In the Footsteps of the Trespass
Uploaded by
toobaca
on Dec 16, 2014
Region: United Kingdom
Route type: Hike
Difficulty:
Tough
Distance: 11.38km, 7.07 miles.
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About trip
If you want to climb one of the quieter ways to Kinder Scout, Hayfield to the west is one of the best places to start. Itâs also a route with a bit of history to it. From the beginning of the 20th century there had been conflict between ramblers and the owners of Kinderâs moorland plateau. By 1932 ramblers from the industrial conurbations of Sheffield and Manchester, disgusted by lack of government action to open up the moors to walkers, decided to hold a mass trespass on Kinder Scout. Benny Rothman, a Manchester rambler and a staunch communist, would lead the trespass on Sunday 24 April. The police expected to intercept Benny at Hayfield railway station, but he outwitted them by arriving on his bicycle, not in the village itself, but at Bowden Bridge Quarry to the east. Here he was greeted by hundreds of cheering fellow ramblers. With the police in hot pursuit the group made their way towards Kinder Scout. Although they were threatened and barracked by a large gathering of armed gamekeepers the ramblers still managed to get far enough to join their fellow trespassers from Sheffield, who had come up from the Snake Inn. Predictably, fighting broke out and Benny Rothman was one of five arrested. He was given a four-month jail sentence for unlawful assembly and breach of the peace. The ramblersâ cause inspired folk singer, Ewan McColl (famous for Dirty Old Town and The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face) to write The Manchester Rambler, which became something of an anthem for the proliferating walkersâ clubs and societies. However it took until 1951, when the recently formed National Park negotiated access agreements with the landowners, for the situation to improve. Just like the mass trespass this walk starts at Bowden Bridge, where you will see a commemorative plaque on the rock face above the car park. After climbing through the Kinder Valley and above Kinder Reservoir youâre confronted by those same moors of purple heather and the enticing craggy sides of the Scout. But now it is the National Park signs that greet you, not a gun-toting gamekeeper. The Downfall: A dark shadow-filled cleft in the rocks captures your attention. Itâs the Kinder Downfall, where the infant Kinder tumbles off the plateau. Now you climb to the edge for the most spectacular part of the walk â the part that would have been a trespass all those years ago â and continue along a promenade of dusky gritstone rock. Round the next corner you come to that dark cleft seen earlier. In the dry summer months the fall is a mere trickle, just enough to wet the rocks, but after the winter rains it can turn into a 100ft (30m) torrent, thrashing against the jumble of boulders below. The prevailing west wind often catches the torrent, funnelling it back up to the top rocks like plumes of white smoke. In contrast, the way down is gentle, leaving the edge at Red Brook and descending the pastures of Tunstead Clough Farm. A quiet leafy lane takes you back into the Kinder Valley. While you're there: In 2007, the 75th anniversary of the mass trespass was marked by the opening of the Trespass Trail, a 14-mile (22.6km) walk following the route of the original brave trespassers up on to Kinder Scout. A booklet guide is available from Hayfield Information Centre. Where to eat and drink: Near the car park on Kinder Road, The Sportsman is a walkerfriendly pub, which serves hot and cold food every lunchtime and evening â from snacks to main meals. Children and dogs are welcome and thereâs a pleasant outside seating area. What to look out for: When youâre absorbed in the cerebral pleasures of wilderness walking, some comic bird with a flash of red on his head will probably wreck the moment by cackling loudly before scuttling from under your feet. This red grouse will have been absorbed in the pleasures of the tasty heather shoots you are passing. The gamekeeper makes sure that this ungainly bird has all he needs to breed successfully â a mixture of young heather and mature plants for cover. Directions: Turn left out of the car park and walk up the lane, which winds beneath the trees and by the banks of the River Kinder. After 550yds (503m), leave the lane at a signposted footpath after crossing a bridge. Follow the path as it traces the east bank of the river before turning left to rejoin the road at a point just short of the treatment plant buildings. 2 Here you fork left through a gate on to a cobbled bridleway, climbing above the buildings. It continues alongside the reservoirâs north shore, turning sharp left on White Brow. Beyond a gate, but donât cross over the footbridge, follow the path instead as it climbs alongside William Clough, where it is joined by the Snake Path from the left. 3 The path crosses and recrosses the stream as it works its way up the grass and heather clough. In the upper stages the narrowing clough loses its vegetation and the stream becomes a trickle in the peat. Climb to Ashop Head where you meet the Pennine Way at a crossroads of paths. 4 Turn right to walk along the slabbed Pennine Way path across the moor towards Kinder Scoutâs north-west edge, then climb those last gritstone slopes on a pitched path to gain the summit plateau. Now itâs easy walking along the edge. 5 After turning left into the rocky combe of the River Kinder, the Mermaidâs Pool and the Kinder Downfall (waterfalls) come into view. Descend to cross the Kinderâs shallow rocky channel about 100yds (91m) back from the edge before turning right and continuing along the edge. 6 Beyond Red Brook, leave the plateau by taking the right fork, which descends south westwards, contouring round grassy slopes beneath the rocky edge. 7 After passing The Three Knolls rocks and swinging right beneath the slopes of Kinderlow End, go through a gate in a fence (grid reference 066867) before taking a right fork to reach another gate in the wall dividing the moor and farmland. Go over a stile next to it and then turn left through a gateway. Descend the trackless pastured spur, passing through several gates and stiles at the field boundaries to pass to the left of Tunstead Clough Farm. 8 Turn right beyond the farmhouse to follow a winding track that descends into the upper Sett Valley. At the crossroads of lanes at the bottom, go straight ahead, and along the road to emerge at Bowden Bridge.