National Walking month - Nine favourite hikes from BMC staff
This May is National Walking month, so to celebrate the power of a good old stomp around the UK’s countryside, nine of the BMC staff have shared their favourite hike. From fossil-hunting in the Peak District and airy Scottish scrambling to the Via Alpina in Switzerland, one of these is bound to tickle your fancy this spring or summer. Better still, with the BMC collaborations with Komoot and HotelPlanner, you can plan and navigate your route and find your accommodation for your trip for less!
This month is National Hill Walking month, so to celebrate the power of a good old romp in the UK’s countryside, nine of the BMC staff have shared their favourite hike, in conjunction with Komoot, the route planning app.
Don't forget, BMC members get a free Komoot region map bundle worth £8.99 here! And if you need accommodation for any of these walks, check out the BMC HotelPlanner search facility for the best deals and discounts, especially for large group bookings. For even more member benefits click here.
If you value the hills and your time walking in them, consider volunteering for or donating to the BMC's Mend Our Mountains project, find out more here.
The Derbyshire Dragon’s Back, Peak District
The BMC’s Jon Fullwood is the Access & Conservation Officer for England, diligently working to secure climbers and hill walkers access to crags and footpaths across the land, from his recent success at Wildcat Crag in the Peak and ongoing discussions at Symonds Yat in the Wye Valley.
Jon says, “Mine is what’s sometimes referred to as the Derbyshire Dragon’s Back, over Parkhouse Hill and Chrome Hill, south of Buxton in the Peak District. You can make this into a lovely circular walk by coming back via Hollins Hill. I’m very into fossils and this is really good place to see them because these sharp, mini-mountains are actually the remains of a fossilised carboniferous reef. Along the way you might see brachiopods and gastropods, and even trilobites if you’re lucky. You’ll find them in the loose stones in the path or on the screen slopes on the western side of Parkhouse Hill, but please leave any fossils where they are though for others to enjoy.”
Walk it with Komoot
Try a 9 mile (450m ascent) Dragon’s Back loop from Longnor on Komoot here.
Grindslow Knoll & Fist Rock, Peak District
Katy Shilladay is the BMC’s Digital & Marketing co-ordinator, gathering all the info for the monthly email newsletter and daily social media posts, keeping members informed of all the BMC projects, campaigns, advice, news and collaborations. The BMC's Access Land film has been one of her most popular posts this year.
Katy says, “The walk was part of the BMC staff away day and we teamed up with Moors for the Future to learn more about their projects. The BMC’s Access & Conservation Trust charity are funding Moors for the Future as part of The Climate Project and they help to restore the peat bogs to their natural, carbon-locking state by revegetation, dam works and planting sphagnum. So far they have restored 250km2 of damaged peat land, and through the BMC Get Stuck In volunteer projects we are helping to plant more of this moisture-absorbing, carbon-sinking moss.”
Walk it with Komoot
Follow this walk on Komoot here.
Grasmere Circuit, Lake District
Gavin Finch is the Chief Commercial Officer for the BMC. His most recent success has been getting the accommodation provider HotelPlanner on board, securing BMC members discounted accommodation, particularly with big group bookings, and giving the BMC a percentage of its profits. Try it out here.
Gavin says, “My favourite round is a walk from Grasmere in the central Lake District, starting with an ascent up to Helm Crag, following the ridge NW to Gibson Knott and Calf Crag, circling round and back via Tarn Crag with Easdale Tarn down to your right. It’s a 4-5hr walk and gives you a real sense of what the lakes has to offer, fun in all weathers and you can stop off at the tarn on your way back for a dip! There’s a bit of history at the tarn where you can see the remains of a Victorian ‘snack shop’ where they used to serve tired Victorian walkers!”
Walk it with Komoot
Try this 4.5 mile (300m ascent) loop from Grasmere to Helm Crag on Komoot here.
Fairfield Horseshoe, Lake District
Cressida Allwood is the BMC’s Partnerships Manager. She is also a mountain leader, expedition leader (listen to her incredible back story on The Outdoors Adventure Podcast interview) and passionate about encouraging more equality and diversity in the outdoor world, having been on the BMC Equity, Diversity & Inclusion committee in the past too. Recently she has been involved with the very popular YHA Festival of Walking which will take place this Sept 2024, dates coming soon. Here there are fantastic volunteer opportunities for trainee mountain leaders to practice leading groups under the wing of more experienced, qualified outdoor folk.
Cressida says, “I live in Kendal right next to the Lake District National Park so I’m really torn for my favourite route there! Veering off from the walking slightly I recommend a short sub-10k of very doable trail running around the mini mountain of Loughrigg just next to Ambleside - stunning views around four different bodies of water and when it’s quiet it feels amazing. But you said favourite walk, oops! So there I’d go for the iconic round of the Fairfield Horseshoe from Ambleside. It’s about 10-12 miles long and takes in High Pike and Dove Crag before summiting Fairfield itself at 873m high. Then you descend via Great Rigg and Heron Pike with the most wonderful views of Windermere.”
Walk it with Komoot
Try this 11 mile (870m ascent) circuit from Ambleside around the Fairfield Horseshoe on Komoot here.
Crib Nantlle, North Wales
Eben Muse is the BMC’s Policy & Campaigns Officer (Wales), working to make sure the government puts access, conservation and the right to roam for hill walkers and climbers at the top of its agenda, especially with the general election coming up this year. Eben was also heavily involved with the Sirhowy Crag Crowdfunder campaign that raised £20,951 to protect and enhance access to this popular climbing area.
Eben says, “For me, when I go home to Eryri, my heart always wants me to return to Crib Nantlle. It's not the highest range in Eryri, nor the steepest ridge, but it's placed right at the edge of the park and is the boundary of the valley in which I grew up. It's quieter there than other areas, and I've always loved the perspective it gives me of the valley below - the patchwork of farmland, the scars of Pen yr Orsedd and Dorothea quarries. It also doesn't hurt that it passes by some of the most wonderful cliffs in Wales (and therefore the world) at Cwm Silyn - and you can peer down at some of the new bouldering developments at Cwm Dulyn (both also the names of the houses at my school). The walk itself is stunning, I prefer to start with the sharp hill from Rhyd Ddu, enjoying the gentler slopes to finish down at Nebo or with a nice cool dip in one of the lakes scattered around the northwestern slopes of the range. The views of Llyn, Yr Wyddfa, and Ynys Môn are unbeaten in my mind.”
Walk it with Komoot
Try a 7.5 mile loop (700m ascent) along part of Crib Nantlle on Komoot here.
North Ridge of Tryfan, North Wales
Paul Ratcliffe, the new BMC CEO is a two-time Olympian who won silver in the Canoe Slalom at the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games. As well as paddling, Paul has a passion for climbing mountains and is getting stuck in to supporting and inspiring the current BMC community as well as encouraging new audiences into the outdoors. He recently helped plant sphagnum moss in the Peak District as part of The Climate Project, watch the film including his interview here.
Paul says, “My ‘likes’ in walking are when I feel slightly on the edge of my comfort zone and being challenged. For those reasons, the North Ridge of Tryfan and then going on to climb Bristly Ridge on Glyder Fach is one of my favourites. This North Wales classic inspires me with the technical challenge it presents and the incredible views once on the tops being in the centre of Snowdonia.”
Walk it with Komoot
Try a 3 mile loop (530m ascent) up Tryfan's north ridge on Komoot here.
Crib Lem/Llech Ddu Spur, North Wales
Jon Garside is Acting Head of Performance at GB Climbing, supporting our athletes representing Great Britain on the international stage. Recently he has been excited to see TeamGB’s Olympic hopeful Toby Roberts win the second Lead World Cup of his career, becoming only the second British male to do so. See our interview with Toby in the Summer issue (#114) of BMC Summit magazine, out 18 June.
Jon says, “My fave walk is a bit of a scramble too, but not a hard one. Crib Lem, or Llech Du spur, is both remote and quiet and yet very easy to access from Bethesda, where you can park. The spur sits above a big crag, easily access by a path on the right hand side. I’ve always loved the remoteness of the Carneddau and Crib Lem takes you into the heart of some really impressive scenery. You pop out just near the summit of Carnedd Dafydd and can loop back to Bethesda then another lovely quiet walk down the grassy shoulder NW from Carnedd Fach. A perfect day out!”
Walk it with Komoot
Scramble Crib Lem/Llech Ddu with Komoot here.
Aonach Eagach Scramble, Scottish Highlands
Claire Maxted is the editor of BMC membership magazine Summit, and the comms lead for the BMC’s Access & Conservation work, including the Mend Our Mountains campaign and The Climate Project. Her favourite news story so far has been how access colleague Jon Fullwood (see his fave walk above) filled in a swastika on a crag at Burbage North, and the call out to spot adders this summer as you walk and climb.
Claire says, “Aonach Eagach is a tremendously airy scrambling ridge in Glencoe Scotland, that makes a sensational traverse with rocky pinnacles and skinny sections high above the valley with views of Ben Nevis and Curved Ridge. This one is for experienced scramblers and mountain climbers, but don’t worry, it’s still a spectacular hike around this famous mountain if you don’t have a good head for heights and a firm feeling of where to put your hands and feet.”
Walk it with Komoot
Hike around Aonach Eagach with Komoot here.
Via Alpina, Switzerland
Tom Carrick is the BMC Access & Conservation Officer for Wales. He has been busy lately adding the seagrass planting project to the BMC’s The Climate Project portfolio, updating this summer's nesting bird restrictions on the Regional Access Database (RAD) and bagging up crag-side rubbish with Bangor University.
Tom says, “The Via Alpina from Murren to Kandersteg is one of my favourite hikes, crossing two beautiful cols the Sefinafurgge and Hohturli. The Alpine terrain of this walk moves from the stark peaks of the Jungfrau through a mixture of terrain with alpine flowers, exciting paths and views across the Swiss Alps. More importantly though, the alpine huts on the route make some of the best cakes and milkshakes. This is topped off by a finish descending towards Oeschinensee, the most beautiful lake in the Alps in my opinion.”
Walk it with Komoot
Find the Via Alpina route collection here on Komoot.
BMC members, get your free Komoot region map bundle worth £8.99 here! And search for accommodation on HotelPlanner here for the best deals and discounts, especially for large group bookings, and a share of the profits goes straight back to the BMC!
Not a BMC member? Not only do you get a 15% discount off Cotswold Outdoor, Snow+Rock and Runners Need stores plus £15 million Worldwide Combined Liability Insurance and £10,000 Personal Accident Insurance cover, but you’re also helping to support vital access and conservation work, protecting the hills you love to walk in. Become a member today, here.
Related Content
Access News
Consultation on Wales’ proposed new National Park – member’s views needed.
Mend Our Mountains Articles
This Sunday is National Hiking Day, celebrated on 17 November, encouraging people to get outdoors and enjoy the beauty of nature through hill walking. Use the BMC's hiking route ideas to inspire you and our mapping discounts and freebies to navigate your way.
Mend Our Mountains Articles
Do you have Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) days to fill or is your company looking for new and exciting CSR days for your staff? The British Mountaineering Council (BMC) has the answers.
Hill Walking News
Over 800 drinks containers were removed from Wales’ highest peak last weekend causing environmental campaigners to demand the urgent introduction of a Deposit Return Scheme (DRS) for bottles and cans.
Mend Our Mountains Articles
Did you know that the 140,000 miles of footpaths and bridleways we have access to in England and Wales are under serious threat? The footpaths you love the walk on are disappearing fast before our eyes due to erosion from increased footfall and more extreme weather conditions. Here are 14 reasons why we can't ignore footpath erosion.
Access News
The Yr Wyddfa (Snowdon) Big Clean Up event marks an unprecedented effort to begin to rid the mountain of decades-old litter, including a misplaced Santa hat! Over two days, Friday 20th and Saturday 21st September, dedicated volunteers and specialists undertook a challenging mission to clean one of Wales’ most iconic natural landmarks.
Hill Walking Articles
For many hill walkers, the call of the wild is a lifelong passion. However, the demands placed on our bodies by these activities require thoughtful care, especially as we age.
Rock Climbing
A peregrine survey by boat with high-quality photography organised by local BMC Access Reps Iain Peters and James Mann has helped to identify peregrine nesting sites so that a blanket ban on climbing at the Cornish climbing site of Carn Cowla can be lifted. A temporary ban had been put in place by the National Trust covering the cliffs between Tubby Head and Bawden Cliff, including major route locations up to and beyond the America Buttress. The ban has now been lifted so all sections are open, with only crag- and area-specific restrictions in place when necessary.
Mend Our Mountains Articles
The BMC volunteers have been super busy this summer, with the latest Get Stuck In project seeing 12 of them create a 50m length of stepping stone path to make a more sustainable way through the bog below Tryfan, Eryri (Snowdonia), North Wales.
Hill Walking News
Hill walking offers a wonderful way to connect with nature, challenge your body, and clear your mind. However, the physical demands of walking up and down steep terrain mean that optimal nutrition is essential to ensure you stay energised, strong, and focused. Whether you're setting off on a gentle stroll or tackling a more challenging route, here are the top nutrients you need to consider, along with some nutritious snack ideas to keep you fuelled on your adventure.
News
The BMC is pleased to announce our membership of Sports for Nature (S4N) - the first mountaineering organisation to do so. S4N enables and encourages sporting bodies to champion nature and contribute to its protection and restoration, an initiative that aligns completely with the BMC’s values, including our ongoing access and conservation work, aims for net-zero emissions by 2040 and new Climate & Sustainability Action Plan.
Hill Walking News
This August, 14 BMC volunteers spent two days on The Band in Langdale, Lake District, making repairs to a 100m stretch of footpath in the latest Get Stuck In event, funded by the Mend Our Mountains campaign from the BMC's Access & Conservation Trust.
News
The sphagnum season is upon us again! Now that the ground-nesting birds have stopped ground-nesting, it’s time for BMC volunteers to start planting this incredible, carbon-sequestering moss at strategic locations across the Peak District moorland. Can you help us?
Rock Climbing
A climbers’ meeting this week expressed their opposition to the continued ban on climbing at Symonds Yat, Herefordshire, imposed by Forestry England.
News
This weekend the BMC joined Avon Access Rep Ben Darby and his team of volunteers near Bristol to install 28 new belay stakes on Main Wall so that climbers no longer need to rely on the wobbly old iron fence as an anchor point. Vegetation was also cleared and a thorough litter pick was carried out.
Access News
Yesterday, former Olympic gold medal-winning cyclist Chris Boardman CBE met with BMC staff in the Peak District to highlight projects that are successfully fighting the climate crisis.
Access News
Proposals to make ordinary trespass a criminal offence have alarmed outdoor groups, including the BMC. Ahead of a debate in Parliament on the issue and the possibility of Government publishing the Police Powers and Protections Bill, Ed Douglas calls for the Government to think again.
Access News
There are concerns that government are considering moves to turn trespass from a civil offence to a criminal one. In a public consultation that is currently out for comment, it has been suggested that police powers could be strengthened to force people to move on from unauthorised encampments. The BMC is concerned however, that there could be unintentional consequences of the proposals around issues such as wild camping.
Hillwalking Skills
How to choose an ice axe for your next winter adventure
Access Articles
Access to the south side of Cheddar Gorge is fragile and relies upon climbers following the agreements in place with the landowner.
Rock Destinations
Climbers have a responsibility to understand the relevant access and conservation issues associated with the places we climb. Here are a few pointers to help you enjoy these areas sustainably.
Hill Walking Articles
The health and well being benefits of physical activity are numerous. Apart from the obvious physical benefits, there are many mental health and social perks to hillwalking and climbing too.
Rock Climbing Articles
In this booklet for managers and landowners, the aim has been to address a range of common questions and concerns about rock climbing in disused quarries. Covering all aspects of access and liability, through a selection of case studies, it showcases the benefits not just for climbers, but for the wider public and land managers themselves. Benefits which can be realised with assistance from climbers and the BMC, through the repurposing of disused quarries as rock climbing destinations.
Hillwalking Skills
Camping ‘wild’ is a different way of spending the night outdoors but it isn't allowed everywhere - with a responsible approach however, there are many remote areas where you can still rest your weary head under a star-filled sky.
Rock Climbing News
The stats are in from the Bangor University Mountaineering Society's (BUMS, excellent acronym) crag clean up at Penmaen Head, a limestone sport climbing venue in North Wales, near Colwyn Bay.
Indoor Climbing Gear
We take a look at the culture of tight climbing shoes. Just how tight is too tight - and are we creating problems for the future?
Climate Articles
Want to know more about how you can reduce your own personal carbon footprint and lessen your impact on the environment? We’ve tried to make it simple for you by producing three separate checklists – for yourself, your workplace and for any events you might be arranging.
Governance
On this page, you will find links to recent BMC annual reports and annual accounts.
Hill Walking Articles
Diversity conversations in the outdoors can’t leave anyone out. At ESEA Outdoors UK we’re celebrating the fact that East and Southeast Asian people go outdoors too, in spite of historical erasure and lack of representation in outdoors media. Here’s what you need to know:
Hill Walking Articles
Each year there are reports of people who have been attacked, or even trampled to death, by cows whilst out walking or approaching crags. BMC member Simon Coldrick was badly injured after a cow attacked him as he led a fell race on the edge of Sheffield.
Mountaineering Destinations
If you’re looking for an unforgettable, high altitude trekking holiday this year we’ve got some great ideas for you here in Nepal, Bhutan, Pakistan and India from climbing mountaineering expedition operator Jagged Globe.
Climate Articles
The BMC has welcomed another conservation project into The Climate Project portfolio, planting seagrass with Seagrass Ocean Rescue in conjunction with the North Wales Wildlife Trust. This is in addition to the current sphagnum moss planting and peatland restoration with Moors for the Future in the Peak District that you can also get involved with here.
Mountaineering
The Julie Tullis Memorial Award is a small grant to assist deserving female mountaineers or any disabled climbers or mountaineers, both male and female, to achieve their climbing or mountaineering ambitions.
Mountaineering Articles
An introduction to BMC and MEF mountaineering grants
Rock Climbing Articles
Access & Conservation
With the general election announced for Thursday 4 July 2024, get behind the British Mountaineering Council (BMC) as we lobby for more access to nature, outdoor education and more protection for the places we love to walk and climb in. Pick one (or all!) of the below and ask your election candidates if they will back it and why it’s important to them.
Mountaineering Articles
Are the Alps falling down? IFMGA Mountain Guide Andy Perkins has a stark warning about the impact of climate change on the Alps: “I don’t have children but if I did I wouldn’t persuade them to be mountain guides. I’d be saying ‘Get your yacht sailing ticket...'" Katy Dartford interviews Andy to find out more.
As part of LGBTQ+ history month we asked members of the BMCs Equity Steering LGBTQ+ sub-group to share their stories about getting into climbing and walking.
Access & Conservation
As the general election date draws nearer, the British Mountaineering Council (BMC) have reviewed the manifestos from each party to help you make a more informed choice when it comes to protecting the landscapes and crags that we love to walk in and climb on.
News
As the world’s garment manufacturing industry moves to a more sustainable business model, what we’re wearing in the hills in three years time will be very different to today’s unsustainable, un-recyclable, polluting garments, predicts Mike Parsons from the Outdoor Gear Coach. But why is change needed? And what is going to happen? Mike explains in this article.
Access & Conservation
The Labour Party has announced three policies to help connect people with nature. The British Mountaineering Council has advocated for greater access to nature for many decades and welcomes action to promote this – we’ve therefore taken a look at each policy individually.
Here’s a rundown on ten of the best places to boulder outside for beginners.
Rock Destinations
The Landscape Project is the BMC's latest film series that brings climbing and natural history together. Presenter Nathan Chrismas, a biologist and ecologist, shares his deep knowledge and passion for the geological and ecological highlights of four hugely popular climbing and walking areas.
Access News
Wildlife and Countryside Link—a coalition of over 80 charities including the British Mountaineering Council (BMC), RSPB, The Wildlife Trusts, the National Trust and WWF UK—is challenging all political parties to set out how they would halt wildlife decline by 2030, ahead of the General Election.
Volunteering News
This week is Volunteering Week 3 - 9 June so why not get involved with one of the many BMC volunteering opportunities? There are loads to choose from, including helping out at climbing competitions, leading hill walks at events and litter picking nationwide, planting seagrass in Wales, repairing footpaths in the Lake District and restoring peat bogs in the Peak District.
Article
In National Walking month this May we’ve teamed up with BMC Official Retail Partner Cotswold Outdoor to bring you all the info and advice you need to care for and repair your favourite pair of walking boots. Not only does this save you money, it also saves the environment - the less we consume and throw away, the better.
Access Articles
BMC volunteers from the Get Stuck In programme joined Fix the Fells last month in Wasdale on Lingmell Breast, one of the main routes up to Scafell Pike. They spent the day helping to maintain part of this hugely popular footpath up to England’s highest mountain.
News
BMC member Madalin Cristea, known as Cris, from Romania, has become the first person to summit both Aconcagua and Kilimanjaro from sea level and back again. He is currently attempting to be the first person ever to climb up and down each of the world’s seven summits (the highest mountain on each continent) from sea level - climbing every metre of the mountains up and down.
News
BMC member Wayne Andrews from Bettws, South Wales has started a hill walking group for people who suffer with their mental health or an addiction, called Forever In The Hills.