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Thursday 26th August 2004
Start point: The back road,
Bowston (SD
490 980)
Bowston - a
nameless summit 1262' -
Brunt Knott
(147)(OF)
- a nameless summit 1266' -
Ulgraves
(OF)
- Bowston
Route Map
Weather: Started off bright but worsening
with one heavy shower.
Today's walk follows
Wainwright's Potter Fell chapter in his book 'The Outlying Fells of
Lakeland', page 8.
There are spaces for parking on the
back road between Bowston and Staveley 100m beyond Hagg Foot Farm. A
footpath signposted 'Side House' shows the way from the road, and the
grassy path leads through woodland to reach it.

Side House.
Round the back of the house, the path follows a walled
lane. A 'no access' sign blocks the way of the Wainwright route; another
signs points the permitted way to Potter Tarn. It is only a slight
detour as you can then follow the wall up and resume the route above
Potter Tarn.

Potter Tarn from the ascent to a nameless summit
1262'.

Rocky outcrop en-route to a nameless summit 1262'.
Turning left at the rocky outcrop, there are many
false summits before you reach the nameless grass summit. Directly ahead
lies Brunt Knott, its cairn visible on the horizon.

Potter Tarn and Kendal beyond.

Kirkstone Pass and The Eastern Fells from a nameless
summit 1262'.
Following the wall down to a depression, note the wall
running through a pool on the right, cross it and head for the
steepening summit of Brunt Knott.

Wainwright's 'wall through a pool'.

From Brunt Knott summit: Yoke, Ill Bell and Froswick
to the left, the flat summit of Thornthwaite Crag, centre, and Harter
Fell, Kentmere Pike and Shipman Knotts to the right.
I headed boggily eastwards, over a stile in the wire
fence to a junction of walls, crossed it at the stile and then followed
another wall to a heathery nameless summit.

The heathery slopes of a nameless summit 1266'.

The Eastern Fells from a nameless summit 1266'.
The way to Ulgraves basically follows the line of the
walls. I had to hunt for ways through all the cross walls and access
here is difficult. On reaching the Ulgraves enclosure, there is gated
access and it is a steep grassy climb past the cows to the large cairn
on the summit. As I arrived here the heavens opened but there was still
a magnificent full length view of the Longsleddale valley.

Looking along Longsleddale from the summit of
Ulgraves.
From Ulgraves, Gurnal Dubs reservoir can be seen
below. I headed for this, crossed a fence and went around the south side
of Gurnal Dubs although the path goes either way. The major path takes
at its outlet takes you down to Potter Tarn.

Gurnal Dubs.
I turned off at Potter Tarn dam outflow, the lovely
track passes through woods and past a reservoir (Ghyll Pool) before
descending back to the Bowston Road. On the way note the bridge carrying
the Thirlmere aqueduct across the stream.

Ghyll Pool reservoir outlet.
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Previous Walk 24th August 2004
The Lion and The Lamb < > Next Walk 2nd
September 2004
Starling Dodd
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