- Southern Fells
rect 23 372 252 419 Slight Side (762 m)rect 173 794 560 834 Scafell East Buttressrect 707 787 893 861 Esk Pike or Crag (885 m)rect 245 303 409 358 Sca Fell (964 m)rect 408 238 637 280 Mickledore (c. 840 m)rect 544 174 826 213 South Summit (<978 m)rect 706 310 928 355 Scafell Pike (978 m)rect 870 238 1108 286 Broad Crag (934 m)rect 1043 308 1198 360 Ill Crag (935 m)rect 1238 311 1446 351 Great End (910 m)rect 0 0 1444 1085 Click hyperlink or button to expanddesc none
The Southern Fells are a group of hills in the English
Lake District . IncludingScafell Pike , the highest peak in England, they occupy a broad area to the south ofGreat Langdale ,Borrowdale andWasdale . High and rocky towards the centre of the Lake District, the Southern Fells progressively take on a moorland character toward the south west. In the south east are the well knownFurness Fells , their heavily quarried flanks rising aboveConiston Water .Partition of the Lakeland Fells
The Lake District is a
National Park in the north west of the country which, in addition to itslake s, contains a complex range of hills. These are known locally asfells and range from low hills to the highest ground in England. Hundreds of tops exist and many writers have attempted to draw up definitive lists. In doing so the compilers frequently divide the range into smaller areas to aid their description.The most influential of all such authors was
Alfred Wainwright whose "Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells " series has sold in excess of 2 million copies, [ [http://www.wainwright.org.uk/events/2007/centenary.html : The Wainwright Society - The Alfred Wainwright Centenary 2007] ] being in print continuously since the first volume was published in 1952. Wainwright divided the fells into seven geographical areas, each surrounded by valleys and low passes. While any such division must be arbitrary- and later writers have deviated to a greater or lesser extent from this blueprint-Birkett, Bill: Complete Lakeland Fells: Collins Willow (1994) ISBN 0-00-218406-0] Richards, Mark: Lakeland Fellranger series: Collins (2002)ff: Mid-Western Fells ISBN 0-00-711368-4] Wainwright's sevenfold division remains the best known partitioning of the fells into 'sub ranges', each with its own characteristics. The Southern Fells are one of these divisions, covered by volume 4 of Wainwright's work.Alfred Wainwright : "A Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells ", Book 4: ISBN 0-7112-2457-9] .Boundaries
Of all Wainwright's boundary decisions, the outer perimeter of the Southern Fells is the most often debated. [Dave Hewitt, (ed.); "A Bit of Grit on Haystacks" (Disley: Millrace, 2004)] Two ridges continue south west on either side of the Duddon Valley, the longer ending only at the Irish Sea in the terminal height of
Black Combe . Wainwright however chose to excise a wide area of fell from his guidebooks, declaring that "south and west fromGreen Crag the scenery quickly deteriorates. This summit has therefore been taken as the boundary of fellwalking country for the purposes of this book and the territory southwest omitted from the map". He makes similar statements regarding the fells to the south ofDow Crag on the parallel Coniston ridge. The later Fellranger guides mirror part of Wainwright's Southern Fells in the curiously named "Mid-Western Fells" volume, and then all of the fells south from Wrynose andHardknott Pass es to the sea in a further volume, "The Southern Fells". The author, Mark Richards, notes his differences with Wainwright in the introduction. Birkett simply includes everything without comment. Even Wainwright ultimately relented and included the southern extremities in an eighth guidebook, "The Outlying fells of Lakeland" (1974).The northern boundaries are clear, beginning on the west with
Wastwater and rising up beyond the head of Wasdale to Sty Head Pass, the popular walkers' route to Borrowdale. Across the border on this side areGreat Gable and theWestern Fells . The boundary continues north to Stonethwaite in Borrowdale, before turning sharply south east along the Langstrath branch of that valley, including the long ridge ofGlaramara within the Southern Fells. At the head of Langstrath the perimeter crosses Stake Pass, another pedestrian route, and sweeps eastward down Great Langdale to Windermere. Stake Pass provides the high level link to theLangdale Pikes in theCentral Fells . Although falling within the Southern Fells area, Wainwright makes no mention of the low hills between Coniston and Windermere in the Pictorial Guides. These appear, somewhat illogically, within his Outlying Fells volume.Topography
The Southern Fells occupy a broad sector of the circular Lake District massif, trending a little to the west of centre and about convert|10|mi|km|0 across in either direction. In addition to the perimeter dales,
Eskdale and theDuddon Valley provide further subdivision flowing out from the centre of the district. In the north, surrounding the head of Eskdale, are theScafells . Also standing above the valleys of Wasdale, Borrowdale and Great Langdale, this high cirque is open to the south and contains England's highest ground. The range begins on the west withSlight Side before rising to the summits ofScafell ,Scafell Pike andGreat End . Across the gap of Esk Hause and enclosing the eastern side of Eskdale areEsk Pike ,Bowfell andCrinkle Crags . Satellites to this main ridge areLingmell above Wasdale and theAllen Crags -Glaramara -Rosthwaite Fell ridge jutting deep into Borrowdale. East of Bowfell isRossett Pike providing the link to the Central Fells. More loosely connected areIllgill Head andWhin Rigg , the fells forming the famous Wastwater Screes.South from Crinkle Crags, between Eskdale and the Duddon, are
Hard Knott , Harter Fell andGreen Crag . A second ridge falls south easterly from Crinkles overCold Pike andPike O'Blisco , crosses the motor road ofWrynose Pass and then rises toGreat Carrs , the first of the Coniston (or Furness) Fells. The remainder of this group comprisesSwirl How ,Grey Friar ,Wetherlam ,Brim Fell ,Coniston Old Man andDow Crag , together forming the watershed between Coniston and the Duddon. To the east are the low outliers ofHolme Fell and Black Fell.Access for walkers
The high Southern Fells can be accessed from many of the principal walking centres of Lakeland, namely the heads of Wasdale, Borrowdale, Langdale and Eskdale. Sty Head, the Stake, Rossett Gill, Grains Gill, Burnmoor Tarn and Esk Hause provide pedestrian links between all of these valleys, many miles apart by road.
The main paths from Seathwaite or Wasdale Head to Scafell Pike, and from Great Langdale up Bowfell are heavily used, as is the 'Tourist Route' up Coniston Old Man. These tops will be busy on almost any day of the year. Away from these famous tops however it is possible to find quieter walking, particularly to the south.
ee also
*
Eastern Fells
*Far Eastern Fells
*Central Fells
*Northern Fells
*North Western Fells
*Western Fells References
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