Walking Maps
Annas Ghyll Walk, Brookhouse
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Summary Information
Start Point
- Bell Beck Picnic site on A683
- SD 531 649
Terrain
- Roads, tracks and fields
- Some stiles
OS Explorer
- OL41
'Forest of Bowland and Ribblesdale'
Walk Description
- Start from Bull Beck Picnic site, just north east of
Caton and turn right out of the car park along the A683.
Take the footpath on the right just before the road bends
left.
- Go up the hill and look for the marker post in the middle
of the field. Follow the arrow up to the right-hand corner
of the field. Go through the kissing gate and along a narrow
path to join Kirkbeck Close. Turn left towards the main
road and turn left up the hill.
- The footpath leads off the road to the right, following
the old hedge line up the hill. At the top, look for a
stile in a wall up ahead. Follow the hedge then cross the
field to a corner and keep to the left of the wall. Follow
the path on to Anna’s Ghyll farm (which was built
in 1664 by Thomas Wilson. A gravel pit found near Anna’s
Ghyll is evidence of early industrial activity in the area).
- Follow the footpath signs to the right and out of the
farmyard and follow the farm track until it joins the road.
From here, you can look back at the pattern of ancient
field enclosure, which is much the same today as it was
hundreds of years ago.
- Now turn right to a T-junction and right again down into
the village of Brookhouse. Pass St Paul’s school
and bear right before the bend into Chapel Square.
- Follow the lane and at the end, enter St Paul’s
churchyard through an arch in the wall. From the church
take the path from the tower down to the main double gates
and steps.
- Walk down the hill past the Black Bull pub and turn right
into Holme Lane. At the end of Holme Lane, cross the main
road and walk back along the Lune Millennium Park pathway
to the right, returning to the Bull Beck Picnic site.
About this walk
Caton and Brookhouse are situated on the north-facing slope
of the Lune Valley. The villages lie in a scenic area near
the celebrated Crook O’Lune - painted by Turner, praised
by the poets Thomas Gray and William Wordsworth, and admired
by Queen Victoria.
Caton-with-Littledale Parish contains a wide range of habitats,
which are home to a variety of special birds, including the
rare hen harrier, the symbol of the Forest of Bowland AONB
Birds to look out for include:
- The curlew, which nests in open farmland and moorland,
and uses its long curved bill to probe the mud for worms.
Listen out for the curlew’s far-carrying ‘bubbling’ song
during spring and summer.
- Lapwings and snipe, which along with the curlew, are attracted
to Bowland’s farmland by the thousand in springtime,
when they come here to breed.
- Herons and geese, which can be seen flying over the river
valley in search of other feeding areas.
- Dippers and wagtails, which can be seen feeding on insects
along Bull Beck.