The Limestone Uplands of Yorkshire possess an unfair share of Britain’s natural wonders, and no less than three of them fall within a two-mile radius of Malham, a pretty village of babbling streams and stone cottages on the edge of the Yorkshire Dales National Park. This classic route includes Malham Cove, Malham Tarn and Gordale Scar and brings you alongside gigantic white cliffs, rushing waterfalls, some outlandish rock formations and the highest lake in the country – not to mention a string of wildly contrasting vistas.
Arguably the most majestic of these extends from the rim of Malham Cove itself, a spectacular amphitheatre of escarpments from whose foot a dark river mysteriously emerges. Back in the last Ice Age, this same river used to plunge over the top of the precipice, but when the ground thawed the water began to flow underground, leaving in its wake an elaborately ribbed “pavement” of blue-grey limestone that today forms a surreal foreground to the panorama of lush hills and dales infolding from below it.
The view from the top of Malham Cove stands as a grand finale to a circuit that’s been a popular excursion since Victorian times, when its landforms inspired Turner, Ruskin and Charles Kingsley. More visitors than ever are now coming to Malham to experience these great sights, but thanks to sensitive management by the National Trust you still have to walk – and in one instance scramble – to reach the most impressive viewpoints, which has ensured these limestone treasures remain relatively undiminished by the attention lavished on them.
[1] Turn left out of the National Park Visitors’ Centre onto the main road through the village, past the Methodist Chapel on your left. Opposite the River House Hotel you’ll see an old smithy, behind which a stone clapper bridge crosses to the far bank of Malham Beck. Once over this, turn right and follow the Pennine Way downstream. After passing through two swing gates, you reach a kissing gate where you should turn left off the Pennine Way in the direction of “Janet’s Foss”, as indicated. The path winds along the side of a wall and Gordale Beck for about 15 mins, passing three handsome old stone barns and a concrete bridge to the right which you should ignore. Another gate leads into the National Trust owned Janet’s Foss woodland, past a succession of mossy crags and fallen tree trunks on its approach to the famous waterfalls and pool.
(A) The beck reaches a crescendo at Janet’s Foss, where it plunges over an outcrop into a deep pool ringed by mossy boulders and trees. “Foss” derives, like its namesake “force”, from the Norse word for “waterfall”; “Janet” is a Fairy Queen of local folk lore, suggesting this magical glade has been popular with the area’s inhabitants for many centuries. Elderly residents of Malham still recall the time when the pool was used for an annual mass sheep dip. Stripped to the waist, shepherds would wash their flocks to encourage the growth of new wool – a spectacle around which a small festival grew up over the years. As you approach the falls through the wooded gorge below them, look out for fallen tree trunks into which people have hammered lucky pennies as offerings to the fairies who inhabited these glades.
[2] The path climbs left of the falls and on across a field to meet Gordale Lane. Turn right on to the tarmac and follow it for a few minutes, past Gordale Bridge (where the alternative walking route turns off - see [3] below) until you reach a right hand bend. Go through a gate on the left and along a footpath, signposted to Gordale Scar, past the campsite. Continue along a well-made path running to the right of the stream to reach the ravine itself.
(B) Hidden until the last second by a bend in the surrounding cliffs, Gordale Scar comes as a complete revelation – a vertical trench bounded by 100-metre/328-feet cliffs that seem almost to meet at their tops. Through this narrow defile the stream froths down two superb waterfalls, the higher of the pair cascading over a rock arch above the first. The geological explanation is that the gorge was formed by the collapse of a massive underground cavern, but this fails to convey the gloomy magnificence of the scene, which has long fascinated visiting artists The Romantic poet Thomas Gray (1716–71) claimed he could only bear to stay in the Scar for a quarter of an hour at a time, and then, “not without shuddering”. And after being invited here by the local landowner, Lord Ribblesdale, in 1811, James Ward declared the vista “unpaintable”, before proving himself wrong with a rendition as awe-inspiring as it was huge. His enormous canvas, measuring 3.7m x 4.3m/12ft x 14ft, now hangs in the Tate where it is regarded as the apotheosis of the so-called “Regency-Gigantism” school of Romantic landscape painting.
[3] Most walkers turn back when they reach the waterfalls to walk round, but seven or eight moves are all that’s required to carry you above the obstacle. The reward for the little scramble is a superb view back down the gorge and access to the radically different landscape above.
However please note - the Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority now (December 2012) recommends the alternative route to avoid further environmental damage and this alternative route should also be used when the falls are frozen or the river is in spate.
Having admired the falls, return back down the path to the tarmac road. Turn right and follow the road for 40m/50yd until you reach a gateway on your right at Gordale Bridge, signposted “Malham Cove 1 mile”. Go through this gate and keep to the clear path ahead, which runs up the side of a drystone wall to a second gate. Turn sharp right (northeast) after the gate, making for a third gate visible on the far side of the field, just beyond a wall junction. From the other side of this gate a clear path strikes steeply right up the hillside to the crags above. Running in parallel with the drystone wall lining the cliff edge, it then goes along the top of the ravine before making a slight descent to rejoin the main Gordale Scar path at a ladder stile over a wall.
Once atop the gorge, keep to the obvious path, which gradually drifts to the left of a dry valley in the direction of the Malham Tarn road. After crossing the ladder stile where the alternate route rejoins, continue along the wide path. The last stretch shadows a drystone wall, funnelling you into a corner where a stile carries you over to Street Gate.
[4] Continue straight ahead from here along the broken-surfaced track, heading due north, with a wall to your right. Bending away left from this wall, the path eventually drops downhill to arrive at a gate next to Great Close Plantation. Ignore the trail leading ahead beyond the gate and instead turn left along the side of the wall bounding the trees. Ignore the small wood on the hillside to the left and when a second coppice appears ahead of you make for the left hand side of it. Skirt the south edge of this second clump of trees until you arrive at a gravel track, where you should turn right and then left almost immediately onto the Pennine Way, as indicated by a finger post sign. From here you can either keep to the Pennine Way, which glances the southern tip of nearby Malham Tarn, or follow a broader track southwest to crest a rise from where views of the lake and house are best.
(C) Originally formed by glacial meltwater, the lake Malham Tarn – the highest in Britain – presents a serene spectacle against its backdrop of moorland ridges. The eastern shore is dominated by the stately facade of Malham House, an elegant aristocratic bolthole that formerly belonged to Lord Ribblesdale. The mansion nowadays serves as a field centre run by the National Trust.
[5] Both trails eventually converge on a small car park. Turn right on to the road, cross the stream and pick up the Pennine Way, which turns left through the gate just beyond stream. After approximately 100 metres turn left again as indicated by a finger post to pass the famous Water Sinks. The next leg down Watlowes follows an obvious path but is rocky, muddy and hard going in wet weather. After 5mins or so you reach a small clearing; stay with the clear path going left, which then circles right to a stile on the left. Cross the stile and descend a steep, rocky path. This eventually takes you to the lower level of the valley, where it splits below some dramatic crags. Once on level ground the rest of the route to the head of Malham Cove is relatively plain sailing.
[6] Turn right along the Pennine Way when you reach the rim of the Cove – our featured viewpoint – picking your way across the limestone pavement, or over the crags to its right. At the point where the rocks peter out, the path plunges left through a gate in a drystone wall to start its stepped descent back to Malham. After passing through a gate at the bottom of the steps it’s worth making a short detour on a path to the left to admire the cliffs from below. The remaining stretch into the village runs above the beck via a good path, scaling a rise to rejoin a lane on the northern fringes of Malham. Turn left on to this tarmac lane and follow it for 5 mins past the entrance to Beck Hall into the centre of the village. The National Park Visitor Centre lies a few minutes’ walk further down the same road, past the Buck Inn and Methodist Chapel on your right.