The 'Yorkshire Dales' (also known as the "Dales") is the name given to an upland area, in Northern
England.
The area lies within the
historic county boundaries of
Yorkshire, though spans the
ceremonial counties of
North Yorkshire,
West Yorkshire, and
Cumbria. Most of the area falls within the Yorkshire Dales District National Park, created in 1954, and now one of the twelve
National parks of England and Wales.
'The Dales' is a collection of river
valleys and the hills in between them, rising from the
Vale of York westwards to the hilltops of the main
Pennine watershed (the British English meaning). In some places the area even extends westwards across the watershed, but most of the valleys drain eastwards to the Vale of York - into the
Ouse and then the
Humber.
"Dale" comes from a Nordic/Germanic word for valley, and occurs in valley names across Yorkshire (and northern England generally) but since the creation of the Yorkshire Dales National park, the name "Yorkshire Dales" has come to refer specifically to these western dales (the area of dales and hills EAST of the Vale of York is now always called the "
North York Moors" after the National Park created there). Confusingly, the Yorkshire Dales have plenty of moors, too.
They tend to be Glacial.
Geography
Most of the dales in the Yorkshire Dales are named after their river or stream (eg Arkengarthdale, formed by Arkle Beck). The best-known exception to this rule is
Wensleydale, which is named after the town of Wensley rather than the River Ure, although an older name for the dale is Yoredale. In fact,
valleys all over
Yorkshire are called "(name of river)+
dale" - but only the more northern Yorkshire valleys (and only the upper, rural, reaches) are included in the term "The Dales". For example, the southern boundary area lies in
Wharfedale and
Airedale. The lower reaches of these valleys are not usually included in the area, and
Calderdale much further south, would never normally be referred to as part of "The Dales" even though it is a dale, is in Yorkshire, and the upper reaches are as scenic and rural as many valleys further north.
Geographically, the classical Yorkshire Dales spread to the north from the market and spa towns of
Settle, Deepdale near
Dent,
Skipton,
Ilkley and
Harrogate in North Yorkshire, with most of the larger southern dales (e.g. Ribblesdale, Malhamdale and Airedale, Wharfedale and Nidderdale) running roughly parallel from north to south. The more northerly dales (e.g.
Wensleydale, Swaledale and Teesdale) running generally from west to east. There are also many other smaller or lesser known dales (e.g. Arkengarthdale, Barbondale, Bishopdale, Clapdale, Coverdale, Dentdale and Deepdale, Garsdale, Kingsdale, Littondale, Langstrothdale, Raydale, Waldendale and the Washburn Valley) whose tributary streams and rivers feed into the larger valleys.
[1]
The characteristic scenery of the "Dales" is green upland pastures separated by
dry-stone walls and grazed by
sheep and
cattle. The
dales themselves are 'U' and 'V' shaped valleys, which were enlarged and shaped by
glaciers, mainly in the most recent,
Devensian ice age. The underlying rock is principally
Carboniferous limestone (which results in a number of areas of
limestone pavement) in places interspersed with
shale and
sandstone and topped with
millstone grit. However, to the north of the Dent fault, the hills are principally older
Silurian and
Ordovician rocks, which make up the
Howgill Fells. Because of the limestone that runs throughout the "Dales" there are extensive cave systems present across the area. Many of these are open to the public for tours and for
caving.
[2] These include:
★
Gaping Gill System,
[3] Alum Pot System, Mossdale Caverns Kingsdale Caverns, Lancaster Pot and Easegill Caverns System, White Scar Caves near
Ingleton,
[4] Ingleborough Cave
[5] in
Clapdale near
Clapham, and Stump Cross Caverns near
Pateley Bridge.
Many of the upland areas consist of
heather moorland, used for
grouse shooting in the months following
August 12 each year (the '
Glorious Twelfth').
Yorkshire Dales National Park

Stone houses in
Hawes, a typical example of Dales architecture

Limestone hills and
dry-stone walls in the west of the Yorkshire Dales. This part of the national park is popular with walkers due to the presence of the
Yorkshire three peaks.
In 1954 an area of
1,770 km² was designated the 'Yorkshire Dales National Park'. Most of the
National Park is in
North Yorkshire, though part lies within
Cumbria. The park is 50 miles north east of
Manchester; Leeds and Bradford lie to the south, while Kendal is to the west and Darlington to the east.
[6]
Over 20,000 residents live and work in the park, which attracts over eight million visitors every year. The area has a large collection of activities for visitors. For example, many people come to the "Dales" for walking or exercise. The National Park is crossed by several long-distance routes including the
Pennine Way, the
Dales Way, the Coast to Coast Path and the latest national trail - the
Pennine Bridleway.
[7] Cycling is also popular and there are several cycleways.
[8]
The Park has its own museum, the
Dales Countryside Museum, housed in a conversion of the
Hawes railway station in
Wensleydale in the north of the Park.
[9] The park has 5 visitor centres located in major destinations in the park.
[10] These are at:
★
Aysgarth Falls
★
Grassington
★
Hawes
★
Malham
★
Reeth
Other places and sights within the National Park include:
★
Clapham
★
Cautley Spout waterfall
★
Gaping Gill
★
Hardraw Force
★
Horton in Ribblesdale
★
Kisdon Force waterfall in
Swaledale
★
Sedbergh
★
Settle
★ The
Yorkshire three peaks
Miscellaneous
James Herriot's veterinary books are set in the Dales, as is the TV
soap opera ''
Emmerdale.''
The acclaimed American travel writer
Bill Bryson lived in and is an admirer of the Yorkshire Dales. He describes the dales in his book on Britain,
Notes from a Small Island.
The British writer
Gervase Phinn has published four autobiographical novels (a fifth will be released in summer 2007) about his career as a school inspector in the Dales.
The Yorkshire Dales is served by its own radio station,
Fresh Radio, which broadcasts programmes from studio bases in
Skipton and
Richmond, North Yorkshire.
List of Dales

The whole of Ingleborough as seen from the peat bog below
★
Arkengarthdale
★
Birkdale
★
Bishopdale
★
Coverdale
★
Dentdale
★
Garsdale
★
Langstrothdale
★
Littondale
★
Malhamdale
★
Nidderdale
★
Ribblesdale
★
Swaledale
★
Wensleydale
★
Wharfedale
See also
★
Bolton Castle
★
Skipton
★
Settle and Carlisle Railway
★
List of peaks in the Yorkshire Dales
References
1. http://www.yorkshire-dales.com/welcome.html
2. http://www.yorkshire-dales.com/caves.html
3. http://www.yorkshire-dales.com/gaping-gill.html
4. http://www.yorkshire-dales.com/white-scar-caves.html
5. http://www.yorkshire-dales.com/ingleborough-cave.html
6. http://www.yorkshiredales.org.uk/
7. http://www.yorkshiredales.org.uk/index/enjoying/things_to_do_in_the_dales.htm
8. http://www.cyclethedales.org.uk/
9. http://www.yorkshiredales.org.uk/index/enjoying/dales_countryside_museum.htm
10. http://www.yorkshiredales.org.uk/index/enjoying/national_park_centres_1.htm
External links
★
Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority
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Yorkshire Dales Society
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Photos of The Yorkshire Dales on Flickr