production. The income from location fees goes straight back into conservation work to care for historic houses and landscapes, so that we’ll all be able to see them both on screen and in real life for years to come.
Find out which historic houses and dramatic landscapes you can see on-screen, from popular TV dramas to brand new films.
Fancy taking a break somewhere you’ve seen on screen? From The Secret Garden to Game of Thrones and Harry Potter, many of the places we care for have been filming locations for much-loved movies and TV shows.
Spot scenes from the film and books on a rebuilt Victorian steam-powered yacht.
Stay in the Coniston cottage that initially inspired Arthur Ransome, and was a backdrop to many of the film’s scenes on the lake.