Leave the car park and turn right along the pavement
towards the centre of Barley. Over the bridge at the ‘T’ junction,
cross the road and pass along the right hand side of the village hall
down the lane signed "Barley Green". Follow the lane as it
bends around top the left in front of some terraced cottages and on
along it through the gate posts. Keep on past the water works before the
lane then rises more steeply to reach the side of Lower Ogden Reservoir. |
Keep on the track down the right hand side of the
reservoir, and on over a cattle grid as it heads towards Ogden Clough,
with views over the water to Fell Wood. Just past Lower Ogden Reservoir,
the path is joined by the Pendle Way, the course of which is followed
for the rest of this walk over the summit of Pendle and back down in to
Barley. The track starts to climb, before levelling again to enter
partial tree cover, before descending towards the base of Upper Ogden
Reservoir. Pass over a stone stile by a metal gate, and head the few
yards up to the start of the reservoir. |
Here, follow the yellow way marked arrow pointing
down the right hand side of the reservoir, along a path (sometimes a
little boggy in places) that keeps close by the side of the reservoir
next to a fence. Pass through a wooden kissing gate and continue along
the side of the wall, before leaving it and gently climbing as Ogden
Clough is entered. The path is wide and grassy underfoot as it continues
along towards a wooden gate in a wall, which marks the boundary between
the grassy field from the bracken covered open moorland. |
 |
Pass through the wooden kissing gate in the wall, and
head diagonally right, climbing initially up a stony path. The path
continues its slow climb before descending briefly to a small stream. As
the stream is approached, ahead can be seen some wooden fencing, with a
very eroded path heading up from it. Ignore and keep on past this, and
then turn right up the hill about thirty yards past the fencing, up an
initially sketchy path, towards a wooden waymarker, which is just
visible on the horizon above. There is a small cairn which has recently
been started marking this turning point. |
The path passes the waymarker and keeps on in the
same direction as it slowly pulls across to Boar Clough to its right.
The path continues to gently climb and its course is sporadically marked
along the way by small cairns. It then follows an old watercourse for a
while and is badly eroded in places as it continues to follow the line
of cairns as it slowly bends around to the right. |
Continue the ascent across Barley Moor, following the
line of cairns as they swing sharply to the right. After the path turned
around to the right, this line of cairns is followed for about 600 yards
at which point the path swings around to the left and the summit is
visible a couple of hundred yards straight ahead. The triangulation
point at the top of Pendle Hill stands at 558 metres (1,831 feet). |
After admiring the views, continue on in the same
direction past the triangulation point and down the wide path towards
the wall ahead. On a clear day, as the wall is approached, Yorkshire’s
Three Peaks are all visible directly ahead. Upon reaching the wall, do
not climb the stile, but turn right to walk along the near side the
wall. A few yards further on, at the Pendle Way stone guide post, turn
right heading directly away from the wall, along an initially gravelled path. |
The path then becomes rougher underfoot as it begins to descend much more
steeply – ahead are wonderful panoramas of Barley, Lower Ogden
Reservoir, Brierfield, Nelson and beyond. The path continues its steep
descent down a series of man-made steps. As the path becomes less
severe, it bends around to the left and pulls in alongside a wall.
Follow by the side of the wall down to, and through a kissing gate. |
From here, head diagonally right following the yellow
arrow on the gate, to head across the field on a line just to the right
of a large tree, which is to the right of the farm buildings. Pass along
the side of the fence surrounding the tree, and a few yards further on
pass through the wooden kissing gate, by the side of a larger wooden gate. |
The path gently descends through the field keeping by
the side of the left hand wall, to reach another kissing gate. Pass
through this, and head diagonally right across the field towards and
past the telegraph pole to descend to another kissing gate. Pass through
this kissing gate, and keep ahead on the (in places) narrow path as it
reaches yet another kissing gate built in to a wall. Pass through this
and turn left along the gravelled path by the side the wall and on down
and through the next kissing gate. |
Here turn immediately right along a track towards a
couple of cottages. Just before reaching then, turn left through the
wooden kissing gate, and continue straight ahead down the lane. After a
few yards take the path which leads straight on past the large tree,
ignoring the lane which goes off to the left over the cattle grid, and
the stile which goes off to the right at the start of the path. |
Keep on this gravelled path alongside the wall on the
left, and pass through yet another kissing gate. The path continues its
gentle descent and at one point winds its way through a field before
passing through another kissing gate, and shortly afterwards over a
wooden footbridge. |
The path is then enclosed by fences and passes under
overhanging trees before heading down the side of a line of conifers and
becoming cobbled underfoot. At the end of the short cobbled section,
pass through the metal kissing gate and turn left down the metalled lane. |
Walk down the lane past the houses taking time to admire the beautifully kept
gardens where the lane is bordered by a succession of white stones, and
then on out through the stone gateposts. Follow the lane for a few more
yards and then where the lane bends around to the left, turn right over
the wooden footbridge, following the yellow Pendle Way arrows. |
The path then bends around uphill to the left behind
a large tree and on past the side of a wall. Keep on past the wooden
waymarker towards the buildings ahead. Pass over the wooden footbridge
and down to and through the wooden kissing gate, before following the
gravelled path along the side of the stream to reach the road. |
Upon reaching the road, turn right and follow it for
a hundred yards or so through Barley centre. Just before reaching the
Pendle Inn, pass through the gap in the wall on the left hand side of
the road, by the children’s play area. Walk along this path between
the road and the children’s play area, on over the footbridge and back
around to the car park. |