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Wednesday 16 February 2011

A Walk in the Rain - 2 Wainwrights from Newlands

Newlands Hause
The long days of summer when the trail stretches away ahead until the golden evening dresses the hills in patterns of light and shade and the westering sun lights the path homewards are the truly memorable ones. They shine like a beacon in our minds through the dark of winter and bring us back to the hills time and time again as if we are searching for some half remembered place in a dream.

Today at Newlands Hause though was not one of them. Driven before a westerly gale, the rain drifted in watery veils across the open fellsides and a grey nimbostratus hid the higher summits from view. This is perhaps the more usual scene to greet those who come to walk in the Lake District but at least the Ard Cragsfells looked dramatic and Moss Force just above the pass was at its best. But yes - these are excuses - the weather was grim and if I did the walk I would get wet.

Part of the joy of doing the Wainwrights - the fells classified by the late AW Wainwright in his guides to Lakeland - is that some of them can be ascended so quickly and easily that on days like this the getting wet part is not for long enough to become too tiresome. Indeed Latrigg took me and Josh rather less than 10 minutes from the Skiddaw car park and the view from there far outweighs that tiny effort. These two fells I was climbing today - Ard Crags and Knott Rigg - involved slightly under 4 miles of walking and just 1050 feet of ascent for the return trip.

From the small parking area at the top of Newlands Hause set off along the path on the opposite side of the road to the spectacular waterfall of Moss Force - after visiting it 5 minutes the other way - which is actually signposted to Ard Crags if the sign has not since blown away. The path follows the obvious line up a fairly steep grassy ridge ahead past a small rocky outcrop where there was some shelter if only because the wind was blowing the rain over the top of it. After here the steepness eased and the ridge led up past another outcrop to the small cairn atop the grassy ridge of Knott Rigg.

Leaving Knott Rigg the way descends only slightly to cross a wide grassy area which was not overly boggy even in this weather to ascend the steeper slope to Ard Crags itself one mile distant.

Today I saw no-one else on this route and I was in all probability the only one to visit these 2 summits and unlike those who no doubt climbed nearby Crag Hill (aka Eel Crag) or Grasmoor I had a view to enjoy as I remained below the cloud level for the duration of the walk. These lower peaks in the Lake District are often - quite wrongly - neglected in favour of their more illustrious neighbors but they usually offer fine summits and enjoyable quiet approaches whether the sun shines or not.
Pete Buckley Feb 2011
summits Knott Rigg 556m (1824ft) >>> Ard Crags 581m (1906ft)

Essentials >>> Up 320m >>> Down 320m >>> How Far? 6.4km return >>> Start and finish at Newlands Hause (minor road between Buttermere and Braithwaite) >>> More walks and hikescan be found on my website