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"They're also refuges for rare wildlife, plants and distinctive habitats, and they have a vital role to play in addressing some of the most pressing challenges our country faces, such as biodiversity loss, climate change and wellbeing," says Davies.
Sedate boat cruises on lakes including Windermere, Ambleside and Ullswater are the order of the day, though wild swimming and stand-up paddling are livelier, more up-close options.
The park can get busy and congested, especially in summer, but at 2,362sq km and with plenty of peaks that coach tours can't reach, it's possible to find seclusion and perhaps inspiration for your own poem or story.
"The Cairngorms has enormous whale-back granite mountains that form a kilometre-high plateau, one of the UK's most hostile landscapes, with winds that can reach 170 mph," says Davies.
Pembrokeshire is home to remarkable birdlife, especially the islands of Skomer, Grassholm and Ramsey, which teem with Manx shearwaters, puffins, guillemots, razorbills and gannets, while colourful kelp forests and abundant marine life can be found underwater in rocky coves.
Located in England's south-east corner, the Broads doesn't have towering peaks but there's a special kind of beauty to this vast network of lakes, rivers, fens and marshes and semi-submerged woodland.
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