Walking the Lake District Fells - Patterdale. Mark Richards

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High Brock Crags.) The main way leads on through two further gateways before bearing up through High Brock Crags onto the ridge, skirting round some fenced-off boggy ground and climbing by the wall to the summit of Low Pike. From here just follow the wall on, due north, down to the depression, over the ladder-stile and back up again to High Pike. The ridge wall continues north, with the popular path keeping to the east side for shelter from prevailing winds. A lesser path exists on the west side, and this is better on sunny days as the views are just that bit better. The detour to High Bakestones is recommended. A clear path that diverges from the popular east-side path after ½ mile runs along the edge to the landmark cairn. As it approaches the summit, the ridge wall becomes intermittently broken.

      Via Scandale →7.2km/4½ miles ↑745m/2445ft Image3hr 30min

      6 Leave the car park to the east, crossing the footbridge to reach Rydal Road and here turn left to the mini-roundabout and right to climb up Smithy Brow past the Golden Rule pub. Bend left on Kirkstone Road and then take the next left, Sweden Bridge Lane. This becomes a walled lane which passes through woodland and forks, after about 2km, with High Sweden Bridge down to the left. Stay with the old valley track as it wanders into an undulating lane, after passing through a gate traversing Scandale Bottom, to reach a sheepfold complex and, beyond, to pass through a gate. At this point you have a choice.

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      The handsome standard cairn distinguishing High Bakestones

      7 Continue for another kilometre up to the Scandale Pass ladder-stile and bear left to follow the path above Scandale Tarn which winds up to High Bakestones (Beckstones). The path continues beyond to meet the ridge wall, where you turn right (north) to reach the bleached outcrop and summit cairn. 8 Alternatively, go through the gap immediately left of the gate, cross the first beck confluence and go up to where a wall and fence meet at the top of the bank above the beck. Keep adjacent and above the beck, rising right with the first feeder-gill. Above the bracken the ridge steepens, and a grooved path winds above the eastern side of the gill and crosses a marsh to join the path from Scandale Tarn. Bear left to gain the distinguished cairn surmounting High Bakestones and rejoin Route 6 to the summit.

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      Summit cairn

      The summit

      A relatively small outcrop forms a plinth for the cairn set 25m east of a deteriorating ridge wall. The plateau has a random scattering of stones, while west of the wall the fell is largely grass. In settled weather you might consider visiting the top of Dove Crag itself, where a length of wall to keep out sheep defines the limit of safe exploration.

      Safe descents

      The ridge wall is key, as any vague wandering to the E will surely end in tears. Either head N to the depression short of Hart Crag, descending Houndshope Cove (1) for Dovedale, or go S 360m to the old fence-junction, religiously following the fence down to Scandale Pass (6) for both Brothers Water via Caiston Glen and Ambleside via Scandale.

      Ridge routes

      Hart Crag →0.8km/½ mile ↓45m/150ft ↑75m/250ft Image25min

      Again it is the ridge wall that acts as the guide – descend easily NW to the shallow depression at the head of Houndshope Cove, and clamber to the summit cairn amid an abundance of splintered rock.

      High Pike →2km/1¼ mile ↓135m/445ft Image30min

      Follow the wall S on a gentle grassy, occasionally peaty, path to where the ridge narrows at the summit.

      Little Hart Crag →2km/1¼ miles ↓165m/540ft ↑15m/50ft Image45min

      Follow the wall S for 360 metres, at which point an old fence diverges east. Follow this, descending, to run along the undulating peaty moor above Black Brow and continue direct to the twin-outcrop summit.

      Fairfield 873m/2864ft

Start
Climb it from Deepdale Bridge 23, Dunmail Raise 8, Winterseeds 9, Rydal Mount 15 or Pelter Bridge 16
Character A flat-topped favourite, its rugged qualities held securely within Deepdale
Fell-friendly route 9
Summit grid ref NY 359 118
Link it with Great Rigg, Hart Crag or St Sunday Crag

      Presiding over the southern part of the Near Eastern Fells and separated from the Helvellyn massif by the deep trough of Grisedale, Fairfield is a fine mountain. The popularity of the Fairfield Horseshoe on the south side notwithstanding, the fell reserves its most stunning qualities for its northern slopes. Observers high on St Sunday Crag, or within the secretive depths of Deepdale, are privy to a ferocious gallery of crags each interlaced with runs of scree which stream into the barren dale heads of Link and Cawk Coves.

      Most of the fell, however, falls away as rather featureless slopes, so the daily procession on the Horseshoe, knowing little more than these plainer aspects, must value it as a viewpoint, notably the breathtaking view north across the headwall of Grisedale towards Helvellyn.

      Of the five natural lines of ascent, the best by far, and the least tested (1), climbs pathless out of Deepdale into Link Cove to mount the Step. The ‘Horseshoe’ ridges rising from the Rothay valley give simple connections from Great Rigg (8-9) and Hart Crag (not described here). A formless scree-infested west shoulder leads up from Grisedale Hause (3), while the finest ridge, that from St Sunday Crag, mounts from Deepdale Hause over Cofa Pike (2). Over recent decades three paths have also evolved climbing direct from Grisedale Tarn – two lines leading to Deepdale Hause (5–6) and one, a far from pleasant stony chase, direct to Cofa Pike (4).

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      Fairfield from Gavel Pike, with Hart Crag left

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      Ascent from Deepdale Bridge 23 off map E

      A grand walk-in that only improves as the drama of the dale head unfolds but no place for the walker who is unattuned to wilder fell terrain, nor when cloud swirls and the heavens threaten to open.

      Via Greenhow End →6.7km/4¼ miles ↑720m/2360ft Image3hr 30min

      1 Follow the walled lane to Lane Head. Bear left at the

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