TOUR OF PENDLE
The 42nd TOUR OF PENDLE Saturday 21st November 2026
Distance: 27 km / 16.8 miles
Climb: 1473 m / 4833 ft
'The Tour' is an AL Fell Race, it is not a Long Distance Walk. Experience and navigational skills are required and local knowledge an advantage.
The race is registered and licensed through the FRA and is organised in accordance with FRA’s rules and requirements. You must carry: waterproof whole body cover (with taped seams and integrated attached hood), hat, gloves, map of the route, compass, whistle and emergency food.
No GPS.
The race will start at 10:15am.
A head count will begin at 10:00am approx. 30m from the Village Hall, 20m from the start. Access to the lane beyond is not permitted before the race starts.
The cut-off at CP4 will be at 12.00pm, assuming the race sets off promptly at 10:15am.
A second cut-off at CP6 will be enforced - this will be determined by the conditions on the day.
If you are unable to complete the full course within 4hrs 45mins, in conditions which might reasonably be considered normal for November, you are unlikely to meet the CP6 cut-off.
Anyone arriving at CP4 or CP6 after it has closed will be directed back to Barley Village Hall where they must inform one of the marshals at the hall of their retirement and give them their race number.
Results
2026
21 November 2026
Enter via SiEntries
https://www.sientries.co.uk/event.php?event_id=16803
Pre-entry: £16.00
EOD £25.00 if limit of 450 not reached
full kit (Hat or buff as long as it covers your head)
PRIZES COURTESY OF PETE BLAND SPORTS
Fell running
Running among the Scottish hills, Welsh mountains and Lakeland fells.
Race Photography
Race photography from fell races in Northern England and hill races in Scotland.
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From the Shetland Isles to South Wales: exploring Britain’s coastline by kayak.
NORTHERN HORIZONS
Launched at the Fort William Mountain Festival, 14 Feb 2025, and published by Scottish Mountaineering Press, Northern Horizons features a collection of essays and challenging fell and hill running routes across Scotland and Northern England.
In review:
"Like the quieter corners of the rugged mountains of Scotland and Cumbria it vividly describes, this book is to be relished. Speaking not with the commodifying sensationalism of our times, nor the relentless stopwatch of performance, Northern Horizons is an immersion in the ephemeral patterns and shifts of mountain time. Woven with human and geologic history, its celebration of the primal act of moving amongst mountain landscapes is second only to the enduring grandeur of these places.”
Finlay Wild