Routes EnglandIngleton
Ingleborough, Yorkshire Dales

Ingleton, England

Ingleborough, Yorkshire Dales

Length10.5 mi
Elev. Gain2109 ft
Est. Steps24000

Scenic views

Wild flowers

Mountain

Quiet place

Steep slope

Created by andrew.calderbank
Ingleborough, Yorkshire Dales Introduction
Ingleborough, Yorkshire Dales is a 10.5 mile (24,000-step) route located near Ingleton, Carnforth, England. This route has an elevation gain of about 2109 ft and is rated as hard. Find the best walking trails near you in Pacer App.
Attractions Near Ingleborough, Yorkshire Dales
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Ingleton Waterfalls Trail

Tourist Attraction
Ingleton Waterfalls Trail is a well-known circular trail beginning and ending in the village of Ingleton in the English county of North Yorkshire, now maintained by the Ingleton Scenery Company. It is claimed that the trail, some 8 kilometres (5 mi) long, and with a vertical rise of 169 m (554 feet) has some of the most spectacular waterfall and woodland scenery in the north of England.

Chapel-le-Dale

Landform
Chapel-le-Dale is a hamlet in the civil parish of Ingleton, North Yorkshire, England. It is in the Yorkshire Dales and was previously in the West Riding of Yorkshire.

Great Douk Cave

Landform
Great Douk Cave is a shallow cave system lying beneath the limestone bench of Ingleborough in Chapel-le-Dale, North Yorkshire, England. It is popular with beginners and escorted groups, as it offers straightforward caving, and it is possible to follow the cave from where a stream emerges at a small waterfall to a second entrance close to where it sinks 600 yards (549 m) further up the hill.

River Doe

Water
The River Doe is a river in North Yorkshire, England. The river's source is near God's Bridge close to the settlement of Chapel-le-Dale and flows through Twisleton in a south-westerly direction to Ingleton, where it meets the River Twiss to form the River Greta. The river forms part of the River Lune system that flows into the Irish Sea.

River Twiss

Water
The River Twiss is a river in the county of Yorkshire, England. The source of the river is Kingsdale Beck which rises at Kingsdale Head at the confluence of Back Gill and Long Gill in the Yorkshire Dales. Beneath Keld Head, it changes its name to the River Twiss. It has two notable waterfalls, Thornton Force and Pecca Falls, and its course follows part of the Ingleton Waterfalls Walk, then through Swilla Glen to Thornton in Lonsdale and down to Ingleton, where it meets the River Doe to form the River Greta.

Weathercote Cave

Landform
Weathercote Cave is a natural solutional cave in Chapel-le-Dale, North Yorkshire, England. It has been renowned as a natural curiosity since the eighteenth century, and was accessible to paying visitors until 1971. The entrance is a large shaft about 20 metres (66 ft) deep, dominated by a waterfall entering at one end.

Ingleborough

Mountain
Ingleborough (723 m or 2,372 ft) is the second-highest mountain in the Yorkshire Dales. It is one of the Yorkshire Three Peaks (the other two being Whernside and Pen-y-ghent), and is frequently climbed as part of the Three Peaks walk.

Ingleton railway station (Midland Railway)

Place
Ingleton (Midland) railway station was one of two stations serving the village of Ingleton, North Yorkshire, England. It was originally open for just ten months between 1849 and 1850, and did not reopen until 1861. It then served as the frontier between the Midland Railway to the south and the London and North Western Railway to the North, with trains from each railway terminating at the station.

Yorkshire Three Peaks

Place
The mountains of Whernside (736 m or 2,415 ft), Ingleborough (723 m or 2,372 ft) and Pen-y-ghent (694 m or 2,277 ft) are collectively known as theThree Peaks. The peaks, which form part of thePennine range, encircle the head of the valley of the River Ribble in the Yorkshire Dales National Park in the North of England.

Wraysholme Halt railway station

Place
Wraysholme Halt was a railway station on the Furness Railway in the Furness exclave of Lancashire. Situated between Cark and Cartmel and Kents Bank the halt was not open to the public and was used by the British army's Territorial Force as a railhead for troops training at the Rougholme Rifle Range at nearby Humphrey Head.
Route Details

Length

10.5 mi

Elev. Gain

2109 ft

Est. Steps

24000
Created by
andrew.calderbank
Open in AppOpen