At 215 metres, it is modest in height. But Nicky Nook has a habit of making people feel rather foolish for underestimating it.
Stand at the trig point on a clear day, and you can see Blackpool Tower to the south, Morecambe Bay to the north, and the Lake District fells beyond.
In the right conditions, it is even possible to spot the Isle of Man and the Great Orme on the North Wales coast.
A fell that can be climbed in well under an hour, with views that take far longer to fully take in.
Nicky Nook (Image: Google)
The village at its feet
Scorton sits at the edge of the Forest of Bowland Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, on the banks of the River Wyre, north of Garstang.
Its name is thought to derive from Old Norse and Old English, meaning “farmstead by a ravine”, a reference to the landscape that still shapes it today.
For much of its history, Scorton was a quiet rural settlement. That changed in the 19th century when it became part of Lancashire’s thriving cotton industry, with its own mill powered by an underground waterwheel fed from the River Wyre.
The mill is long gone, but the village’s tight cluster of stone buildings, its river walk, playground and churches still give it the feel of somewhere that grew around a particular purpose and then quietly got on with things.
The climb that rewards every effort
The most popular route up Nicky Nook begins in the village and crosses the motorway bridge before heading up through the Wyresdale Park estate and out onto open fell.
The path is well-maintained, the ascent steepens only briefly, and the whole circuit, including a loop around Grizedale Reservoir, can be completed comfortably in around two hours.
Church of St Peter, Scorton (Image: WikiCommons)
The fell sits within the wider Wyresdale landscape. Wyresdale Park itself is an 800-acre estate, combining working farmland with woodland, lakes and a country house originally built in the 19th century.
As for the name, “nook” traditionally refers to a small, sheltered corner. Exactly who Nicky was remains uncertain, but the name has been attached to the land for generations.
The estate café and the tearoom in the village
Walkers starting from the Wyresdale Park car park on Snow Hill Lane are well catered for at the Applestore Café, which sits beside Wyresdale Lake and serves food and drinks throughout the week.
Back in the village, the Priory has been a fixture since 1969, a family-run café and bed and breakfast serving breakfasts, lunches and homemade cakes in a cosy setting, with a reputation strong enough to draw people from across the region.
The Barn, a large garden centre, café and gift shop, rounds out Scorton’s offering, making it a genuinely useful base rather than simply a starting point for a walk.
Skylarks, meadow pipits and open moorland
The fell itself is managed as part of the wider Bowland landscape and supports a mix of upland birds typical of the area.
Skylarks and meadow pipits are common on the open fell, while more fortunate visitors may spot tree pipits or yellowhammers.
In spring, bluebells carpet the woodland sections of the walk up from Wyresdale Park, while the reservoir at Grizedale offers a quieter, reflective stretch on the way back down.
Getting there
Scorton is just off the A6 between Garstang and Lancaster, accessible from junctions 32 or 33 of the M6. The village is also served by regular bus services from Preston, Lancaster and Blackpool.
There is parking in the village for those using local businesses, and additional spaces at Wyresdale Park near the Applestore Café.
Combine the fell with a walk along the River Wyre, lunch at the Priory and, if the weather holds, an hour on the summit watching the light change over Morecambe Bay. It is one of those days that costs very little and stays with you for a long time.
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