- High Crag
Infobox Mountain
Name = High Crag
Photo = High_Crag.jpg
Caption = High Crag from the summit tarn on Haystacks
Location =Cumbria , ENG
Range =Lake District ,Western Fells
Elevation = 744 m (2,441 ft)
Grid_ref_UK = NY180140
Topographic
OS "Landranger" 89
Listing = Wainwright, Hewitt, Nuttall
Prominence = "c." 29 mHigh Crag stands at the southern end of the
High Stile ridge which divides the valleys of Ennerdale andButtermere in the west of theEnglish Lake District . It is often climbed as part of this popular ridge walk, from Black Sailyouth hostel , or from Buttermere via Scarth Gap. The panoramas of theGreat Gable and theScafells are particularly memorable.Topography
The
Western Fells occupy a triangular sector of the Lake District, bordered by the River Cocker to the north east andWasdale to the south east. Westwards the hills diminish toward the coastal plain of Cumberland. At the central hub of the high country areGreat Gable and its satellites, while two principal ridges fan out on either flank ofEnnerdale , the western fells in effect being a great horseshoe around this long wild valley.Alfred Wainwright : "A Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, Volume 7 The Western Fells": Westmorland Gazette (1966): ISBN 0-7112-2460-9] The highest section of the northern branch is formed by the trio ofButtermere fells, High Crag,High Stile and Red Pike.The Buttermere Fells, also known as Buttermere Edge, Bill Birkett:"Complete Lakeland Fells": Collins Willow (1994): ISBN 0-00-713629-3] form the watershed between
Buttermere and UpperEnnerdale . The Ennerdale flanks are steep and rough, put with only small areas of crag, the lower slopes being planted with a ribbon of conifers. Across the narrow ridge-top to the north are deep corries and dark walls of crag, glowering down over the lake. The ridge continues south east to Haystacks and theGreat Gable group. Beyond Red Pike to the west areStarling Dodd ,Great Borne and theLoweswater Fells.High Crag forms the eastern terminus of the Buttermere Fells, its most arresting feature being the great scree slopes of Gamlin End where the high ground falls away. 700 ft below, the ridge levels out once more and throws up the craggy top of Seat (1,840 ft). A final steep descent then leads to Scarth Gap, a walkers' pass between Buttermere and Ennerdale.
All three Buttermere Fells throw out a rocky spur toward the lake, these walls enclosing Birkness and Bleaberry Combs. Birkness Comb, also called Burtness Comb on
Ordnance Survey maps, lies between the truncated and unnamed northern ridges of High Crag and High Stile. Drained intoButtermere by Comb Beck, its headwall is rimmed by crags on all sides. Sheepbone Butress flanks High Crag, which also has a share in Comb Crags, lining the onward ridge. It is the great scooped hollow of the Comb which results in the narrowness of Buttermere Edge. The northern spur also ends abruptly as High Crag Butress, a further tier of rock lying just above the lakeshore.Geology and Mining
The summit rocks are of the Birker Fell Formation,
plagioclase -phyricandesite lava s. Interbeds ofvolcaniclastic sandstone andlapilli -tuff also appear. Seat is an outcrop of the flow banded andesite lavas of the Haystacks Member, shot through withquartz -feldspar phyric microgranite .British Geological Survey: 1:50,000 series maps, "England & Wales Sheet 29": BGS (1999)]There was small scale mining activity in the late nineteenth century beneath Low Wax Knott, adjacent to the Scarth Gap path. Two men worked the operation, living on the fellside in a hut. A search was organised after their regular visits to the local hostelry abruptly ceased, and one was found dead in a pool at Warnscale. It was suspected that the other had killed him.Adams, John: "Mines of the Lake District Fells": Dalesman (1995) ISBN 0-85206-931-6]
ummit and View
The triangular summit has a
cairn at the high point above Gamlin End. The view is restricted byHigh Stile , but the head ofEnnerdale - backed by theScafells - presents a fine picture. More distant glimpses ofSkiddaw and theHelvellyn range are also granted. A short walk north west toward the top of the crags bringsButtermere andCrummock Water into sight.Ascents
Scarth Gap can be gained from the head of Ennerdale, but this is a long walk from anywhere except Black Sail
Youth Hostel . Scarth Gap provides the more regular approach from the Buttermere valley, parking being available at Gatesgarth. On the Buttermere side a path cuts off the corner at the top of the pass and removes the need to first ascend Seat, before the long assault on the screes of Gamlin End. From the shore of Buttermere Wainwright noted that an ascent may be made via Birkness Comb, climbing a grassy rake through the crags.References
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