Red Pike (Buttermere)
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Red Pike | |
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Red Pike (right), High Stile and Rannerdale Knotts from Crummock Water |
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Elevation | 755 m |
Location | Cumbria, England |
Range | Lake District |
Prominence | c. 40 m |
Topo map | OS Landranger 89 |
OS grid reference | NY160154 |
Listing | Wainwright, Nuttall |
Red Pike is a fell in the High Stile range in the western English Lake District, which separates Ennerdale from the valley of Buttermere and Crummock Water. It is 755 metres high. The direct ascent of Red Pike from Buttermere is very popular and the ridge walk from Red Pike to Haystacks is regarded as one of the finest in the area, with excellent views of the Scafells, Great Gable and Pillar.
The fell can be confused with Red Pike (Wasdale), which is only three miles away but cannot be seen from the summit. Alfred Wainwright in his guidebook The Western Fells comments that the Wasdale Red Pike might be higher but is less suited to the name. Red Pike in Buttermere is given its rich red colouring by the presence of syenite in the rock and subsoil of the fell. This is particularly marked in places where surface erosion has occurred (notably the stony track by the side of Scale Force and the path from Bleaberry Tarn to the summit) and the red colouring of the paths can be seen from some distance.