Saturday, March 20, 2010

My walk to Hayeswater 20 March 2010

This was a low level walk, as the mountain tops were all in cloud, and I had spent most of the morning drinking coffee, but was very rewarding with good views and some spectacular waterfalls.
There is a car park in Hartsop, at the far end of the village, at the start of the footpath up to Hayeswater. There is a detour, past the remains of an old mill, and some mine workings, although I lost the track after the mill and returned to the main footpath.
The path follows Hayeswater Gill, past Hartsop Dodd, which is the one you pass on your left as you drive past Brother Water at the start of Kirkstone pass. After Hartsop Dodd there is a good view up Pastures Bottom, with Raven Crag very prominent part way along to the right.
After crossing the gill, the path rises over the lower slopes of Gray Crag, leaving the gill down the valley to the left.  There is an alternative route, with the gill on your right side, along the track to the filter house, after this it crosses by a foot bridge, and rises sharply to join the main path.
Either way, I wanted to be on the footbridge, because it marked the start of a section where there were a number of waterfalls, and I wanted to get nearer the action, and to take some closer photos.  They were quite beautiful.
On the other bank, above the filter house was Prison Crag, and a number of gills including Sulphur gill, which crossed an expanse of rock where it divides into a series of waterfalls.
All the time the view back over Hartsop was growing more spectacular, seeing Brother Water in the valley, over Hartsop above How on the other side, and beyond to St Sunday Crag on the other side of Deepdale.
Gradually the gill became more gentle, and the climb more level, and the path went alongside the gill until it reached the footbridge at the top.
I suppose Hayeswater is a man made lake, a reservoir created by the dam across the end.  The sky brightened a little making the water sparkle more than I had hoped, but the mountains of High Street and the Knott were lost in cloud.
I did attempt to cross the gill at the point where the map shows the footpath crossing it, some way before the footbridge. There was no bridge there, and not many stepping stones. If you can manage it, you are more adventurous than I am, or there is less recent rain.
Now the weather was not wonderful, but it was not awful either. It was pleasant walking, but not popular. I must have seen no more than 8 or 10 people all the time.
For all the time I took going up, traversing slopes to take pictures, climbing up towards the Knott, the route down took just 20 minutes, which was just as well as I needed to get back.

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