Outdoors News
You are looking at: Home : Outdoors News

Peak On Fire...

A huge moorland fire is burning uncontrollably on Bleaklow shrouding surrounding towns in smoke, meanwhile there are smaller blazes on Kinder and Saddleworth Moor.


Posted: 18 April 2003
by Jon

More of a 'Black Friday' than a Good one for the Dark Peak as a massive fire burned out of control on Bleaklow. From above Glossop, the hill looked like a volcano with a massive plume of smoke blowing from the burning moorland.

For some reason the blaze on Kinder, which started on Thursday, is getting all the publicity in the national media, but the Bleaklow fire is much, much larger and Glossop is shrouded in smoke, which according to some reports has also reached as far as Manchester.

A Fire Brigade spokesman told OUTDOORSmagic that the area covered by the Bleaklow fire measures approximately 5km by 2km with fresh winds fanning the flames and helping to spread the fire. The area affected is north of the Doctor's Gate bridleway and the A57 Snake Pass from the top of Yellow Slack across to Shelf Moss and the Wainstones. See map.

The extent of the fire means that it's effectively uncontrollable and as a result, walkers are advised to avoid the area and the section of the Pennine Way that crosses Bleaklow. The Fire Brigade are concentrating on the smaller fire on Kinder - which is on the plateau to the NW of the Downfall - using two helicopters dropping water bombs.

The rest of the plateau is unaffected, but you should avoid the area at the top of William Clough and, obviously the section of the plateau between Ashop Head and the Downfall. One walker we met was advised by a ranger that he was free to go that way, but he'd be risking his safety and the Park Authority would not take responsibility if he went into the area.

Meanwhile another fire is burning on Saddleworth Moor above Marsden and tinder dry conditions have also led to forest fires in Scotland and the west country.

Still smoking...

Incredibly, some walkers are still smoking in the Peak despite prominent fire warning and, even more obviously, plumes of smoke from the burning areas. It's hard to believe how stupid you'd have to be to do that.

The only bright spot on the horizon is that the weather is forecast to cool down with the possibility of rain from Saturday afternoon.


Previous article
Easter Weekend Weather Outlook
Next article
Hinkes Suffers Big Setback


TwitterStumbleUponFacebookDiggRedditGoogle

Related Content

Related Products


Discuss this story

See the news article, but bottom line today, Good Friday, is that if you're planning to walk on Bleaklow or downwind of it this weekend, you'd best go elsewhere.

It really is a mess. Looks like a volcano and Glossop is under a cloud of eye-smarting smoke with residents advised to keep their windows shut.

You can smell the fire for miles around too. Anyway, I'm not working today, but since none of the nationals seem to have picked up on how serious the Bleaklow fire is, I thought I'd best get it up.

Food now...

Posted: 18/04/2003 at 19:13

Any one got a veggi-sausage for the big Barbi round at Jon's gaff then...

Posted: 18/04/2003 at 19:29

I had a great day out on the Carnedds today - even so, there was a moorland fire burning all day on a hill above the Menai Straits, sending black smoke all over Anglesey.

It's odd that there have been so many new fires since the media reports on the first fires in Lancashire and I wonder whether those reports have encouraged the local arsonists to set off with a box of Swan Vestas? You can't blame addicted fell-walkers for all of them.


Posted: 18/04/2003 at 21:51

See more comments...
Talkback: Peak On Fire...

First Name:
Last Name:
Nickname:
Email:
Security Image:
Enter the code shown:

I agree to the site's Terms and Conditions & Code of Conduct: