Harman Patil (Editor)

Birks (Lake District)

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Listing
  
Nuttall, Wainwright

OS grid
  
NY380143

Prominence
  
19 m

Parent range
  
Eastern Fells

Location
  
Cumbria, England

Elevation
  
622 m

Parent peak
  
St Sunday Crag

Birks (Lake District) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Topo map
  
OS Landranger 90 OS Explorer 5

Mountain range
  
Lake District, Eastern Fells

Similar
  
Arnison Crag, St Sunday Crag, Nethermost Pike, Birkhouse Moor, Hartsop above How

Birks is a fell in the English Lake District situated two kilometres south west of the village of Patterdale in the Eastern Fells. The fells summit sits on a shoulder of the north east ridge of the higher and better known fell of St Sunday Crag, by which it is dominated, walkers often pass over the top of Birks either climbing or descending from the larger fell. The fell's name means a place where Birch trees predominate.

Contents

Map of Birks, Penrith, UK

TopographyEdit

Birks reaches a height of 622 metres (2041 feet) and is characterised by a grassy summit ridge which has precipitous craggy slopes to the north and west which fall away to the valley of Grisedale, its southern flank is steep and grassy and ends in the valley of Deepdale and to the north east the main ridge descends towards Patterdale over Black Crag and through Glenamara Park.

Birks is regarded by guide book writers as an unspectacular fell, it has 19 metres of prominence from St Sunday Crag and therefore qualifies as a Nuttall, while Alfred Wainwright gives the fell a separate chapter in his Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells because "it is sufficiently well defined to deserve a separate name".

GeologyEdit

The principal rocks of the summit area are the pebbly sandstones of the Blind Cove Member. The flanks carry andesite sills and volcaniclastic sandstone.

AscentsEdit

The fell is always climbed from the Patterdale valley, with no other starting point being viable. The ascent is a pleasant walk through the wooded Glenamara Park along a footpath which leaves Patterdale and follows Hag Beck and then a ruined dry stone wall to the summit. An alternative route goes via Thornhow End and finds a way through Black Crags at attain the top of the fell. Most walkers who climb Birks will continue on to St Sunday Crag which is a comfortable climb of about 240 metres with a few small dips on the ridge.

SummitEdit

The highlight of the view from the summit is a good view of the lower reach of Ullswater.

References

Birks (Lake District) Wikipedia