Walk out of the car park in the direction
you drove in towards Pendle Hill following the route cars use to drive
into it. Upon meeting the road turn right, and keep ahead down the
gravelled track enclosed on both sides by walls. Pass through the stone
stile to the right of the wooden gate and keep straight on walking
across the field. A very wide grassy path leaves the corner of the field
enclosed on both sides by fences and trees. The trees to the right of
the path are soon replaced by a wall, and the path becomes partially
gravelled underfoot. Continue by the side of the wall heading towards
the gate in the corner of the field. Once through the gate, walk up
through the next field by the side of Longlands Wood. Carry on to the
corner of the field and pass through the stone stile or the wooden
kissing gate and keep ahead by the side of the wall. |
Shortly afterwards where the wall bends off
uphill to the right, leave the wall and head diagonally left across the
field towards the trees. Pass around the right hand side of a fence and
then on to the left of a line of trees and another fence towards the
gate in the corner of the field. Pass through the kissing gate and
continue ahead - off to the right is Worsaw Hill. Keep on towards the
trees ahead, and then (ignoring the gate giving access to Warsaw Hill)
follow the path around to the left and down towards the farm building
forty yards below at Worsaw End. Pass to the right of the building
(Pendle Hill is now directly ahead) and on a little further, enclosed by
fences, to reach a lane. Go over the wooden stile and turn right to walk
along the lane (West Lane). |
The lane initially gently rises, and then
flattens - keep straight on where a further lane branches off to the
left. The lane again starts to climb at one point giving a clear view of
Worsaw Hill to the right, and then bends sharply around to the left
before straightening and keeping on climbing. |
As the lane bends around to the right it
forks - here take the left branch heading up hill, following the sign
for ‘cul-de-sac’. The lane keeps on climbing towards Pendle Hill,
and as the lane ends keep straight on up the grassy path, ignoring the
entrance for Moorside Farm on the left. The enclosed grassy path passes
by a few trees before reaching a stile. Pass over the wooden stile and
head diagonally right towards a wooden waymarker, and then upon reaching
that, turn left to walk steeply uphill, up the right hand side of the
‘mini-valley’. |
After passing a tree, the climb begins to
flatten, and as Pendle Hill again becomes visible ahead, the climb up
across the side of Worston Moor can be seen ahead. The path bends around
to the right following a series of small stone waymarkers over towards
Burst Clough. The path then eventually pulls in and starts to climb up
by the side of a wall, then as the wall bends sharply around to the
right and starts a gentle descent, the path leaves the wall to head
diagonally up to the right as it starts its ascent from Worston Moor up
on to Pendle Moor. |
Pass the final waymarker and head up onto
the well worn track, and keep on climbing along this ‘nick’ cut in
to the side of the moor. As the path reaches almost the top of the
climb, the path is interspersed with small cairns. As a much larger
cairn is approached, take the path that branches off to the left about
twenty yards before it to continue climbing. Keep ahead past several
smaller cairns, until a couple of hundred yards further on the very
large stone memorial is reached. |
Walk straight past the monument and keep on
in the same direction towards the weather shelter visible on the horizon
ahead. Continue on past the weather shelter and on towards the stile in
the wall ahead. |
Pass over the stile and follow the broad
grassy path as it swings away from the wall to the right. The path now
for about half a mile is a broad, green ‘grassy’ path, which affords
excellent views of the Ribble Valley off to the left and to the trip
point on the summit of Pendle Hill to the right. Keep on this path until
it reaches a gate and a stile in a wall. |
Here pass over the stile and head the final
few hundred yards up to the trig point and summit. The triangulation
point at the top of Pendle Hill stands at 558 metres (1,831 feet). The
all around panorama is magnificent, but the extensive nature of the flat
top requires an amount of wandering if all the views are to be seen at
their best. Mountains as far away as the Lake District and landmarks
such as Blackpool Tower can be seen from the top. |
After admiring the views, retrace your steps
the couple of hundred yards back to the wall you just passed over. Pass
back over the stile, but this time take the path directly away from the
wall, not the path that heads off diagonally left, which was the path
used on the way up. |
The path’s descent is gentle at first, and
as it descends it starts to contour around the hill to the left. As it
contours around, Hookcliffe plantation and the return path back to
Downham become visible down below to the right. |
The path keeps on contouring around the
hill, but its rate of descent continues to get steeper. At a waymarker
the path swings back around sharply to the right. |
It then swings back to the left before
turning to head down in the direction of Hookcliffe plantation. Go over
the wooden stile and continue a gentle descent down to a wall ahead. Go
over the stile in the wall and head directly away from the wall. |
The path meanders down through the reeds in
the field down towards Pendle Road below. Pass through the kissing gate
just before reaching the road, cross the road and on through the next
kissing gate. |
Head down the steps and over the stile and
then follow the path to the left a few yards further on, just before the
fence, as it rises to head the short distance to the building. Opposite
the right hand side of the building there is a stile in the wall. Go
over the stile and walk away from the wall down the right hand side of
the field, keeping just to the left of the fence. At the bottom of the
field, proceed over the next stone stile and keep on through the next
field, again by the left hand side of the fence. At the bottom of that
field, pass over the wooden stile and cross the lane to the stile
diagonally left built into the wall opposite. |
Climb over that stile and turn left along the gravelled path, enclosed
by a wooden fence to the left and trees to the right. Soon afterwards
the path crosses over a footbridge and enters into another field. Keep
to the right of the field walking along the left hand side of the fence
and continue on down to the next stile in the corner of the field. Pass
over this stone stile and on towards the fence ahead. |
Upon reaching the fence, pass through the wooden kissing gate and head
across the field towards the trees and the wooden waymarker. Pass the
waymarker and continue on for a few more yards to reach Downham Beck.
Keep on in the same direction walking along the path down the nearside
of the beck towards the buildings ahead. Pass through the kissing gate
and out on to the road. Walk along the road and at the junction turn
right towards the bridge. As the road approaches the bridge, turn left
just before reaching it along another road. Head along this road for
about fifty yards before turning right back in to the car park. |