North Pennines
Blease Fell
474M
1555FT
About Blease Fell
Rising as a broad, grassy shoulder on the western fringe of the Dales, this quiet Tump offers a tranquil alternative to the busier Three Peaks. The terrain is typically Pennine moorland—undulating and often damp—rewarding walkers with a sense of isolation and expansive views towards the limestone scars of Ingleborough.
Key Statistics
Rank
197th Highest in Region
Parent Range
Yorkshire Dales
Prominence
?
Data coming soon
Nearest Town
Sedbergh
Geology
Beneath your boots lie layers of sandstone, siltstone, and clay-like rocks. These sediments form the rugged Screes Gill and Coniston Group formations that shape this fell.
Classifications
Find It
OS Grid Reference
NY623004
Latitude
54.3909°N
Longitude
2.5074°W
Did You Know?
- •The name likely derives from the Old Norse word 'bles', meaning a white spot or 'blaze' (commonly used for a marking on a horse's face), which in a landscape context often referred to a pale patch of bare ground or scree on a hillside.
- •Situated on the borderlands of the Yorkshire Dales and the Forest of Bowland, the fell forms part of the sprawling Bentham Moors, a plateau of gritstone and peat that feels far more remote than its modest altitude suggests.
- •The summit provides a grandstand view of the Lune Valley to the west, while to the northeast, the massive bulk of Ingleborough dominates the skyline, appearing particularly imposing from this lower perspective.
- •Walkers often combine a visit to the summit with the Great Stone of Fourstones, a significant glacial erratic deposited during the last Ice Age that sits on the moorland plateau to the south.
- •This is a landscape that rewards the well-waterproofed; the local peat hags are frequently deeper and more ambitious than the gentle gradient of the map might suggest.
