- Grey Friar
Infobox Mountain
Name = Grey Friar
Photo = Grey_Friar_and_harter_Fell_from_Great_Carrs.jpg
Caption = Grey Friar from Great Carrs, one km to the east, Harter Fell is in the background.
Location =Cumbria , ENG
Range =Lake District ,Southern Fells
Elevation = 770 m (2526 ft)
Grid_ref_UK = NY259003
Topographic
OS "Landranger" 96, 90 OS "Explorer" OL6
Prominence = 78 m
Parent peak =Swirl How
Listing = Hewitt, Nuttall, WainwrightGrey Friar is a fell is the English
Lake District , it is one of the Coniston Fells and is situated 13 kilometres west-south-west ofAmbleside . It reaches a height of 770 metres (2,526 feet) and stands to the north west of the other Coniston Fells, a little off the beaten track and tends to be the least visited of the group. It is quite a large fell and forms the eastern wall of theDuddon Valley for several kilometres, in fact all drainage from Grey Friar goes to the Duddon Valley and not toConiston Water .Topography
The Coniston (or Furness) Fells form the watershed between Coniston Water and the Duddon valley to the west. The range begins at
Wrynose Pass and runs south for around 10mile s before petering out atBroughton in Furness on the Duddon Estuary. Grey Friar is the only major fell in the group not to stand on this main axis, rising to the west ofGreat Carrs across the depression of Fairfield.Bounded to the north and west by the infant Duddon, Grey Friar has long rough slopes on this side with many small areas of crag. The southern perimeter is formed by Seathwaite Tarn and its attendant streams. The tarn was originally a much smaller waterbody, but was raised early in the 20th century to provide drinking water for the
Barrow in Furness area. The dam is almost 400 yards long and is concrete cored with slate buttresses, the resulting depth of the tarn being around 80 ft. Water is not abstracted directly from the tarn, but flows some distance downriver to an off-take weir. Blair, Don: "Exploring Lakeland Tarns": Lakeland Manor Press (2003): ISBN 0-9543-9041-5 ] Since Grey Friar curves southward, the main ridge stands across the tarn,Brim Fell and the back ofDow Crag forming the opposing slope.Mining
The fell has been mined for
copper extensively in the past, the Seathwaite mine was situated on the southern slopes above Seathwaite Tarn while the Cockley Beck mine stood on the fells lower north western slopes, they operated in the mid 1800s and were nowhere near as profitable or extensive as the main Coniston copper mines in the so called “Coppermines Valley”.Adams, John: "Mines of the Lake District Fells": Dalesman (1995) ISBN 0-85206-931-6]Ascents
Grey Friar can be climbed from several locations; it is often ascended along with the other six Coniston fells and this walk is usually started at Coniston village. Direct ascents of the fell can be started from the Duddon valley, the top of the
Wrynose Pass or Cockley Beck.Alfred Wainwright : "A Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells ", Book 4: ISBN 0-7112-2457-9] Birkett, Bill: "Complete Lakeland Fells": Collins Willow (1994): ISBN 0-0021-8406-0]ummit and View
The summit of the fell is stony with two cairned rock outcrops, the south easterly is the higher while the north westerly offers the better view. There is a good view of the Scafell massif and the other Coniston fells are well seen along the ridge to the south. 200 metres north west of the main summit is a distinctive pointed rock, often called the “Matterhorn Rock”. Richards, Mark: "Southern Fells": Collins (2003): ISBN 0-00-711367-6]
References
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