The area is access sensitive

Although subject to CRoW (the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2,000) granting statutory public access, Bamford Edge is a special case. The landowner actively manages Bamford Moor as a grouse shoot, meaning walkers and climbers must adhere to certain rules and regulations, as agreed between the landowner and the British Mountaineering Council (BMC):
1) Absolutely no dogs are allowed.
2) For reasons of land management the owner has the right to close the moor for up to 28 days a year (excluding bank holidays, summer weekends or more than four weekend days outside the summer period).
3) The approach described below is the ONLY way climbers should access the crag.
New Road is a small lane, which starts 200m south of the Yorkshire Bridge Inn on the A6013 Bamford-to-Ladybower road and runs uphill to the Dennis Knoll parking area (Stanage). Approximately 1.7km from the junction with the A6013 (1.5km from Dennis Knoll) there is a wooden gate and stile on the northern side of the lane. Park in grassy lay-bys as close to the gate as possible. Cross the stile and take the left-hand of two well-marked paths. After 30m the paths split: again take the left-hand alternative, following a trail diagonally leftwards across the hillside to reach the Gun Buttress Area at the right-hand end of the crag (10 minutes from P). Well-marked paths lead leftwards from here along the base of the crag, running as far as the K Buttress, but beyond that the going becomes more indistinct. The far left-hand buttresses (Great Tor Area) are better reached by dropping down from the major path running along the top of the crag.

Note

If you know about access issues in this area, please send us an email support@27crags.com.

Bamford Edge

The area is access sensitive!

Although subject to CRoW (the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2,000) granting statutory public access, Bamford Edge is a special case. The landowner actively manages Bamford Moor as a grouse shoot, meaning walkers and climbers must adhere to certain rules and regulations, as agreed between the landowner and the British Mountaineering Council (BMC):
1) Absolutely no dogs are allowed.
2) For reasons of land management the owner has the right to close the moor for up to 28 days a year (excluding bank holidays, summer weekends or more than four weekend days outside the summer period).
3) The approach described below is the ONLY way climbers should access the crag.
New Road is a small lane, which starts 200m south of the Yorkshire Bridge Inn on the A6013 Bamford-to-Ladybower road and runs uphill to the Dennis Knoll parking area (Stanage). Approximately 1.7km from the junction with the A6013 (1.5km from Dennis Knoll) there is a wooden gate and stile on the northern side of the lane. Park in grassy lay-bys as close to the gate as possible. Cross the stile and take the left-hand of two well-marked paths. After 30m the paths split: again take the left-hand alternative, following a trail diagonally leftwards across the hillside to reach the Gun Buttress Area at the right-hand end of the crag (10 minutes from P). Well-marked paths lead leftwards from here along the base of the crag, running as far as the K Buttress, but beyond that the going becomes more indistinct. The far left-hand buttresses (Great Tor Area) are better reached by dropping down from the major path running along the top of the crag.