The Cheviot

From Wikishire
Revision as of 17:21, 28 October 2011 by RB (Talk | contribs) (Created page with '{{Infobox hill |name=The Cheviot |county=Northumberland |range=Cheviot Hills |picture=The Cheviot from Broadhope Hill.jpg |picture caption=The Cheviot, from Broadhope Hill |heigh…')

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
The Cheviot
Northumberland
The Cheviot from Broadhope Hill.jpg
The Cheviot, from Broadhope Hill
Range: Cheviot Hills
Summit: 2,674 feet NT909205

The Cheviot is the highest summit in the Cheviot Hills and the county top of Northumberland. Its summit reaches 2,674 feet, and is just two miles from Northumberland’s boundary with Roxburghshire, subsidiary peaks reaching across into that county and indeed providing Roxburghshire’s own county top at Auchope Cairn.

The Cheviot is the first major peak at the northernmost end of the Pennine Way long distance path, or its dramatic conclusion for a walker coming from the south.

Summit

The Cheviot summit

The summit of the Cheviot is very flat. It is an ancient, extinct volcano. It is covered with an extensive peat bog up to 6 feet deep; the Northumberland National Park authority have laid stone slabs down on the main access footpath to prevent erosion damage to the peat and to make access to the summit safer for walkers.

North of the summit, in the peat bogs, are the remains of a crashed B-17 Flying Fortress bomber, which hit the mountain due to a navigational error in the Second World War. The more recognisable pieces of wreckage have been removed, but pieces of the aircraft can still be found.

Ascents

The last leg up the Cheviot

Other than the route by way of the Pennine Way, most routes up the Cheviot start from the Harthope Burn side to the northeast, which provides the nearest access by road. The summit is around 3 miles from the road-end at Langleeford on the Harthope Burn.

There are routes following the ridges above either side of the valley, and a route that sticks to the valley floor until it climbs to the summit of The Cheviot from the head of the valley.

Although the Pennine Way itself does a two-mile out-and-back detour to the Cheviot, many walkers who come this way omit it, since the stage (the last) is 29 miles long.

View

Looking toward Scald Hill and beyond

The view is from the summit itself obscured greatly by the flatness of the summit plateau. Nevertheless, on a clear day the following are visible (from west, clockwise);

Broad Law, Moorfoot Hills, Pentland Hills, the Ochil Hills, Lammermuir Hills, Ros Hill, Long Crag, Urra Moor, Tosson Hill, Burnhope Seat, Cross Fell, Helvellyn, Scafell Pike, Skiddaw, Sighty Crag, Peel Fell, Queensberry.

Outside links