Pike of Blisco and Crinkle Crags from Great Langdale

Shared on

by

Pike of Blisco and Crinkle Crags from Great Langdale

Starting in the beautiful Great Langdale, this is a relatively short circular walk that still packs a punch: it climbs two Wainwrighrs, Pike of Blisco and Crinkle Crags. Both offer fantastic views of the surrounding countryside, with latter of the two, at 859 m, is approaching one of Lakeland’s taller fells. Pike of Plisco provides good entry-level scrambling that comes in a few short (a few metres at most) easy sections with little exposure.

14.66 km
5:30
1134 m
1140 m

Terrain

Most of the route is on well-trodden and easily navigable paths – although as with a lot of Lakeland, the paths are prone to split and recombine and may not always follow the map exactly. Sections of the route on Pike of Blisco and Crinkle Crags approach scrambling, although it is easy and not exposed.

Access, Start & End

This is a circular walk starting on the valley floor of Great Langdale. There are many ways to get there: there are car parks at Stickle Ghyll (National Trust) and at the Old Dingeon Ghyll pub, as well as a National Trust campsite and regular bus service from Ambleside. This description assumes you are parking at Stickle Ghyll.


Stage 1: In Langdale

Turn tight out of the car park onto the road along Great Langdale for about 100 m, before turning left along a track across the fields. The track leads over a small bridge and up to Side House, where we turn right along the permitted path parallel to the valley floor. Follow this path westwards until it leads down into the back of the National Trust campsite, and then make your way west through the campsite and back onto the lane (a few hundred metres to your right is Langdale’s second car park, so it you started there simply follow the road). You can skip this entire stage by just walking straight up the road but it extends the road section to over 1 km.

Stage 2: Campsite to Pike of Blisco

Turn left along the lane, which leads along the edge of a field, goes between some buildings and over a cattle grid, then begins to climb. After a few hundred metres you will see a path leaving the road to the right, going up a valley on the Pike of Blisco, which we take. The path is well-trodden and wide at first, so easy to find. It begins to climb and fords several small streams (one of which can be hard to cross keeping feet dry in winter or if the weather has been particularly wet). There is only one path from here to the top, but it can split and branch at points as it makes its way over and around crags and outcrops. There are several short mini-scrambles which are not difficult (if you’re on the path) but add some interest to the route.

Stage 3: Pike to Three Tarns Hause

Pike of Blisco has two peaks, with the more northerly of the two (the one you reach second) being the taller. Getting off the summit and onto the correct path can be a challenge for which GPS is helpful, but again there is only one path that leads remotely in the right direction (to the south-west) and once found it is easy to follow. It makes its way down to near Red Tarn, before continuing across a small beck (Browney Gill) and up Great Knott. From here the path makes its way across the wide green slope up to Crinkle Crags, which then provide some good low-level scrambling with relatively easy route finding (so long as the visibility is good). The crags and outcrops continue all the way down to Three Tarns.

Stage 4: From Three Tarns

From Three Tarns, two routes lead eastwards back to Langdale: the more interesting, featuring Hell Gill, takes you down the steep valley below Crinkle Crags and should be avoided in bad weather, while the other option keeps to the ridge of Earing Crag and The Band. The latter is easy to follow (though with some rocky sections), and can make a good way off the hill in bad weather (as I discovered). Both routes take a single path down to Oxendale, with the gill route crossing several small streams on the way. Once on the valley floor, make your way through Stool End (a farm), and along their drive to the road. From here, return to the cars is simply along the road.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Posted:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *