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About Heron Pike
Heron Pike is a fell in the English Lake District,
two kilometres east of Grasmere and is part of the Fairfield group in
the Eastern Fells.
Not a fell of great significance, Heron Pike
is a slight grassy rise on the long southern ridge of its parent fell
Fairfield. Just cresting the 2,000 foot mark at 612 m (2,008 ft), it is
mostly climbed as part of the Fairfield horseshoe walk and it lies
between the adjoining fells of Nab Scar and Great Rigg.
Heron
Pike’s eastern side features Erne Crag and Blind Cove as it falls away
quite steeply towards Rydal Beck. At the base of Erne Crag is an old
quarry, the mouth of a cavern quite easy to locate.
The fell's
western flank drops towards Grasmere and has the small Alcock Tarn on
its lower slopes at a height of 360 m (1,180 ft).
Alcock Tarn was
originally known as Butter Crags Tarn and was enlarged by means of a
stone and earth dam in the nineteenth century to a depth of about six
feet. The owner, a Mr Alcock of Grasmere, then stocked it with brown
trout.
Heron Pike has a "subsidiary" top which qualifies as a
Nuttall. It is called Heron Pike North Top on the Nuttall lists, but is
also known as Rydal Fell in some guide books. It lies 400 metres north
of the main summit at the top of Erne Crag and has a height of 621 m
(2,039 ft).
The deliberate choice by Alfred Wainwright of the
lower top to be the summit in his Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells
is one of the many oddities which differentiate Wainwrights from more
logical hill lists such as Nuttalls or Hewitts.
The south summit
has flashes of quartz in the uppermost rock and by far the better view.
This takes in a fine vista of Windermere, the Coniston and Central
Fells. The higher northern top bears the remains of a cross wall, some
of this fashioned into a small cairn.
Ascents of the fell are
commenced either from Rydal or Grasmere. The ascent from Grasmere allows
Alcock Tarn to be visited by a short detour while the route from Rydal
first climbs Nab Scar.
However, the majority of walkers who visit
Heron Pike do so either on the way to or on the way back from the main
fell of Fairfield.
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