Walking Maps
Caton Village Walk
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Summary Information
Start Point
- Caton Centre on A683
- SD 531 647
Terrain
- Roads, tracks and fields
- Some stiles
- Can be wet underfoot
OS Explorer
- OL41
'Forest of Bowland and Ribblesdale'
Walk Description
- Start from the Station Hotel and walk east along Hornby
Road for 200 yards (towards the library). Cross over Artle
Beck and climb a stile immediately after, taking you up the
side of the beck. Turn left at the road and head towards
Brookhouse. Continue up the road and turn right into Hawthorn
Avenue. Take the footpath straight ahead to access the open
country beyond.
- Climb the hill across the first meadow and through the
kissing gate. Continue to climb up and slightly left, following
the line of sparse trees. Head for the crest of the hill
and continue onwards, climbing the stiles and out through
the kissing gate to Littledale Road. Turn right along the
road and almost immediately, take the footpath heading back
right.
- Follow the wall to a stile and head straight on at the
fence corner. In the next field, head for the corner of the
wall ahead and follow the waymarker. Continue down the hill,
crossing the left field edge and over a stile into a tree-lined
lane. This leads to a T-junction at a single-track road.
Turn right along the lane as far as a white gate. The right
of way beyond is in the field to the right of the lane, accessed
by a stile.
- In the field, walk parallel with the lane and then drop
down to a stile. Cross the lane and over another stile, across
the short field and over a final stile into the wood by the
beck. The footbridge upstream leads to some steps up to Broadacre
by the entrance to the Primary School.
- Turn right along Broadacre, past Rumble Row cottage and
keep straight on until the millrace surfaces on the right
of the road. Follow the millrace then turn right with it
through a small housing development and through a ginnel
in the far corner leading to Copy Lane. Cross the road and
turn right.
- Just after passing Willow Mill (on the right), turn left
through the gate into a narrow ginnel, which soon opens out
into a lane leading to Lancaster Road. Turn right past the
Ship Inn back to the village centre.
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 chaffinch, Britain’s second commonest bird after
the wren. It is found in open woods, parks and gardens, as
well as along hedgerows. The very vocal chaffinch has a bright
characteristic song.
- The lapwing, which can be spotted flying over farmland.
Its rounded wings make strong, slow, flappy beats, hence
the name ‘lap-wing’.
- Tits, blackbirds and robins in the village gardens.
- Swallows, house martins and swifts are common in the skies
above the village in summer. They are often seen flying high,
hunting insects in the air.