Walking Maps
Calder Vale: Water of the Fylde
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Summary Information
Start
Point
- Calderbank
Country Lodge,
Oakenclough
- SD 538 475
Terrain
- Tracks, fields and roads.
- Gates and stiles.
- Steep sections and can be wet underfoot.
OS Explorer
- OL41
'Forest of Bowland and Ribblesdale'
Walk Description
This route is waymarked with a blue disc labelled ‘Calder Vale Walk
Blue 1’.
- Turn right out of Calderbank Lodge along the road to a T-junction. Turn
left up hill for 300m and take the grassy track on the right.
- Continue uphill, passing the track to the aerial masts and wireless station
on the right, and down to a track crossroads. Continue straight on to Moor
House. Walk across the front of the house and along a hedge lined track.
- The track bends right and then left before reaching a gate by a stream.
Continue straight on keeping the hedge on your right to a gate onto a stone
track. Go down into Burns farmyard.
- At the yard turn right, past the farmhouse and buildings. Turn right onto
the lane then left shortly after. Go straight on, past the covered reservoir
and over a stile at the edge of a wood.
- Cross the field to a kissing gate at the edge of the next wood.
- Follow the path straight down the steep bank and cross the footbridge.
- Turn right and follow the track up the Grizedale Valley.
- At the end of the reservoir go through the kissing gate on the right and
take the concessionary path all the way through Holme Wood.
- At the end of the wood head towards the sheepfold and pass through and
continue to the road.
- Turn right over Grizedale Bridge and follow the road up to Grizedale Lea
Reservoir.
- Just past the entrance to the reservoir take the footpath on the right.
Follow this path for 50m, then turn left and go through the fields along
the bottom of the slope to the road.Turn right and follow the road downhill
back to Calderbank Lodge.
About this walk
Grizedale Valley is wooded for most of its length and supports an impressive
range of woodland birds. In addition to the more common species, woodpeckers – greater
spotted (and occasionally green) – can be seen, as well as summer migrants
such as blackcaps, willow warblers, chiffchaffs, whitethroats and garden warblers.
Buzzards often soar along the ridge of the adjacent hill, Nicky Nook.
Towards the top of the valley is Grizedale Reservoir, constructed 1861- 63
by the original Fylde Water Board. Demand soon outstripped supply, leading
to the creation of three further reservoirs to the east, up beyond the tree
line. These reservoirs
– Barnacre East, Barnacre West and Grizedale Lea now help to supply drinking
water to the Fylde area. Grizedale Reservoir itself is no longer used for drinking
water, except in times of drought when its water is pumped to top-up the upper
reservoirs.