The Pendle Way from Barley
Walk directions
Exit the car park, turn right and cross the main road to a bridlepath signposted 'Ogden Clough', Pass the three-storey Barley Green Farmhouse with its interesting row of corbels, proceed between circular gateposts, and pass a Water Works building on the right. Continue to a climb beside the grassy dam of the lower reservoir, where the metalled lane gives way to an unmade track. Continue straight ahead and join the Pendle Way as it leaves Fell Wood on the left; here you get your first clear view of Pendle Hill up to the right. Keep straight ahead to the bottom of the upper reservoir, cross a stile and ascend the track beside the dam. Follow the Pendle Way alongside the reservoir and up Ogden Clough, passing through a kissing gate into open country. The path is obvious to another kissing gate, where the route bears right up a stony path that soon swings left and follows the contours.
Cross the stream in Boar Clough. An obvious, badly eroded, path climbs up to the right. The worst of this can be avoided by continuing ahead a short distance, then climbing grassy slopes directly to a marker post. Either way is steep at first but soon gives way to a more gentle climb on soft ground along a cairn-marked route over Barley Moor to the summit trig point.
Walk along the summit escarpment to a wall with a ladder stile. Go right, staying this side of the wall, to a carved upright stone marking the Pendle Way; strike sharp right and descend steeply down the stone-stepped path.
Go right after the kissing gate at the bottom, signposted 'Barley', rounding the back of Pendle House to a yellow-topped post and bear left through another gate. Drop down the meadow, with a wall on the left, and through a gate at the bottom leading into another meadow. Keep on down to a kissing gate and walk through newly-planted trees to another gate near a farm building. Turn right along a track as signposted, then bear left through the grounds of Brown House to join a pretty tree-lined path between a stream and a wall.
Proceed through gates and over footbridges to reach a narrow cobbled lane. Exit onto a metalled road and turn left through the grounds of Ing Ends.
Soon cross a yellow waymarked footbridge on the right and bear left through a meadow and gates to pick up the stream on the left. On reaching the main road in Barley opposite the Primitive Methodist church, turn right through the village to a Pendle Way marker leading you off the road, through the playground and park to the car park beyond.
Additional information
Terrain
- Defined paths, lots of kissing gates, one stile
Landscape
- Wooded valleys, moorland, hilltop views
Dog friendliness
- On lead near livestock on moorland
Parking
- Pay-and-display car park in Barley
Toilets en route
- At car park
About the walk
This walk commences in the commendable village of Barley, which, in 1324, was known as Barelegh – an infertile lea or meadow. It follows much of the route of the Pendle Way, signposted by a black witch flying on her broomstick across a yellow sky. You climb gently past the Lower Ogden Reservoir and... the Upper Ogden Reservoir to the steep sided Ogden Clough, then strike off up Boar Clough where the vegetation is indicative of acidic peat: ferns uncurl above bilberry shrubs and verdant patches of moss and white bog cotton complete the patchwork. The going is soft on the peaty ground across Barley Moor to the summit of Pendle Hill, and such is the spellbinding spirit of the area that dark figures on the skyline above could easily be mistaken for witches! The descent down the Big End is steep but quick, followed by a lovely tree-lined walk beside a tiny beck to return to Barley. Referred to as a sleeping lion, Pendle Hill slopes gently up the lion's back to fall away sharply down the face, known as the Big End. The summit affords a spectacular bird's-eye view over the Ribble Valley to Yorkshire's Three Peaks in the north and Lancashire's cotton towns of Padiham and Burnley nestling beneath the Pennine hills to the south. At 1,827ft (557m), the hill is constructed of gritstone and limestone, a combination that strongly influences the contrasting Pendle scenery. On the summit is the Beacon, a Bronze Age burial mound thought to be possibly 7,000 years old. It was Pendle Hill that George Fox climbed in 1652 and where he had his vision of enlightenment that led him to found the Quaker movement. 'I was moved of the Lord to go up the top of it, which I did with much ado, as it was so very steep and high. 'The name Pendle Hill means 'Hill Hill Hill'. The way this came about is typical of the convoluted history behind so many English place names. If you lived below Pendle, you might well call it simply 'the Hill', and early Celtic inhabitants did just that - 'Pen'. Later incomers, not realising this, called it Pendle, meaning 'the hill called Pen'. This meaning too became obscured, and the name was later applied to the whole district. The Wild High Moors. Pendle is also associated with witches. Pendle Witches ‘Witch’ comes from the Anglo-Saxon word ‘wicca’, meaning ‘the wise ones’ and were thought to possess magical powers. The Demdikes of Malkin Tower and the Chattox’s of Higham were matriarchal families who lived in the Pendle area in the early 17th century. These self-confessed witches were accused of turning cattle into cats, turning the ale in the inn at Higham sour and bewitching the landlord’s son to death, and paralysing a pedlar on the road to Colne. These were difficult times for independent women, witches or not, and 19 Pendle residents were eventually taken to the gaol at Lancaster Castle where they were charged with witchcraft. The Witch Trial took place in August 1612 and, after some dubious confessions, resulted in the execution by hanging of seven women and two men. The story has been fictionalised in many novels including Robert Neill’s Mist Over Pendle (1951) and The Familiars (2019) by Stacey Halls.
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Been on this walk?
Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.
Walking in Safety
Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.
Get an AA guide
Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.
About the area
Lancashire was at the centre of the British cotton industry in the 19th century, which lead to the urbanization of great tracts of the area. The cotton boom came and went, but the industrial profile remains.
Nearby places to stay
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Self-Catering
Pendle Holiday Cottages
★★★★
"Wonderful country walks from the doorstep..."
- Total units: 2
Hotel
Crow Wood Hotel & Spa Resort
★★★★
"Beautifully located with a great range of food options...."
- En-suite rooms:
- Family rooms: 1
Nearby places to stay
Pendle Holiday Cottages
In the picture postcard village of Barley, Pendle Holiday Cottages are surrounded by beautiful countryside within the Forest of Bowland Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Chose between...
★★★★ Rating
Fence Gate
Fence Gate has been family run for more than thirty years, and offers rooms that vary in size and shape, with each providing high levels of quality and lots of thoughtful extras. There’...
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Crow Wood Hotel & Spa Resort
Located just off the motorway but secluded and peaceful, Crow Wood is situated in 100 acres of woodland and offers modern bedrooms, attractively appointed and well equipped for both lei...
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Ribble Valley Holiday Park
Ribble Valley is a peaceful countryside holiday park with views of Pendle Hill. The countryside location is truly magnificent; miles of countryside in every direction providing fantasti...
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The Croft
Set in a high moorland location, with fabulous views, The Croft is beautiful, stone built, former farm building located in Trawden Forest on the outskirts of Trawden village. Just 5 mil...
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The Croft
Set in a high moorland location, with fabulous views, The Croft is beautiful, stone built, former farm building located in Trawden Forest on the outskirts of Trawden village. Just 5 mil...
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Freemasons at Wiswell
The Freemasons at Wiswell is a village pub with a 3 AA Rosette restaurant, in a quiet, tucked-away location. It also has four luxuriously appointed bedrooms in the cottage next door. Pr...
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Hill Brook Barn
Hill Brook Barn sits resting among the scenic splendour of the Pendle Valley, in a wonderfully remote area of Lancashire. On the grounds of the owner's farm where you can watch cattle a...
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