Eldroth
Walkshire

Walks in Eldroth

From easy city strolls to challenging trails, discover the best of Eldroth on foot.

Ingleborough Walk from Clapham
7mi
Moderate

Ingleborough Walk from Clapham

📍Eldroth

Starting in the North Yorkshire village of Clapham this walk climbs to Ingleborough Cave, Ingleborough and Gaping Gill. The Route Start Point: Clapham, North Yorkshire Finish Point: Clapham, North Yorkshire Distance: 7 miles GPX Route Map ingleboroughwalkfromclaphamDownload Walk Description what3words for start point: ///wants.boom.jugs This walk starts in the North Yorkshire village of Clapham before tackling the challenging 4 mile hike to the top of the mountain. Heading north on the footpath that runs along Clapham Beck the route then passes Ingleborough Show Cave before climbing Gaping Gill. The cave is one of the unmistakable landmarks on the mountain with a plunging 98 metre deep hole which Fell Beck flows into. The next section of the route takes you to the summit of Ingleborough, the second-highest hill in the Yorkshire Dales.

Walk: Austwick, Norber Erratics, Crummackdale and Feizor
7mi
Moderate

Walk: Austwick, Norber Erratics, Crummackdale and Feizor

⏱2h 55m📍Eldroth

A 7 mile walk around Austwick and the Norber Erratics. The Route what3words for start point: ///depending.prouder.baroness Start Point: The Green, Austwick, Lancaster LA2 8BB Finish Point: The Green, Austwick, Lancaster LA2 8BB Distance: 7 Miles GPX Route Map austwick-norber-and-feizorDownload Walk Description Austwick was first settled by Vikings, its name means ‘eastern farm’ as at that time the main village in the area was Clapham. It is a delightful village, with a near-perfect scene of old stone cottages facing across a small green complete with an old ‘Yorkshire West Riding’ road sign and the remains of the market cross. It retains a village atmosphere with shop, pub, hotel and school. Of particular note is Austwick Hall, a fine house dating back to at least the early 16th Century originally built as a fortified manor house. To the west of the village are ancient ploughing terraces known as lynchets, flat terraces cut into the hillside wide enough for oxen to pull a plough; these terraces allowed crops to be grown on the otherwise steep valley sides. Some may date back to the early Anglian farmers who settled in this area, although most are medieval. From Thwaite Lane, a path leads off to reach the foot of the impressive limestone screes of Robin Proctor’s Scar caused by the North Craven Fault. The scar is said to be named after a local farmer who fell to his death from these limestone cliffs whilst out riding his horse. The famous Norber Erratics can be found on the limestone plateau above these scars. Literally hundreds of large Silurian slate boulders were carried here by a glacier during the last Ice Age some 12,000 years ago from the western slopes of Crummackdale. Over the centuries, the surrounding limestone bedrock has slowly eroded away leaving the more resistant (and darker) slate boulders perched on thin limestone pedestals. Known to geologists and geography students nationwide, these are classic examples of glacial erratics. The Silurian slate boulders are 100 million years older than the Carboniferous limestone they sit on.