Crossthwaite Common from Middleton-in-Teesdale
North Pennines Walk
Region - North Pennines
County/Area - Durham
Author - Nick Long
Length - 9.8 miles / 15.8 km Ascent - 1200 feet / 364 metres
Time - 6 hours 10 minutes Grade - moderate
Maps
Ordnance Survey Explorer OL31 | Sheet Map | 1:25k | BUY |
Anquet OS Explorer OL31 | Digital Map | 1:25k | BUY |
Ordnance Survey Landranger 91 | Sheet Map | 1:50k | BUY |
Anquet OS Landranger 91 | Digital Map | 1:50k | BUY |
Ordnance Survey Landranger 92 | Sheet Map | 1:50k | BUY |
Anquet OS Landranger 92 | Digital Map | 1:50k | BUY |
Walk Route Description
Click image to visit gallery of 6 images.
From the market place in Middleton-in-Teesdale, turn down Bridge Street and cross the old county bridge over the River Tees. Built in 1811, it used to mark the boundary between the counties of Durham and Yorkshire. Walk up the hill until you come to the first road off to the right (signposted Holwick). Turn right and walk to the end of the house on the corner. To your left you will see a footpath sign for the Pennine Way through a wooden gate. Follow the track up the hill, ignoring two paths that angle off to the left towards the end of the 'field' as you rise. Reaching a green metal gate pass through and continue on the track to find a stile and a dog gate beside a metal gate at the fence ahead.
By now there are superb views back down the hill over Middleton. Once over the stile ignore the path off to the left and turning towards the right follow the track staying parallel to the fence until the track swings back up the hill passing a series of cairns and finally reaching a way marked metal gate. Throughout keep well over to the right of a distinctive mound topped by a clump of pine trees. This is Kirkcarrion or Caryn's Castle. It was named after a Brigantean prince who was said to have been buried here in pre-Roman times, but it is thought much more likely that a Bronze-Age tribal chieftain was buried in the barrow. His or someone else's ghost is still said to haunt the site on horseback. In 1804 a local farmer removed some stones from the mound and uncovered a cist burial, but unfortunately removed some of the stones to build some walls on Crossthwaite Common.
Now head across to approximately the middle of the wall opposite and then having crossed this wall via a way marked metal gate with a ruined byre to the right, keep fairly close to the wall on your right through the next field until you come to the next gate which has a stile beside it. From here the path swings round slightly left towards a cairn and a ruined wall and passes through it by a fallen post with a way mark sign.
From here views of Grassholme Reservoir (completed in 1915 and used as a nature reserve and for angling and sailing as well as a water supply) and the smaller Selset Reservoir open up. Follow close to your right until you reach a galvanised gate with a stone stile beside it.
The track continues passing below a few trees to your right and on down to an old byre on your left. Pass over a stone stile by a gate and head for the farm in the distance. At the next gate the path descends to a track that passes through a way marked gateway. After then gate follow the track for about 50 yards and then branch off on a faint path to the right reaching the next gateway and stile. Cross to the bottom right hand corner of the next field, crossing the stream by stepping stones and in the next field drop down to ford Carl Beck and join the track to Wythes Hill Farm.
Just before the farm, where the track bears left, go through a way marked gate on your right. Now follow the wall on the left with the beck on your right. The path through this section of the walk is very faint and it is important to have with you a map to show it in relation to the walls (a compass is also important equipment for the later moorland section given how quickly visibility can change here).
After a wooden gate the track bends off to the right to cross a small tributary of Merry Beck a little to the left of where the wall crosses the Beck. Soon afterwards you cross the beck itself close to the remains of a shed. From here, make for the stone ruins visible roughly to northwest. There is a short steep climb and then where a wall comes into view on the left, the path drops down to the valley of Rake's Gill with its shelter, shooting butts and a toilet for the shoot's guns.
From the shelter continue northwest to climb up out of the valley on a track. When you come to a fence pass through the gate. A path takes over from the track. Follow it to the right of a flat topped hill. Superb views of Teesdale soon appear. When you come to a metal red gate pass through it and descend on a path over Crook o'Green Fell. On your left you can see rocky crags. Continue to a wall and then turn right to follow it down to cross Easter Beck. From here there is a narrow path on to a gate at the bottom on the left. The path becomes clearer. Cross Rowton Beck and head for the stile below. Follow a series of white posts, white marked stones and cairns, passing a sheep fold and swinging right. The path is marked by cairns and takes you to a steep and narrow valley. Head towards what seems to be the top of a crag. At the last moment you will see a stile. Scramble down the path keeping the stream on your left. At the bottom find a crossing point over the stream and climb up the bank on the far side to join a track.
Turn right towards Holwick. The track soon becomes a road. After about another four hundred yards (soon after the telephone box) there is a signed footpath path off the road to the left. If you feel in need of refreshments 'The Strathmore Arms', which is open every day except Tuesday and caters for walkers, is just a couple of hundred yards down the road. If not, take the footpath to your left and head down towards the Tees, crossing a stile at the end of the first field. Near the bottom of the next field cross the stile in the wall to your right (not that ahead) and continue down to reach the Pennine Way alongside the River Tees (do not cross the river).
Turn right along the Pennine Way. The path follows the River Tees closely for the first mile, until, with Park Fell Wood to your right, it cuts across two meanders in the river. It is well marked throughout this section and for part of it follows a sunken lane, before rejoining the river bank briefly. Finally near East Crossthwaite it leaves the riverside for the last time, passes a stone barn on the left and continues as a clear track to the end of the field and on through the next two until it takes you out onto the road at Middleton. Turn left, crossing the bridge and climbing back up the hill into the village until you reach the Market Place where you can find refreshments in one of the many cafes or pubs.
This is one of a series of walks which form the Teesdale Challenge Walks Programme - there are many other excellent walks to choose from. Click here for full details of this walk
Other walks nearby
Walk 2228 | Romaldkirk Moor | easy/mod | 7.6 miles |
Walk 3099 | High Force, Low Force and the River Tees | easy/mod | 7.5 miles |
Walk 2157 | Romaldkirk & Cotherstone | easy | 5.0 miles |
Walk 2170 | Eggleston & Mickleton from Romaldkirk | easy/mod | 5.8 miles |
Walk 1553 | Hannah's Meadow, Baldersdale & Brown Rigg Moss | easy/mod | 8.0 miles |
Walk 3424 | Cronkley Fell from Hanging Shaw | easy/mod | 7.0 miles |
Walk 3526 | Hanging Shaw, Cronkley Scar, Low Force & High Force | moderate | 12.7 miles |
Walk 3634 | Catterick Moss & Bollihope Carrs | moderate | 5.6 miles |
Walk 2469 | Great Allotment & God's Bridge | moderate | 10.2 miles |
Walk 2393 | Weardale Circular from Westgate | easy/mod | 6.4 miles |
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