CONTENTS
Map keys
Overview map
Introduction
Geology
Plants and wildlife
History
The future
Local services and transport
The walks
Responsible walking
Maps and navigation
Using this guide
Eastern Dark Peak
Walk 1 Chatsworth to Birchen Edge
Walk 2 Longshaw Estate and the gritstone edges
Walk 3 Fox House to Big Moor
Walk 4 Fox House to Stanedge Pole
Walk 5 Grindleford to Higger Tor
Central Dark Peak
Walk 6 Hathersage to Stanage Edge
Walk 7 Wyming Brook to Stanage Edge
Walk 8 Bamford Moor
Walk 9 Win Hill to Hope Cross
Walk 10 Kings Tree to Shepherds Meeting Stones
Walk 11 Westend and Bleaklow Stones
Walk 12 Derwent Edge
Walk 13 Alport Castles and the Woodlands Valley
Walk 14 Margery Hill to Back Tor
Walk 15 Low Bradfield and Dale Dyke
Walk 16 Langsett to Howden Edge
Walk 17 Langsett to Pike Lowe
Walk 18 Torside to Bleaklow Head
Walk 19 Wildboar Clough to Lawrence Edge
Walk 20 Old Glossop to Bleaklow Head
Walk 21 Kinder Scout Northern Edge
Walk 22 Kinder Scout Western Edge
Walk 23 Kinder Scout
Walk 24 Kinder Scout Southern Edge
Walk 25 The Great Ridge
Northern Dark Peak
Walk 26 Dunford Bridge to Ramsden Clough
Walk 27 Crowden Horseshoe
Walk 28 Crowden to Chew Valley
Walk 29 Marsden to Black Hill
Walk 30 Alphin Pike to Birchen Clough
Walk 31 Binn Green to Great Dove Stone Rock
Walk 32 Cotton Famine Road
Western Dark Peak
Walk 33 Goyt Valley to Shining Tor
Walk 34 Derbyshire Bridge to Shutlingsloe
Walk 35 The Roaches
Long day walks
Walk 36 Marsden to Edale
Walk 37 Langsett to Edale
Walk 38 Gritstone edges
Walk 39 Edale Horseshoe
Walk 40 Kinder Scout skyline
Appendix A Route summary table
Appendix B Useful information
Appendix C Aircraft crash site locations
"If you register your purchase, Cicerone will update you from time to time with corrections to the book. It is good to see a publisher committed to walk accuracy!"
Dark Peak Walks describes 35 circular walks (4-14) miles and 5 longer walks (15-28 miles). I am reviewing this book having completed 37 of the 40 walks described. There are 3 long linear walks which are difficult for me to do as a mostly solo walker. Each route has a description and a 1:50,000 map. GPX files for all the walks can be downloaded from the Cicerone website. The routes are fabulous and I have been taken to many new corners of the Dark Peak. For me the GPX files have been a game changer and have given me the confidence to complete routes where paths are indistinct or non-existent. Walk 16 Langsett to Howden Edge involves walking along Outer Edge – a slimy path on a misty January day where it is easy to go off course dodging the marshy bits. Later, the marker for turning right is the second of two wooden posts with stones at the base. Good luck with spotting that! The GPX route showed me I had gone too far and I was able to adjust and get back on track. On a foggy February day, coming down from Black Hill, the GPX route saved me again. There is one walk (22) which traverses the centre of the Kinder Plateau. Instructions read: from the trig pillar: 254° for 250m; 295° for 300m; 257° for 400m etc. Without my GPS and the relevant route, I wouldn’t have had a chance on this walk. I completed it 2 weeks ago and if I had to do it again, I would still need my GPS. The maps are 1:50,000 and some of the features mentioned in the walk description are not on the book maps. As advised in the introduction, you do need the 1:25,000 maps. The photography is excellent although it is interesting to note how few photos feature snow. This is perhaps a reflection of the milder winters we have had recently and the lack of snow. If you register your purchase, Cicerone will update you from time to time with corrections to the book. It is good to see a publisher committed to walk accuracy!
- Peter Barnett, reviewer
Paul Besley clearly knows this area of the Peak District well.
Paul Besley clearly knows this area of the Peak District well. He is a volunteer Ranger for the Peak District National Park and a member of Woodhead Mountain Rescue. I have always found Cicerone guidebooks to be well produced with excellent introductions to the area in question and containing detailed descriptions of well-chosen walks. This new guide is no exception.
I did the walk from Old Glossop to Bleaklow Head with a couple of friends to test out the guide, as this was a new route to me. It was an interesting walk taking in Cock Hill, Clough Edge, Torside Clough, Bleaklow Head, Wain Stones, Hern Stones, the B29 aircraft wreck, Higher Shelf Stones, and James’s Thorn. The route information was clear, with helpful compass directions where necessary. As the author says, it is always useful to carry the OS Explorer Dark Peak Map OS1 with you when walking in this part of the world. If you have a GPS enabled device to navigate, GPX files are available for free download via a link in the book.
My previous Cicerone guide to this area was ‘High Peak Walks’ by Mark Richards, first published in 1982. This was a Wainwright-style book, with hand-drawn maps and illustrations and thus had lots of detail that the new book lacks. However, the new guide has almost twice as many walks in about the same number of pages and, as I’ve indicated, contains sufficient detail to find one’s way – the key requirement of any guidebook. The new book also has the advantage of being completely up-to-date in terms of route finding and promises to provide many more pleasurable days if the Bleaklow walk is anything to go by. I look forward to taking it with me on future excursions in the Dark Peak.
This review is from Signpost 54, Summer 2017
Paul Besley clearly knows this area of the Peak District well.
I have always found Cicerone guidebooks to be well produced with excellent introductions to the area in question and containing detailed descriptions of well-chosen walks. This new guide is no exception.
The new guide has almost twice as many walks in about the same number of pages [as the previous edition] and, as I’ve indicated, contains sufficient detail to find one’s way – the key requirement of any guidebook. The new book also has the advantage of being completely up to date in terms of route finding and it promises to provide for many more pleasurable days. I look forward to taking it with me on future excursions in the Dark Peak.
Ian Salvage, Peak District National Park magazine
An excellent guide
The beauty of the gritstone Dark Peak is a distinct magnet to walkers...
As you would expect from Cicerone, each walk is clearly detailed including distance, terrain and local points of interest. Some walks are easy, some more challenging, providing a range of difficulties for all.
Treading these you will be able to feast on the areas dramatic scenery varying as it does with the seasons, catch a glimpse of man's footprint from archaeological sites to sadly derelict industrial remains from not so long ago and discover some fascinating local stories. This is an excellent guide, illustrated in colour with OS extract maps of the walks it contains.
The Bradway Bugle