Lakeland’s
most beautiful lakeshore walk - stunning views of the Ullswater Valley
and Helvellyn range
Walk
Starting Point:
Patterdale
Hall Estate
Distance:
7 miles /
11 km
Duration:
3 to 5
hours average, depends on your pace and whether or not you stop for a
picnic
Travel
Options:
Walk to
Howtown and catch the lake ‘Steamer’ back to Glenridding – you will
need money for the tickets on the way home!
Footwear:
Boots/sturdy
shoes
Clothing:
Waterproofs during wet weather
Toilets/
Refreshments:
Glenridding Pier House, on the ‘Steamers’ or in the Howtown Hotel Public
Bar. Please note that there are NO OTHER toilets or shops between
Howtown and Glenridding!
Difficulty:
Moderate –
Easy Not suitable for standard prams but OK for ‘All Terrain’ prams
Terrain:
Undulating
path with up and down hill stretches and some slightly rocky parts
Always check the weather forecast before your walk. Take plenty of
water, especially on hot days!
1
Follow the pavement along the main A592 road into
Patterdale until you reach St Patrick's Church at which point the
road bears right. After this bend you should carefully cross over
and take a left turn signposted to Side Farm (just before the George
Starkey Hut). Follow the farm track all the way to Side Farm itself,
walk through the farmyard and turn left. The wide wooden gate takes
you on to the lakeshore path.
2
You can stay on this path for quite a
distance, initially with a dry stone wall on your left before
the path rises at Silver Point and then descends around Silver
Bay. There are some great picnic spots around here - both at the
point and, if you carefully divert from the path down to the
lake shore, on the beach at Silver Bay. Looking back from the
higher stretches of path, you get great views across towards
Helvellyn and also down towards the lake’s 4 islands and Silver
Bay. Although it undulates reasonably gently, there is a steep
side to the following section of path, so be careful. There are
also good views over to Gowbarrow Fell, which is very imposing
on the opposite side of the lake. You could also look out for
Lyulph's Tower, a Sixteenth Century castellated building nestled
towards the bottom of the fell.
3
The path continues to have short stretches of
uphill and downhill as it follows the lakeshore directly along
towards Howtown. As you walk down and around Long Crag, you'll
cross a small wooden bridge and pass an old barn - remember to
look out for Scalehow Force waterfall up to your right, this
marks a geological fault line between soft and hard rock that
runs across the lake and through Aira Force – a larger waterfall
which is hidden behind the left side of Gowbarrow Fell. Follow
the path, great views of Hallin Fell and Martindale stretching
out in front of you. With a dry stone wall on your left, the
path takes you to the small village of Sandwick. When you reach
the tarmac road, turn left and walk down the slope
4
From here, bear right and follow the sign set
into the wall
Footpath to Howtown. Go
through the gate, across the bridge and take the path to the
left marked
Footpath. After 30 metres follow signpost
Public Footpath up to the right. Skirt the wall (notice
the great views across the lake) and pass through several gates,
always keeping the lake on your left and following the signs for
Howtown. The path gets a bit rocky as you pass through Hallinhag
Wood (look out for Red Squirrels here!) but you soon reach
easier ground as the path rises up and around into Howtown bay.
You'll pass a bench on your right and there are stunning views
up the lake towards Pooley Bridge from this area – Dunmallard
Hill at the tip of the lake, the Pennines in the distance and
the Sharrow Bay Hotel prominent on the right hand lakeshore
about a mile away. Follow the path all the way until you reach a
swing gate on your left taking you down some steps to another
gate and out onto a tarmac road.
OPTION: If you are early for the 'Steamer' then bear right
along the road here and head up to the Howtown Hotel Public
Bar for a drink or snack. The hotel is just a few hundred
metres from the pier.
5
In about 30 metres you will reach a swing
gate accessing the short stretch of lakeshore path that leads up
to Howtown 'Steamer' Pier. Cross the wooden bridge, turn left
and you are on the pier. There is a ‘Steamer’ timetable on the
pier if you’re not sure when the next boat is due. Once back at
Glenridding Pier, walk to the car park entrance and through the
gate on the left, signposted
Patterdale and Howtown Walk. Follow the lakeshore path
until you reach the gate to the road. From here EITHER turn left
and walk along the road OR cross straight over and take the
off-road path towards Patterdale Hall Estate.