Walking the Lake District Fells - Patterdale. Mark Richards

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Walking the Lake District Fells - Patterdale - Mark Richards страница 4

Walking the Lake District Fells - Patterdale - Mark  Richards

Скачать книгу

solely on your mobile phone or other electronic device for navigation. Local mountain rescue teams report that this is increasingly the main factor in the incidents they attend.

      The author has taken care to follow time-honoured routes, and kept within bounds of access, yet access and rights of way can change and are not guaranteed. Any updates that we know of to the routes in this guide will be made available on the Cicerone website, www.cicerone.co.uk, and we are always grateful for information about discrepancies between a guidebook and the facts on the ground, sent by email to [email protected] or by post to Cicerone Press, Juniper House, Murley Moss, Oxenholme Road, Kendal, Cumbria, LA9 7RL.

      Summit panoramas for all of the fells in this volume can be downloaded for free from the guide page on Cicerone website (www.cicerone.co.uk/1034). You will also find a ticklist of the summits in the Walking the Lake District Fells series here, should you wish to keep a log of your ascents. For further information about the series, visit www.cicerone.co.uk/fellranger.

      FELLS

      Arnison Crag 434m/1424ft

Start
Climb it from Patterdale 24 or Deepdale Bridge 23
Character A worthy little climb from Patterdale, noted for its intimate dale and lake views
Fell-friendly route 4
Summit grid ref NY 394 150
Link it with Birks
Part of Deepdale and Dovedale Round

      Approaching the head of Ullswater the traveller cannot help but notice Arnison Crag, its rugged little ridge climbing directly from the village of Patterdale to an eye-catching rock pulpit. Tenuously connected to St Sunday Crag, it is intimately rooted in the Patterdale fraternity of fells and has two contrasting aspects: juniper-clothed crags and coarse scree fall directly eastward, while to the west lies Glemara Park, its beautiful oak wood carpeted by bracken and, in season, bluebells.

      Dwarfed by surrounding heights, yet possessing characteristics many a mightier fell would envy, this is a worthy, yet easily won fellwalking prize. The summit is a place to linger and consider the picturesque qualities of Patterdale, the head of Ullswater and the Hartsop vale: green valleys bound by high fells.

      In most cases this ascent is but the first stage on the greater climb to St Sunday Crag across Trough Head. For all the simplicity of the ridge there are several subtle variations to the ascent, with a choice of two distinctly different circular walks. Both begin with the north ridge and provide attractive return options through Glemara Park (4) or lower Deepdale (5 or 6).

Image

      Arnison Crag from below Boredale Hause

Image

      Ascent from Patterdale 24

      Three routes lead up from the village – two pathless and beset by bracken in summer and one fit for all seasons.

      Direct →1.3km/¾ mile ↑290m/950ft Image1hr

      1 Either walk round to the right of the Patterdale Hotel or follow a signed footpath off the main road further south, just past the village shop, leading up a track. At a stone building this path branches left, passing the birch wood environs of Mill Moss to reach a kissing-gate onto the open fell where these two options converge. Three lines of ascent can be considered from here.

      The least-walked way aims for a subsidiary knot on the eastern scarp, crowned with the best cairn on the fell. Bear left beside the fence skirting the marshy ground and join a sheep trod crossing to a wall. Go right and, as the wall curves left, continue up the slope trending left. Climb to the stony gully leading to a notch to find the cairn up to the left, a superb, little visited viewpoint above the Goldrill vale. Continue ascending the steep bank to join a ridge path, itself little better than a sheep trod, and thereby progress up to the summit.

      2 Alternatively start with Route 1 and then head straight up the pathless bracken slope to crest Oxford Crag, turning left at the wall to join the main path. 3 The only way when the bracken is king is to follow the footpath to the deer-park wall kissing-gate. Here turn left to ascend the popular path, keeping the park wall close right. High up the wall bends as the gradient eases. Beyond this point you have a choice. Either continue to the broad ridge-top hollow, and slant left up a path to swing round onto the summit from the south. Or, alternatively, bear left onto a sheep trod then smartly right, continuing up the rocky ridge to the skyline notch between the twin summit outcrops and climbing right to the main top (not shown on map).

      Via Glemara Park →2.8km/1¾ miles ↑315m/1050ft Image1hr 15min

      The north-facing valley of Glemara Park offers a surreptitious approach.

      4 Follow Route 1 to the deer-park wall kissing-gate. Go through the gate, holding to the footpath which fords Hag Beck. After some 70m bear off left with a tractor track which winds up the bank. As this fades contour left to ford Hag Beck and accompany its east bank up to a metal ladder-stile, crossing the deer-park wall at the dale head. Turn left ascending close to the wall, and at its high point bear right onto the ridge, climbing to the summit from the broad depression in company with Route 3.

Image

      The crag from the higher ridge-top knoll to the southwest

      Ascent from Deepdale Bridge 23

      Via Deepdale →4.7km/3 miles ↑335m/1100ft Image1hr 45min

      Southern approaches may also begin from Patterdale if you follow the roadside footway north, branching onto the bridle-track at the cattle grid and joining these routes at Lane Head.

      Follow the walled lane to Lane Head. Here go left on the gated track bound for Wall End, passing to the right of Deepdale Hall Farm.

      Here either 5 follow the steep shepherds’ path, best in winter when the bracken is low, heading north from the Hall, west towards the gill and then due north to the cross-paths in the depression just west of the summit, or 6 continue down the track to where the telephone wires slant across the path and go right, keeping beneath their line on a ramped green track. Continue to the right of the wall corner into a confined groove. As you gain height a path materialises, drifting up from the walled enclosures. This fords a gill below a confluence. Continue within the grooved path until bracken intervenes. Now bear up right (north), pathless, towards the ridge-top, gradually gaining a sheep track that passes a ruined fold to reach the Trough Head cross-paths. Turn northeast (half right) along the undulating ridge path.

Image

Скачать книгу