Staveley and Nan Bield

This is a BIG ride (22 miles). Not one to be taken lightly, but you’ll be glad to know you have a choice of Wilfs Café, More Bakery and Hawkshead Brewery at the beginning or end of your ride to satisfy your every craving.

Start the ride at Staveley Mill Yard where parking is free. Wheelbase is here too so if you’ve forgotten anything for your spares/tool bag – now’s the time to get it. You have choices here, you can either head out up the valley of Kentmere on the road then cut right, ride to Ings then cut right or take the first right over the bridge and head up towards Green Quarter. You’re basically making your way over to the next valley Longsleddale to Sadgill for the climb up Gatesgarth Pass. This is a steady climb that quickly turns into a tough series of cobbled zig-zags. Once you’ve summited the Pass (and yes, I’ve seen people clean it) you head straight on through a couple of gates to some amazing switchbacks all the way down to Haweswater. Pretty epic.

At the junction at the bottom turn left and start climbing towards the waterfall, up the left hand side of the valley. This is the start of the Nan Bield Pass climb, a long technical hike-a-bike. You’ll hike past Small Water about half way up, then it gets serious. Near the top the trail heads left before turning right and reaching a stone shelter and junction in the saddle on the ridge, a good place to stop and regain some energy for the descent.

The descent starts with some steep, technical and very loose switchbacks. This leads on to a great section of boulder covered singletrack that traverses the side of the fell above Kentmere reservoir, on the right. Just sit back and enjoy the next hour or so because the gradual descent has a little bit of everything. It will eventually spit you out back in Kentmere village. Here you can road it back up the valley if you’re toasted, head up back over Green Quarter or cross the valley and head up Heartbreak Hill to finish in Staveley from 3 rivers.

As we said it’s a real big day out but it’s one of the Lake District’s hidden gems.