The Great Outdoors

England's greatest walk (that you’ve never heard of)

UPPER ESKDALE is a paradox. It lies in the heart of England’s most impressive mountain landscape, surrounded by wonderful wreckages of ancient volcanic uproar. It is ringed by a string of fells that read like a list of A-list invitees at the hillwalking Oscars: Crinkle Crags, Bowfell, Esk Pike, Great End, and the glamorous power couple of the bash, Scafell and Scafell Pike. Purely on the basis of the fells it covers, the long horseshoe that lassos all the hills above Eskdale must logically be England’s greatest walk, and a mountain round to rank alongside the best Britain has to offer.

If you reach Upper Eskdale by my favourite route, you walk up through a long, narrowing gorge studded with booming waterfalls, then emerge into something that feels like England’s answer to a Himalayan sanctuary: a hanging valley reached only by the dedicated pilgrim of the Lake District’s wilder corners. You are, in a sense, in the heartland of the Lake District, the hall of its most impressive mountain gods. And the Lake District attracts 20 million visitors a year, so you might expect it to be busy;

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Great Outdoors

The Great Outdoors2 min read
In This Issue
Phillipa Cherryson has been a magazine, newspaper and television journalist for more than 30 years and has lived in Bannau Brycheiniog National Park for almost as long. She is Vice Chair of the park’s Local Access Forum, an OS Champion, South Wales o
The Great Outdoors1 min read
Elevation Gains
TURN TO PAGE 68 FOR THE LATEST SUBSCRIPTION OFFER ■
The Great Outdoors4 min read
6 Gwydir Forest Eryri/Snowdonia WALES
19.8km/12.3 miles/5 hours Ascent 626m/2050ft WHETHER in the stillness of Llyn Crafnant and Llyn Geirionydd, crashing through the Llugwy river gorge, or tumbling over the leafy crags of Coed Felin Blwm, water forms an integral part of the Gwydir Fores

Related Books & Audiobooks