Kingsley Jones

Trail and Fell Running in the Lake District


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       Route 7 Easedale and Blea Rigg

       Route 8 Grizedale Forest

       Route 9 Black Crag and Tarn Hows

       Route 10 Claife Heights

       South-West Lakes

       Route 11 Old Man of Coniston

       Route 12 Langdale Horseshoe

       Route 13 Three Shires loop

       Route 14 Boot and Scafell

       Route 15 Duddon Valley

       Route 16 Scafell Pike

       Route 17 Torver and Walna Scar

       Route 18 Coppermines Valley

       Route 19 Langstrath loop

       Route 20 Tilberthwaite loop

       North-West Lakes

       Route 21 Buttermere and High Stile

       Route 22 Catbells and High Spy

       Route 23 Black Sail and Pillar

       Route 24 Tour of Kirk Fell

       Route 25 Mellbreak and Crummock

       Route 26 Coledale Horseshoe

       Route 27 Buttermere Sailbeck loop

       Route 28 Borrowdale loop

       Route 29 Walla Crag and Castlerigg

       Route 30 Skiddaw

       North-East Lakes

       Route 31 Blencathra loop

       Route 32 Dockray coach road

       Route 33 Gowbarrow loop

       Route 34 Askham and Patterdale

       Route 35 Martindale circuit

       Route 36 Patterdale loop

       Route 37 High Street

       Route 38 Helvellyn skyline

       Route 39 Helvellyn tour

       Route 40 Pinnacle Ridge skyrunning

       Appendix A Useful contacts

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      Grisedale Tarn in the late afternoon light (Route 39)

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      Runners on Route 13 navigating with a map

      INTRODUCTION

      This book will introduce you to the world of trail and fell running on some of the finest mountains of the world; the Lake District. They may not have the stark granite spires of the Mont Blanc massif, or the huge mountain faces of the Himalayas or the Andes, but the old weathered Cumbrian mountains exude a majesty and history that make them more quietly stunning and fascinating. It’s a landscape that draws you in, with the next fell ever beckoning you to run its slopes, until the lure of a cosy pub beckons you back into the valley.

      It was only at the end of writing this book that I realised what a personal journey it had been for me. I sat atop Jenkins Crag at sunset one glorious June evening, the surface of Windermere as still as a mirror below me, as the fells beyond caught the last rays of the sun; Wetherlam, Cold Pike, Crinkle Crags, Bowfell and Loughrigg. Each ridgeline, each crinkle, each notch on those fellsides was as familiar as my own hands, and a cascade of memories flooded in with each area my eyes focused on. To be lucky enough to live in the Lake District is one thing, but to feel so connected to these fells and to have learnt to read the running lines over them forges a permanent bond.

      There is a rich history of mountain running in the UK, with the first recorded fell race in Braemar around 1040. The Lake District became the spiritual home to fell running, with the Guide’s Race in each of the village fairs and sports days. These were first recorded in the 19th century, and one of the oldest events occurs each August in Grasmere. Keswick hotelier Bob Graham made a round of 42 fell tops within 24 hours in 1932, and this circuit has become a test piece for all fell runners.

      Bob Graham took 23hr 39min, but the men’s record now stands at 13hr 53min by Billy Bland in 1982, and the women’s at 15hr 24min by Jasmin Paris in 2016. Joss Naylor ran an incredible round with 72 peaks in 23hr 20min in 1975. In 1970 the Fell Runners Association (FRA) was established, and there are now over 400 races each year in its calendar. Many records in fell running stand for an incredible length of time, such as Kenny Stuart’s 18min 56sec record for the Wansfell race, set back in 1983.

      Books have been written about the rich history of fell running, but there has been a growth in other facets of the sport of mountain running, including trail running and ultras. Some of this growth has been driven by the development of better clothing, equipment and training, but also changes in lifestyle and a challenge-based culture have seen a demand for the evolution of different styles of mountain running. Some runners want to stay on trails and paths, while others want to belt hell for leather over the open hillsides. What unites these various facets of the sport is that mountain running is driven by the simplicity and the joy of pushing one’s limits in glorious scenery. Mountain running gives us freedom.

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      Runners with Coniston Old Man behind (Route 11)

      As humans we are born runners. Our Neolithic forefathers were persistence hunters, using a combination of running and tracking to pursue prey until it was exhausted. Nowadays we see the effects of modern diet and work environments having a detrimental impact on many people’s health. The attraction of running is that it’s a sport that comes naturally to us; it requires very little equipment, improves our health and has huge mental benefits too.

      There’s a natural progression for those who run to seek the next challenge – be it in terms of distance or on tougher terrain – and the mountains provide the most extreme medium in which to practise our sport. At the pinnacle of this, elite runners have run up famous mountains around the world including Mont Blanc, Kilimanjaro, Aconcagua and the Matterhorn at mind-boggling speeds.

      One of the main draws of trail and fell running is that you move fast and unencumbered, in comparison to the average trekker or climber, and that opens up new horizons in what you can achieve. Mountain running brings a sense of liberation that it is rarely felt – even while walking or mountaineering.

      Given the sport’s increased popularity, gone are the preconceptions of mountain runners as wild mountain men with overly short shorts and wild beards. You’re more likely to be overtaken