Yorkshire Walks
Hell Gill and High Way

Map
based on Ordnance Survey mapping by permission of Ordnance Survey
on behalf of the Controller of Her Majesty's Stationery Office. © Crown
Copyright.
Distance:
131/2 miles (21.5km)
Height gain: 985 feet (300m)
Walking time: 6 hours
Type of walk: Long and fairly demanding; good paths
Start/Finish: Appersett. GR858907
This long, steady walk is simply splendid and takes
you almost to the source of the River Ure, which flows
through Wensleydale. The turning point is Hell Gill, the
boundary with adjoining Cumbria, from where we trace the
route back towards Hawes followed by the redoubtable Lady
Anne Clifford as she travelled this countryside in the
17th century. The scenery is outstanding, and the walk
best kept for a long day, though it is not difficult and
could be undertaken at any time of year.
Appersett
is a small, attractive village at the upper end of Wensleydale,
but invariably passed through by visitors bound for the delights
of nearby Hawes; that's a pity, because Appersett, with its village
green and cluster of old cottages, has its own place in the scheme
of things, and was originally a Norse settlement.
Walk
out from Appersett on the Sedbergh road and cross the bridge
spanning Widdale Beck. A short way on leave the road over a ladder
stile on the left, and go right, alongside a wall, until you
approach New Bridge, which crosses the River Ure. As you reach
the bridge, don't cross it, but go left over a stile and walk
alongside the river, on its true right bank. The onward route
is now marked by stiles and gates, and crosses a succession of
riverside, or near riverside, pastures. Keep on to pass to the
left of Birkrigg Farm, and cross more pastures. Nearby Hollin
Bank is especially pleasing in spring and early summer when it
is bright with wild flowers. Here the route takes you away from
the river for a while, but gradually you come back to rejoin
it. Off to your left is the course of the old Wensleydale railway
that once travelled up and down the valley to Garsdale and beyond;
what a tourist attraction that would be if it were ever reopened.
Gradually
you approach Mossdale Head Farm. Pass in front of the farm and
go forward to a bridge spanning Mossdale Gill. Cross the bridge
and climb on the other side beside a wall and turn through a
gap. Now cross the corner of a field and go down to reach the
A684 at Thwaite Bridge. Cross the road with care, and go forward
to cross the river, then go left through gates on a track signposted
to Yore House. The path now strikes across numerous fields, below
the small plantation of Cotter and on to Yore House. Beyond,
turning towards the Vale of Eden, you head across more pastures
to Blades Farm, where refreshments are usually available.
Continue
by going round the back of the buildings at Blades, through a
couple of gates, and then on towards a footbridge. From the footbridge,
turn sharp right and soon go left alongside a woodland strip.
Keep on through two more gates and cross Cowshaw Hill, a low
drumlin, and a relic from the last Ice Age. Press on to reach
Beck Side Farm, and then traverse more pastures just above the
Ure to reach Low West End Farm. Go past Low West End on its access
track, heading initially for How Beck Bridge, but then cutting
away on a rising track that continues the route northward to
Green Bridge. Here you cross the infant River Ure, which rises
only a short distance to the east, on Lunds Fell. A short distance
further you reach Hell Gill Bridge, the turning point.
Hell
Gill Bridge is a fine single arch of stone and dates from 1825,
replacing an earlier structure, and a small stone in one of its
parapets is thought to be an old boundary stone between Yorkshire
and what was then Westmorland. William Camden, writing in the
16th century, mistakenly took the gill for the Ure, his perception
no doubt traumatised by the severity of everything he saw: '...it
is in most places, so waste, solitary, unpleasant and unsightly,
so mute and still...that it striketh a certain horror.' This
last remark was about the depth of Hell Gill, but it makes clear
that the route across the bridge was in use from an early date.
Hell Gill marks the county boundary and the edge of the Yorkshire
Dales National Park. The narrow neck of land lying between the
gill, which later flows into the Eden and out to the Solway Firth,
and the River Ure, which flows eastwards to the North Sea, lies
on the watershed of Britain, the true divide between east and
west.
To
return to Appersett, start by retracing your steps for a few
strides, and then branch left across an expanse of limestone
pavement. The track you are now taking is known as The High Way,
and is part of the route taken by Lady Anne Clifford, one of
the most renowned noblewomen of the Stuart era, as she travelled
between her Westmorland castles and estates. Once this was the
major route through the valley from Hawes to Kirkby Stephen,
and was in use until the 1820s when the new turnpike road (now
the B6259) was built.
As
it heads south-eastward, the High Way takes a slightly rising
course. Before long it reaches High Hall, formerly an inn called
the Highway House, on a well-used route through the mountains
- well used, not only by nobility, but also by drovers, tradespeople,
and highwaymen, too. And Mary Queen of Scots is said to have
passed along it in 1568, on her way from Carlisle to imprisonment
in Bolton Castle. Passing for the most part alongside walls and
along the steep edge of the escarpment, with a fine view of the
valley, the route eventually rounds Cotter End, from where it
descends to meet the road. Continue down the road for about 800yds/m,
and then leave it, on the right, for a footpath that immediately
crosses the river and rejoins your outward route for the final
stage back to Appersett.
From 'Yorkshire
Dales: North & East' by Terry Marsh
The
information given in this walk has been provided in good faith
and is intended only as a general guide. Whilst all reasonable
efforts have been made to ensure that details were correct at the
time of publication, the author and Country Publications Ltd cannot
accept any responsibility for inaccuracies. It is the responsibility
of individuals undertaking outdoor activities to approach the activity
with caution and, especially if inexperienced, to do so under appropriate
supervision. The activity described in this walk is strenuous and
individuals should ensure that they are suitably fit before embarking
upon it. They should carry the appropriate equipment and maps,
be properly clothed and have adequate footwear. They should also
take note of weather conditions and forecasts, and leave notice
of their intended route and estimated time of return. |
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