Loft Crag

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Loft Crag
Westmorland

Loft Crag from Pike o‘ Stickle
Range: Langdale Pikes
Summit: 2,231 feet NY277071
54°27’15"N, 3°6’60"W

Loft Crag is a fell amongst the Langdale Pikes of Westmorland, along with the neighbouring fells of Harrison Stickle and Pike of Stickle – the Langdale Pikes form a most picturesque group which when viewed from the area around Elterwater village gives one of the best known views in the Lake District.

Loft Crag is to be found five and a half miles west of Ambleside, beside Great Langdale.

Landscape

The Langdale Pikes form a parapet to the lower hinterland to their north. From 'behind' they are unimpressive, but their southern faces fall full length over crags to the floor of Langdale, nearly 2,000 feet below. Loft Crag has a peaked summit which apes in lesser proportion the fine knoll of Pike of Stickle. To the east, between Loft Crag and Harrison Stickle is the subsidiary top of Thorn Crag: this latter top is sometimes counted as a Langdale Pike in its own right, but only Birkett amongst the major guidebooks takes this view.[1]

Ascents

Loft Crag has an altitude of 2,238 feet: it lies between Harrison Stickle and Pike o’ Stickle and is usually climbed in conjunction with these two peaks. The starting place for the direct ascent of the fell is The New Dungeon Ghyll Hotel in Great Langdale, a path leads north westerly across the hillside passing Dungeon Ghyll Force waterfall and going between Thorn Crag and Gimmer Crag to a col between Loft Crag and Harrison Stickle. From there it is a straightforward climb to the summit. A more circuitous ascent can be undertaken from the same starting point but taking the well trodden (and repaired) path up Stickle Ghyll to Stickle Tarn, from here the fells of Pavey Ark and Thunacar Knott can be climbed before tackling the three Langdale Pikes.[2][3]

Summit and Gimmer Crag

Loft Crag is a fine viewpoint which gives an attractive vista of the fells around Great Langdale, because the fell juts further out into the valley than the other two Langdale Pikes it gives a more impressive and full view of the valley. The fell has a small sharp summit below which rises Gimmer Crag, which is one of the top rock climbing venues in the Lake District, the crag is made of Rhyolite rock and was pioneered in the early 1880s by the father of British rock climbing Walter Parry Haskett Smith.[2][4]

References

  1. Bill Birkett: Complete Lakeland Fells: Collins Willow (1994): ISBN 0-00-218406-0
  2. 2.0 2.1 Wainwright, Alfred: A Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, Book Three — The Central Fells (1958)
  3. Mark Richards: The Central Fells: Collins (2003): ISBN 0-00-711365-X
  4. British Geological Survey: 1:50,000 series maps: sheet 38; BGS (1998)