Lake District
Shelter Crags
815M
2674FT
About Shelter Crags
Linking the formidable giants of Bowfell and Crinkle Crags, this undulating ridge offers rugged, rocky terrain characteristic of the Southern Fells. Though often treated as a mere transit point, its multiple summits provide a wild, high-altitude atmosphere with dramatic, plunging views into Oxendale and the Great Langdale valley.
Key Statistics
Rank
52nd
Parent Range
Southern Fells
Prominence
?
31m
Nearest Town
Wasdale Head
Geology
Borrowdale Volcanic Group
Find It
OS Grid Reference
NY249053
Latitude
54.4380°N
Longitude
3.1583°W
Did You Know?
- •Shelter Crags takes its name from the numerous rocky outcrops and overhangs that provide natural protection from the elements along the ridge between Three Tarns and Crinkle Crags.
- •While Alfred Wainwright omitted it as a separate chapter in his Pictorial Guides, both Tim Synge and Bill Birkett recognise it as a distinct summit. Birkett actually identifies five separate tops across this undulating plateau.
- •The summit offers a spectacular, close-up perspective of Bowfell’s Great Slab, a massive tilted sheet of rhyolitic volcanic rock that dominates the view to the north.
- •The area is notorious for its complex micro-topography; in thick mist, the main path can be difficult to track as it weaves between the various rocky knobs and depressions that define the ridge.
- •It is the ultimate 'middle child' of the Lake District—frequently overlooked by walkers in a hurry to reach more famous neighbours, yet perfectly capable of tripping up the distracted with its confusing array of false summits.
