We caught the bus to Gatesgarth and were on our way by about 9:25.
The weather was mixed, but we were both eager to get cracking. This is a half-day walk, not too strenuous but a proper climb nonetheless.
Descent via Warnscale a little hard on the knees on the top section.
The very beginning of Scarth Gap - Come on!
Climbing Scarth Gap, we appear to have the entire fellside to ourselves. With the rocky form of Hay Stacks ahead, there is an eery silence as clouds drift by
Looking back over Buttermere and Crummock Water, low clouds
An engineered stone path at this point
Reflection in the tarn near Hay Stacks summit.
The clamber to the summit was a little more difficult than I expected, on a couple of occasions I had to help Indy up with the harness.
Perhaps there was an easier route that we missed...
We are totally alone on the fell, looking down here toward Bassenthwaite
Hurrah! But those clouds look a bit ominous
Our first sight of Innominate Tarn.
The view to the left of us has completely disappeared
To Indy's delight, a cool down and play in Innominate Tarn.
Her only company, a small family of ducks
Further down I met two women coming up from Honister who claimed that there are always ducks in Innominate Tarn because the National Trust puts them there
Still no one around, little did we know that this is far from always the case on Hay Stacks
Warnscale Beck, our route back to Gatesgarth. Our path is on the right.
Buttermere straight ahead, Crummock Water beyond.
The High Stile Range, covered in cloud. We have our lunch here, bus in 30 mins
Waiting for the bus, Indy flops to the floor on standby mode
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