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Walking in the Yorkshire Dales: North and East

Howgills, Mallerstang, Swaledale, Wensleydale, Coverdale and Nidderdale

Walking in the Yorkshire Dales: North and East

Howgills, Mallerstang, Swaledale, Wensleydale, Coverdale and Nidderdale

This guidebook contains 43 circular day walks in the north and east Yorkshire Dales. It explores the dales, hills and moors between Kirkby Stephen and Pateley Bridge. Walking ranges from gentle 3 mile strolls to more strenuous day-long rambles across the Howgills, Wensleydale, Swaledale, Nidderdale, Mallerstang and Coverdale.

Explore the wild beauty of the northern and eastern Yorkshire Dales, where sweeping limestone valleys, heather moorland and distinctive fell landscapes create some of the most rewarding walking in northern England. From the quiet slopes of the Howgill Fells to the historic valleys of Swaledale, Wensleydale and Nidderdale, this varied region of the Yorkshire Dales offers scenic day walks through traditional countryside shaped by farming, geology and centuries of rural life.

This Cicerone guidebook, written by experienced husband-and-wife duo Jan and Dennis Kelsall, is the perfect companion for discovering the best walking in the northern and eastern Yorkshire Dales. Featuring 43 circular day walks between Kirkby Stephen and Pateley Bridge, the guide explores the landscapes of the Howgills, Mallerstang, Swaledale, Wensleydale, Coverdale and Nidderdale with routes suitable for a wide range of walkers.

  • The guidebook describes 43 circular walks across the northern and eastern Yorkshire Dales, allowing you to explore the distinctive landscapes of the Howgill Fells, Mallerstang valley, Swaledale, Wensleydale, Coverdale and Nidderdale
  • Walks range from 5 to 19km (3–12 miles), offering everything from gentle countryside strolls to longer fell walks across open moorland and rugged upland terrain, with routes suitable for a wide range of walkers
  • Each route is circular and easily accessible from key Dales locations such as Sedbergh, Kirkby Stephen, Aysgarth and Pateley Bridge, making it simple to plan rewarding day walks across the region
  • Clear step-by-step route descriptions are supported by 1:50,000 OS mapping, helping you navigate the valleys, hills and moorland paths of the Yorkshire Dales with confidence
  • Practical information on parking and refreshments helps you organise your day in the Dales, while background notes introduce the area’s rich geology, wildlife, history and traditional landscapes

With carefully selected routes, clear mapping and valuable local insights, this guidebook provides everything you need to explore the northern and eastern Yorkshire Dales on foot. Follow quiet valley paths, climb panoramic fell tops and discover the timeless landscapes that make the Yorkshire Dales one of Britain’s most loved walking destinations.

Complete your collection with the companion guide Walking in the Yorkshire Dales: South and West, available separately.

Yorkshire Dales: North and East - Quick Facts

Guidebook name: Walking in the Yorkshire Dales: North and East
Location: Northern and eastern areas of the Yorkshire Dales, North Yorkshire and Cumbria, England, UK
Area type: National park upland landscape of valleys, fells and moorland
Routes included: 43 circular day walks
Distance range: ~5–19 km / 3–12 miles per walk
Typical duration: Half-day to full-day walks
Main areas covered: Howgill Fells, Mallerstang, Swaledale, Wensleydale, Coverdale, Nidderdale
Key starting points: Sedbergh, Kirkby Stephen, Aysgarth, Hawes, Pateley Bridge
Navigation: Some waymarking; Step-by-step route descriptions with 1:50,000 OS mapping
Terrain: Limestone valleys, fell paths, moorland tracks, riverside paths and upland trails
Difficulty: Easy to moderate, with some longer fell walks
Best season: Spring to autumn (Apr–Oct), though many routes are possible year-round in good conditions
Highlights: Howgill Fells panoramas, Swaledale villages, Wensleydale waterfalls, historic Dales landscapes

Author Highlight

“The Yorkshire Dales is like nowhere else in England, a place of intrinsic and striking beauty that owes its scenic qualities both to nature and to man. Bestriding the central Pennines, that broad range of hills erupting along the middle of the country, and known to generations of schoolchildren as the ‘backbone of England’, the Dales boasts a diversity of landscape and character that is hard to beat.”

- Jan Kelsall, one of the authors of Walking in the Yorkshire Dales: North and East


Printed book

A guidebook with detailed route descriptions, stage breakdowns, accommodation listings, profiles and maps - everything you need on the trail.

ISBN
9781852847982
Availability
Published
Reprinted
22 Mar 2022
Published
17 Apr 2015
Edition
Second
Pages
256
Size
17.20 x 11.60 x 1.45cm
Weight
300g

eBook

The complete digital edition of the guidebook, with full route descriptions, accommodation listings, profiles and maps, ready to use on any device. To access your eBook, you will need an eReader app. For more details, visit the eBook FAQs. 


Map key
Overview map

Introduction

The Dales Landscape
Geological History    
Human Settlement    
Industry and Enterprise  
Farming in the Dales     
Plants and Wildlife  
The Northern and Eastern Dales 
The Yorkshire Dales National Park  
Navigation and Maps     
Careful Planning 
Clothing and Footwear  
Food and Drink  
Taking your Car  
Leaving your Car Behind  
Using this Guide

1 The Howgill Fells

1    Sedbergh and the River Rawthey  
2    The Rivers Rawthey and Lune from Sedbergh   
3    Winder, Calders and the Calf    
4    Carlin Gill and Fell Head from Fairmile Gate   
5    The River Rawthey from the Cross Keys Inn   
6    Cautley Crag and the Calf    
7    Around Wandale Hill      
8    Baugh Fell from Rawthey Bridge    
9    Grisedale  

2 Mallerstang  

10    High Seat  
11    Pendragon Castle and Little Fell  
12    Wild Boar Fell and Swarth Fell  

3 Swaledale and Arkengarthdale  

13    Apedale and Harkerside Moor  
14    Grinton and Maiden Castle  
15    Fremington Edge 
16    Slei Gill  
17    Whaw to Dale Head  
18    Old Gang and Surrender  
19    Beside the River Swale from Gunnerside   
20    Gunnerside Gill  
21    Ivelet Bridge from Muker  
22    Great Shunner Fell and Lovely Seat from Thwaite  
23    Muker, Thwaite and Kisdon Force from Keld   
24    Whitsundale and the Head of the River Swale   

4 Wensleydale and Coverdale 

25    A Walk in Coverdale  
26    West Witton and the River Ure to Redmire Force  
27    Aysgarth to West Burton   
28    Aysgarth Falls        
29    Ivy Scar from Aysgarth   
30    Whitfield Gill Force and Mill Gill Falls   
31    By the River Ure from Bainbridge   
32    Bainbridge to Semer Water   
33    Aysgill Force   
34    Dodd Fell Hill and Drumaldrace   
35    Cotterdale  
36    Great Shunner Fell from Hardraw   
37    The High Way  

5 Nidderdale 

38    Brimham Rocks 
39    Ashfold Side    
40    Middlesmoor and How Stean Gorge 
41    Nidderdale  
42    Little Whernside   

Appendix 1 Route summaries and suggestions for longer routes 
Appendix 2 Where to find out more   
 


Seasons

Year round walking in the Yorkshire Dales, but be properly kitted out on the tops in winter.

Centres

Hawes, Sedbergh, Kirkby Lonsdale, Aysgarth, Reeth, Kirkby Stephen, Pateley Bridge

Difficulty

From gentle three-mile walks to more strenuous day-long walks and suggestions for longer routes, not technically demanding but you should be able to use a map and compass

Must See

The Howgills, Wild Boar Fell, Cautley Crag, Brimham Rocks, Nidderdale


September 2020

Walk 25 detour

Walk 25: Coverdale
The foot bridge spanning the River Cover to cross from Hindlethwaite Hall Farm to reach Horsehouse is closed and is not due to reopen until February 2021.

You can reach the nearest bridged crossing by continuing through the fields to Arkleside and joining the lane back over the bridge to Horsehouse, adding around 2km to the walk (see map below)

July 2020

2020 reprint updates

798 Reprint 2020 (973.368 KB)

January 2020

Walk 38 – The High Way – Amendment of final 2 paragraphs

page 216

Make your way through successive enclosures across the slope of the hill, heading for buildings set in a nest of trees, marked as 'Low West End' on the map. Through a final gate a track winds down towards the farm.

After the first building, turn off right at a footpath sign to go between West End Farm House and the adjacent ruin. After crossing Lockshaw Gill, turn immediately left through a gate and head away by the right-hand wall. Beyond a fence stile bear left to a track, your outward route. Follow it left back to How Beck Bridge and keep left again back to the road at Shaw Paddock.

June 2017

Route updates and corrections

Walk 31 -

Revised route description for passing the farm before crossing the river: "Guided by a sign to Middle Borwins, swing between the abutments of a dismantled bridge and then go right across the top of a field following the waymarks through a large gate into a paddock. Reaching the lean-to at the top end, bear left into a small enclosure and go through a small gate on the left down to a line of stepping stones across the river."

Walk 32 - Revised route description: “… eventually passing below a large house at Hill Top to reach a junction of tracks.

Carry on straight ahead for twenty metres to a kissing gate onto the lane, where you should turn left.

At the end by Old Cams House …”

The paragraph beginning “Guided by a sign” should be ignored.

Please note the route shown on the map for this walk is incorrect. The route line should continue directly from the disused railway line onto the track at SD 915 904, rather than passing through the farm at SD 914 903.


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