Dartmoor & Exmoor
Hunter's Tor
326M
1070FT
About Hunter's Tor
Guarding the northern entrance to Lustleigh Cleave, this granite outcrop provides a spectacular vantage point over the Teign Valley. It is a characterful Tump where rugged moorland meets steep-sided woodland. The summit offers a sense of exposure that belies its modest height, looking out over one of Dartmoor’s most dramatic valleys.
Key Statistics
Rank
96th Highest in Region
Parent Range
Dartmoor
Prominence
?
95m
Nearest Town
Water
Geology
You’re walking on a solid foundation of granite, formed when a massive pool of molten rock cooled and hardened underground to create the Dartmoor Intrusion.
Classifications
Find It
OS Grid Reference
SX762823
Latitude
50.6272°N
Longitude
3.7517°W
Did You Know?
- •The name likely stems from its historical use as a strategic lookout for hunting parties tracking game as it moved between the sheltered Teign Valley and the open heights of the moor.
- •The summit is the site of an Iron Age hillfort; though weathered by centuries of Dartmoor weather, the ancient ramparts still encircle the tor, commanding the approach from the valley below.
- •From the granite stacks, walkers can look directly south-west across the valley to the village of Manaton and its church tower, framed by the massive ridge of Hameldown rising behind it.
- •The tor sits at the head of Lustleigh Cleave, a deep, boulder-strewn valley. The name 'Cleave' is a local term derived from the Old English 'clif', referring to a steep hillside or escarpment.
- •The ascent from the River Bovey is surprisingly steep, climbing through the dense oak canopy of Nutters Wood to reach the sudden, open light of the ridge.
- •While it is named Hunter’s Tor, the most dangerous thing you are likely to encounter today is an energetic spaniel or a particularly determined group of rock climbers.
