Where are the Rainiest Places in England?

Here’s a list of the wettest places in England (Preston nearby is apparently the wettest city). But you’ll find that nearly all the wettest places are in The Lake District (England’s largest National Park).
While in the south, the pavement can be dry in a few hours, here you can be soaked to the skin in a downpour, and it just rains and rains and rains!
How to Upright a Sheep (on its back)

If you are out walking and find a sheep on its back, you must act immediately, or the sheep could die, before the farmer finds him/her.
In many places (like Cumbria) there are more sheep than people out-of-season. And farmers have a constant struggle looking after sheep, due to the grass never drying out (causing foot rot).
Although many sheep fall over due to pregnancy, others do so, due to wool coats becoming soaked with rain.
Always follow the Countryside Code, to keep dogs & livestock safe.
Sheep don’t sleep on their backs, due to having four stomach chambers.
To help:
- Gently approach the sheep on its back.
- Grab a handful of wool, and upright. Here’s a quick video.
- Keep hold of the sheep if it fell due to rain, to ensure heavy rain has drained off the wool.
- Say goodbye. The sheep will run off and likely join the flock.
- Alert the farmer, if you can. He or she will most definitely thank you!
Why Does it Rain So Much in the Lake District?

The Lake District (England’s largest National Park) is officially the wettest place in England. Here you can be soaked to the skin within minutes of a downpour.
So why is this area of northwest England rainier than everywhere else? It’s all to do with the nearby Atlantic Ocean, which carries large amounts of moisture from the wind. Mountains (all of England’s highest ones are here) force air to rise. This causes ‘orographic lift. As air rises and cools, it can’t hold moisture, so water vapour then condensed into rain clouds – and lots of them!
Many areas of southern England instead have ‘showers’ which usually fall from individual clouds, with dry sunny intervals in between. In Sussex say, you could have a downpour and the pavement will be dry within an hour.
But in Cumbria, that doesn’t happen. The ground stays wet for ages, which is why farmers have a constant battle using sprays to prevent foot rot on sheep, as the grass never dries out in winter.
The Met Office will always describe this kind of heavy rain in forecasts as ‘prolonged’ or ‘persistent’ rain.
So it’s time to don your natural rubber wellies and sustainable raincoat, and put up your windproof brolly.
Here’s a quick lowdown on England’s rainiest places!
- Seathwaite, Cumbria (in the Borrowdale Valley) is the wettest inhabited spot in England, with over 3,500 millimetres of rainfall (four times the national average).
- Sprinkling Tarn, Lake District. Perched high above Borrowdale, this has rain in thick sheets, and surroundings peaks (Great End and Seathwaite Fell), scoop up Atlantic storms.
- Grasmere, Lake District. Wordsworth’s home is also one of the wettest areas, that’s why it’s so green! Just shy of 2,800 millimetres a year.
- Keswick, Lake District. Sitting under Skiddaw’s dark slopes and beside Derwentwater, the town collects just over 2,600 millimetres of rainfall a year.
- Whinlatter Pass, Cumbria. The high ridge, carved into the northern Lakes, acts as a net for rain from the west. This narrow pass receives nearly 2,500 millimetres each year.
- Shap, Cumbria. High on the eastern edge of the Lake District, Shap feels the full force of passing weather fronts. Here, over 1,500 millimetres of rain a year falls on open ground.
- Honister Pass, Lake District. This is carved by carved by ancient glaciers and constant streams. Rain collects here, drawn in by the surrounding peaks. The pass sees above 2,700 millimetres of rain.
- Glenridding, Ullswater. The village of Glenridding, at the southern tip of Ullswater, soaks in the rain and keeps its lakeshore bright. Almost 2,200 millimetres of water fall every year.
- Buttermere, Lake District. Tucked away between high ridges, Buttermere stays wet. It averages more than 2,000 millimetres of rainfall a year.
- Capel Curig, Snowdonia. Just across the Welsh border, this has over 2,900 millimetres of rain, puffy clouds tumbling in from the Irish sea.
How to Stay Safe During Thunderstorms
- Keep a safe distance from trees and metal objects (umbrellas, golf clubs, motorbikes, wheelchairs, tent poles).
- Stay inside cars (fabric tops could catch fire, if struck).
- If exposed, squat close to the ground with hands on knees, and tuck head between them, touching as little of the ground with your body (don’t lie down).
- If your hand stands on end, drop to the above position immediately.
188 Words for Rain (a damp tour of the British Isles)

Rain is more than just water from the sky. And in England, we have lots of rain, and like to spend a good portion of our lives talking about it!
Here’s a book to expand your vocabulary, so you can make your weather conversations even more interesting
188 Words for Rain takes us on a delightfully damp tour of the British Isles. England and surrounding islands have so much drizzly weather, that there are hundreds of words for the rain. From a ‘light smirr’ in Aberdeen to ‘it’s raining knives and forks’ in the Brecon Beacons.
Write and puddle-splasher Alan Connor digs deep into the meaning and quirky histories of words for rain. He gets caught in a ‘plash’ in Northumberland, and ponders why people picnic-in-the-car when it’s raining. In this charming and witty celebration of our national obsession.
Like many of rain words, kelsher is not said only in the west country. It’s used in Lancashire, and by earth scientists and minerologists, and always means the same thing. Heavy and brought on by strong wind.
Petrichor is the name that two Australian scientists came up with, when they saw that the English language lacked a word for the aromas released, when rain hits soil, catches its scent and bounces it into the winds.
Not Much Rain
- Drizzle. This is light rain with small drops that fall close together, on a blurry damp day, where you can go for a walk, without getting soaked.
- Spitting. This is so light, you can almost count the drops!
- Sprinkle. This means a few drops, just a sprinkle, you may even wonder if its’ raining? It rarely lasts and won’t stop your plans.
- Mizzle. This is soft rain, even finer than drizzle. This is common in southwest England, where it’s ‘damp’ but not always raining.
- Shower. This is a short burst of rain that can be light or heavy, when the sun soon peeks out. Common in southern England as ‘scattered showers’.
- Pattering. This is rain that makes soft sounds as it drops on leaves, the ground or windows. It paints a cosy picture of gentle rainfall, often in mornings and evenings.
- Smattering. This is the same, but with even fewer drops, hardly enough to dampen the ground.
- Mist. This is not rain, but makes everything wet! Mist forms when tiny drops in the air settle on skin, clothes and hair. Common in mornings and evenings, leaving the grass (and roads) damp.
- Liquid Sunshine. This cheerful term is when it’s raining but the sun still shines. Ideal conditions for to spot a rainbow.
- Squall. This is rain with sharp wind, which can turn ‘gentle rain’ into chaos in seconds.
Lots of Rain!
- Downpour. This is heavy rain that falls fast and hard, and soaks you to your undies. Common in Cumbria, this is when people run for cover!
- Rainstorm. This is a serious amount of rain, often with wind and sometimes thunder. Stay inside with a good book, as this rain can last for hours, and sometimes cause floods.
- Sleet. This is a mix of rain and snow, which can make roads slippery. It’s not pure rain, as it partly freezes on the way down from the sky.
- Torrential Rain. A huge amount of rain in a short time, which soaks you to the skin, and makes for poor visibility.
- Cat-and-Dogs Rain. It’s raining cats and dogs’ is a slang phrase for heavy rain. But it’s not scientific!
- Deluge. A flood of rain, much heavier than a downpour and covers vast areas, can even cause streets to flood and rivers to burst their banks. This is rain that appears on news bulletins.
- Bucketing Down. This again is a slang phrase, a playful term of ‘sheet rain’ like someone is pouring a bucket of water over your head!
- Cloudburst. This is an extreme downpour that comes out of nowhere. Clouds open up, and let everything go at once!
- Dreek. This is a Scots word for dull, damp and chilly weather. When someone says ‘it’s dreek outside’, expect persistent rain and grey skies.
- Monsoon. We don’t have this kind of rain in England, it comes with seasonal winds in Asia and Africa. Can last for several days.