- Wandope
Infobox Mountain
Name = Wandope
Photo = Whiteless Edge & Wandope from Whiteless Pike.jpg
Caption = Whiteless Edge & Wandope fromWhiteless Pike
Location =Cumbria , ENG
Range =Lake District ,North Western Fells
Elevation = 772 m (2,533 ft)
Prominence = "c." 30 m
Parent peak =Crag Hill
Grid_ref_UK = NY188197
Topographic
OS "Landranger" 89, "Explorer" OL4
Listing = Wainwright, Hewitt, NuttallWandope (also known as "Wanlope"
Alfred Wainwright : "A Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells , Book 6, The North Western Fells": Westmorland Gazette (1964): ISBN 0-7112-2459-5] or "Wandhope"Fact|date=April 2007) is afell in the north-western area of the EnglishLake District . It lies to the east ofCrummock Water and south ofCrag Hill . From the summit there are excellent panoramas of theSca Fell andHigh Stile ranges.Topography
The
North Western Fells occupy the area between the rivers Derwent and Cocker, a broadly oval swathe of hilly country, elongated on a north-south axis. Two roads cross from east to west, dividing the fells into three convenient groups. The central sector, rising betweenWhinlatter Pass andNewlands Pass , includes Wandope.The highest ground in the North Western Fells is an east-west ridge in this central sector, beginning with
Grasmoor aboveCrummock Water and then gradually descending eastwards over Crag Hill, Sail,Scar Crags andCausey Pike . Grasmoor has the greatest elevation, but Crag Hill stands at the hub of the range. It sends out a subsidiary ridge to the south west, stepping down over Wandope andWhiteless Pike toward Buttermere village.Wandope is not prominent in views from below and from most directions appears subservient to its higher neighbours. The connection to Crag Hill is the broad plateau of Wandope Moss, sloping down easily to the west. On the opposite side is the striking feature of Addacomb Hole. This symmetrical hanging valley resembles a half crater, its headwall being 700 ft high.
The ridge south westward from Wandope is divided into two by Third Gill. The eastern branch is a short blunt ended spur, but the western arm narrows to the fine airy ridge of Whiteless Edge. This makes straight for the summit of Whiteless Pike across the
col of Saddle Gate (2,065 ft). The flanks of the ridge are steep and rough throughout, but with more exposed rock to the east.All of the run-off from the fell finds its way ultimately to Crummock Water, the Derwent-Cocker watershed ignoring Wandope in favour of the onward connection from Crag Hill to
Ard Crags . Sail Beck carries the water from the south and east, running out from betweenKnott Rigg and Whiteless Pike into Buttermere village. Addacomb Beck and Third Gill are the tributaries which mark the northern and southern boundaries of Wandope on this flank. To the north and west of the fell is Rannerdale Beck, disgorging its flow direct into the centre section of the lake.Geology
The summit areas of Wandope are composed of the
Ordovician Kirkstile Formation. This is the typical rock of theSkiddaw fells and is composed of laminatedmudstone andsiltstone . Beneath this are theGreywacke sandstone turbities of the Loweswater Formation. The Causey Pike Fault runs across the southern flanks of the fell, beyond which are the rocks of the Buttermere Formation.British Geological Survey: 1:50,000 series maps, "England & Wales Sheet 29": BGS (1999)]ummit and View
A small
cairn marks the summit on a gentle grassy dome, a few yards in from the fall into Addacomb Hole. The view north is blocked by Grasmoor and Crag Hill, but a glorious mountain view extends in all other directions. TheScafells are perhaps the highlight from this vantage point.Ascents
Buttermere is the obvious starting point for climbing Wandope, and several routes are available. Sail Beck and then Third Gill can be followed to give a toehold on the shorter eastern branch of the south west ridge. Alternatively Sail Beck can be followed further up the valley until Addacomb Beck is reached. Above this point a fine ridge can be seen, skirting the southern rim of Addacomb Hole.
Indirect routes are also popular, and Wandope can either be added to the traverse of the Grasmoor-Causey Pike ridge, or taken on a circuit of Rannerdale.Bill Birkett: "Complete Lakeland Fells": Collins Willow (1994): ISBN 0-00-713629-3]
References
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