- Ingleton Waterfalls Trail
Infobox Hiking trail
Name=Ingleton Waterfalls Trail
Photo=Thornton Force.jpg
Caption=Thornton Force
Location=Ingleton ,North Yorkshire ,England
Designation=
Length=8 kilometres (4.5 miles)
Start/End Points=Ingleton ,North Yorkshire (circular)
Use=Hiking
ElevChange=
HighPoint=
LowPoint=
Difficulty=Easy to Moderate
Season=All year
Sights=
Hazards=Ingleton Waterfalls Trail is a well-known
trail located in the village ofIngleton in the Englishcounty ofNorth Yorkshire , now maintained by the Ingleton Scenery Company. It is claimed that the trail, some 8 kilometres (4.5 miles) long, and with a vertical rise of 169 m (554 feet) has some of the most spectacularwaterfall andwoodland scenery in the north ofEngland .Beginnings
Following a number of articles in the [http://www.lancasterguardian.co.uk/ Lancaster Guardian] and other newspapers about the scenery in and around Ingleton, public interest led to the creation of the trail in an area which was previously hidden from view. Paths and bridges were built and the trail opened on
Good Friday , 11 April 1885. [cite web| author = Ingleton Waterfalls Trail | title = History of the Trail | url = http://www.ingletonwaterfallswalk.co.uk/history.htm | accessdate = 2007-07-09 ]The Walk
Starting in the Broadwood car park the trail takes walkers along the banks of the
River Twiss , through Swilla Glenn with its coin embedded tree and on to Pecca Falls, Pecca Twin Falls, Holly Bush Spout and Thornton Force. A footbridge bridge crosses the Twiss and leads on to Twistleton Lane, where in summer there is often an Ice Cream Van waiting to serve hot and thirsty tourists. Following Twistleton Lane down pastScar End Farm and Twistleton Hall the walk crosses Oddies Lane to Beezley's Farm.Past Beezley’s the trail starts its decent along the banks of the
River Doe . This river emerges near God's Bridge close to the settlement ofChapel-le-Dale and flows gently until it reaches the waterfalls walk at Beezley's Falls Triple Spout (with its three waterfalls side-by side). As the trail continues, you look down 18 metres (59 feet) onto Rival Falls and then onto BaxenghylGorge , Snow Falls and finally walk through Twistleton Glenn and back to Ingleton.In Ingleton, the Twiss and the Doe meet to form the River Greta, which in turn flows into the
River Lune .English Nature designated the River Twiss and River Doe areas of the Waterfalls Trail as aSite of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) due to the interesting plants and animals and the geological structures located there. [cite web| author = English Nature| year = 1984 | title = Thornton and Twistleton Glens | url = http://www.english-nature.org.uk/citation/citation_photo/1003299.pdf | accessdate = 2007-07-09 ]Notes
External links
* [http://www.ingletonwaterfallswalk.co.uk/ Ingleton Waterfalls Trail]
* [http://www.lancasterguardian.co.uk/ Lancaster Guardian]
* [http://www.naturalengland.org.uk/ Natural England]
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