Lake District
Lamb Pasture
367M
1204FT
About Lamb Pasture
Standing at the modest southern terminus of the Bannisdale Horseshoe, this grassy fell offers a quiet, understated experience far from the Lake District crowds. Though low in height, its position provides a sweeping perspective over the A6 corridor and across the rolling landscape of the Far Eastern fells towards Longsleddale.
Key Statistics
Rank
657th Highest in Region
Parent Range
Far Eastern Fells
Prominence
?
29m
Nearest Town
Selside
Geology
You are walking on the Bannisdale Formation, which consists of alternating layers of siltstone and mudstone.
Classifications
Find It
OS Grid Reference
NY534020
Latitude
54.4122°N
Longitude
2.7188°W
Did You Know?
- •The name is a straightforward survival of local farming terminology, marking specific fellside enclosures used historically for the seasonal grazing of young sheep away from the harsher high ground.
- •Alfred Wainwright designated this the final summit of the 'Bannisdale Horseshoe' in The Outlying Fells of Lakeland, a long, high-level circuit he recommended for its solitude and pleasant turf.
- •The summit offers a distinctively low-level vantage point over the A6 road as it climbs toward Shred Level, providing a sense of scale for the transition between the rolling hills of Kendal and the rugged high fells.
- •Looking north-west from the top, walkers can trace the deep, steep-sided profile of the Longsleddale valley, with the higher ridges of Shipman Knotts and Kentmere Pike forming a dramatic backdrop.
- •Despite its status as a Wainwright Outlying Fell and a Birkett, the hill is so unfrequented that the most likely company you will encounter is the livestock the fell was named after.
