About Calf Top
Rising steeply above the village of Barbon, this expansive moorland plateau serves as the high point of Middleton Fell. Its grassy, often wet summit offers a front-row seat to the Lakeland fells across the Lune Valley, while the deep trench of Barbondale provides a dramatic edge to the south.
Key Statistics
Rank
90th Highest in Region
Parent Range
Yorkshire Dales
Nearest Town
Sedbergh
Prominence
?
320.3m
Geology
You are walking on layers of sandstone, siltstone, and mudstone. These rocks formed from compressed sand and mud to create the solid foundation of Calf Top.
Did You Know?
- •The name likely derives from the Old Norse 'kalfr', often used to describe a smaller hill lying adjacent to a larger one, or in this region, a specific area of high grazing for young livestock. On Middleton Fell, however, the 'Calf' has outgrown its neighbours to become the undisputed summit.
- •For decades, Calf Top was recorded as 1,999 feet, agonizingly short of official mountain status. In 2016, a professional GPS survey confirmed the height as 609.606 metres—exactly 2,000 feet and a fraction of an inch—officially promoting it to a Hewitt and Nuttall.
- •From the summit trig pillar, the view west across the Lune Valley is exceptional, offering a clear profile of the Lake District's Eastern and Far Eastern fells, including the distinctive peaks of Ill Bell and the High Street range.
- •The most direct approach is a steep, unrelenting pull from the village of Barbon. While the terrain is predominantly pathless grass and heather, the reward is a sense of isolation rarely found on the more popular Yorkshire Three Peaks visible to the east.
- •Having been measured to within six millimetres of the 2,000ft threshold, walkers are advised not to kick any stones off the summit, lest they accidentally demote the mountain back to a hill.
Find It
OS Grid Reference
SD664856
Latitude
54.2649°N
Longitude
2.5174°W