A 2 hour drive from home in west Lancashire can get me to the start of a lot of walks in north Wales, the Peak District, Yorkshire Dales, Pennines and the Lake District but this day-walk needed a bit more dedication. An early start and a 4 hour drive got me to the Harthope Valley at 10am to start my walk in the Cheviots.
Hedgehope Hill from Hawsen Burn
Although the highest summits were in cloud Housey Crags could be clearly seen. Good ground underfoot soon had me at the base of the crag with a wide choice of routes to the top with anything from some challenging scrambling to walking.
The Cheviot from Housey Crags |
The views were hazy but the valley and its surrounding hills felt big and open with broad grass and heather slopes reaching to a big sky. The walk over Long Crags was easy and the foreshortened view of Hedgehope Hill suggested more of a challenge that it turned out to be. Obviously not overly trodden, a narrow path had been worn and was easy to follow to the final convex slope where I emerged out of the midge-populated still air into a light breeze. The summit is topped by an impressive cairn supporting a triangulation pillar; it turned out to be the most impressive summit of the day.
Hedgehop Hill summit |
Looking out towards the North Sea I spied a lower cloudbase and possibly some rain although inland was clearer. I turned towards Comb Fell encountering some hags down to the col and even more of them at the col, albeit mostly dry, before roughly handrailing the fence to a bend which marked the summit. Mist had moved up Harthope Valley and ascended its north-facing slopes, spilling over the col I had just walked up from. I hadn’t yet escaped the midges as I started across the wetter plateau which had some Armco beams places over occasional areas of exposed peat which made progress easier.
The route to Cairn Hill is not intuitive; that is, not direct! The summit is to the right but the fenceline bends to the left and I was going to take a direct route but after looking at the OS Explorer map I decided to keep to the right of the fence and use it as a handrail feature to take me directly to the summit. The col between Comb Fell and Cairn Hill had some deep groughs that would provide good sport in wetter conditions. It was here that I started to meet other walkers for the first time today as they descended from The Cheviot to take the valley route down and past Langleeford.
Cairn Hill summit |
On the walk from Cairn Hill to its west top, also known as Hangingstone Hill, I could easily see the group of three Nuttalls to the south and west with Windy Gyle being the most obvious. Hangingstone Hill’s summit is an insignificant piece of heather in the middle of nowhere, 60 or 70 yards from the signpost at the junction of the three paths of the Pennine Way. Auchope Cairn was an easy stroll giving teasing views of the more rugged north side of The Cheviot including the rockier features of the Hen Hole and Braydon Crag. The summit cairns stood sentinel over the view to Scotland and I retraced my steps, stopping for a quick chat a young couple mountain-biking to Kirk Yetholm.
Auchope Cairn summit |
Hangingstone Hill signpost |
he route to the top of The Cheviot was on a good flagged path which led into cloud which turned out to be drizzle. I put on my waterproofs at the summit and climbed the slippery concrete plinth to reach the trig point to claim the tick.
The Cheviot summit |
The way down followed a reasonable but rough stony track over pink granite to Scald Hill and then past some well-made and numbered (1 to 10, or was it 11?) shooting butts. This is the standard way up to Northumberland’s county top but I would definitely recommend the horseshoe route that I’d walked.
The day on the hill had been long – just over 8 and a half hours – and I still had to get my boots off and load the car before starting the drive home. I knew beforehand that it would be a long day; the round trip turned out to be 410 miles of driving 18 hours from leaving home to returning.