Peat Law

Hill, Mountain in Northumberland

England

Peat Law

The Yoke Burn in Kidland Forest Labelled as a ford on the 1:25k map, the Yoke Burn is now conveyed under the forestry track in a culvert.

This photograph was taken during the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic of 2020/21/22.
The Yoke Burn in Kidland Forest Credit: James T M Towill

Peat Law is a prominent hill located in the county of Northumberland, England. Situated in the northern part of the county, it forms part of the Cheviot Hills, which extend across the border into Scotland. Peat Law is situated within the Northumberland National Park, an area renowned for its natural beauty and diverse landscapes.

With an elevation of approximately 535 meters (1,755 feet), Peat Law is a notable landmark within the region. The hill offers stunning panoramic views of the surrounding countryside, including the rolling hills and valleys of Northumberland and the Scottish Borders. On clear days, it is even possible to catch glimpses of the North Sea to the east.

Peat Law is characterized by its rugged terrain, covered in heather and moss, giving it a distinct purple hue during the summer months. The hill is a popular destination for outdoor enthusiasts, attracting hikers, ramblers, and nature lovers who come to explore the picturesque trails that wind their way up to the summit.

The site is also known for its rich biodiversity, with a variety of plant and animal species inhabiting the area. Visitors may encounter wildlife such as red grouse, mountain hares, and even the occasional golden eagle soaring above.

Accessible from several nearby villages and towns, Peat Law offers a tranquil escape from the hustle and bustle of urban life. It provides an opportunity to immerse oneself in the natural beauty of Northumberland, making it a favored destination for locals and tourists alike.

If you have any feedback on the listing, please let us know in the comments section below.

Peat Law Images

Images are sourced within 2km of 55.385235/-2.1499655 or Grid Reference NT9010. Thanks to Geograph Open Source API. All images are credited.

The Yoke Burn in Kidland Forest Labelled as a ford on the 1:25k map, the Yoke Burn is now conveyed under the forestry track in a culvert.

This photograph was taken during the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic of 2020/21/22.
The Yoke Burn in Kidland Forest
Labelled as a ford on the 1:25k map, the Yoke Burn is now conveyed under the forestry track in a culvert. This photograph was taken during the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic of 2020/21/22.
A track between Meadow Sike and Milkhope Heading back down to the valley floor track after a cycle to Sting Head.  Storm Arwen (26/27 November 2021) has resulted in destruction of numerous areas within Kidland Forest as seen on the hillside in the background.

This photograph was taken during the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic of 2020/21/22.
A track between Meadow Sike and Milkhope
Heading back down to the valley floor track after a cycle to Sting Head. Storm Arwen (26/27 November 2021) has resulted in destruction of numerous areas within Kidland Forest as seen on the hillside in the background. This photograph was taken during the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic of 2020/21/22.
Hut and ponies beside bridleway This is in the valley of the Yoke Beck in the Kidland Forest as the sign close to the animals tells. The image was made in 1995 and the building, may no longer be there.
Geoff Holland has a more recent image taken from a little further north and so probably beyond the hut's location - <a title="https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/6856451" href="https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/6856451">Link</a> .
Hut and ponies beside bridleway
This is in the valley of the Yoke Beck in the Kidland Forest as the sign close to the animals tells. The image was made in 1995 and the building, may no longer be there. Geoff Holland has a more recent image taken from a little further north and so probably beyond the hut's location - Link .
JCB Mini Digger above the Wholehope Burn This digger, which was lying idle when I passed by, had been used for digging drainage ditches alongside the track referred to at <a title="https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/7126230" href="https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/7126230">Link</a>. The hill in the middle distance is Inner Hill on Shillhope Law. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit <span class="nowrap"><a title="www.cheviotwalks.co.uk" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.cheviotwalks.co.uk">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span>
JCB Mini Digger above the Wholehope Burn
This digger, which was lying idle when I passed by, had been used for digging drainage ditches alongside the track referred to at Link. The hill in the middle distance is Inner Hill on Shillhope Law. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit LinkExternal link
Wholehope Burn This quiet almost linear steep-sided valley stretches from the saddle between Saughy Hill and Wholehope Knowe to the River Coquet between Shillmoor and The Knocks. Hidden in its depths lie the remains of an illicit whisky still as shown at <a title="https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2541394" href="https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2541394">Link</a>. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit <span class="nowrap"><a title="www.cheviotwalks.co.uk" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.cheviotwalks.co.uk">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span>
Wholehope Burn
This quiet almost linear steep-sided valley stretches from the saddle between Saughy Hill and Wholehope Knowe to the River Coquet between Shillmoor and The Knocks. Hidden in its depths lie the remains of an illicit whisky still as shown at Link. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit LinkExternal link
Wholehope Still The old illicit still clearly visible on the banks of the burn.
Wholehope Still
The old illicit still clearly visible on the banks of the burn.
Fence near Uplaw Knowe This fence, which lies adjacent to Clennell Street, also acts as a boundary fence for the nearby plantation. The two hills in the background are, to the right, Green Side, and to the left Lord's Seat. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit <span class="nowrap"><a title="www.cheviotwalks.co.uk" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.cheviotwalks.co.uk">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span>
Fence near Uplaw Knowe
This fence, which lies adjacent to Clennell Street, also acts as a boundary fence for the nearby plantation. The two hills in the background are, to the right, Green Side, and to the left Lord's Seat. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit LinkExternal link
Plantation near Uplaw Knowe This photo shows some of the devastation to this plantation caused by Storm Arwen in November 2021. The damage caused by the storm was compounded by the fact that "sustained winds with gusts in excess of 90 mph were, unusually, from the north-east, affecting trees that do not normally have to yield to those winds." For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit <span class="nowrap"><a title="www.cheviotwalks.co.uk" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.cheviotwalks.co.uk">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span>
Plantation near Uplaw Knowe
This photo shows some of the devastation to this plantation caused by Storm Arwen in November 2021. The damage caused by the storm was compounded by the fact that "sustained winds with gusts in excess of 90 mph were, unusually, from the north-east, affecting trees that do not normally have to yield to those winds." For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit LinkExternal link
Uplaw Knowe The sac marks the 371 metre high top of Uplaw Knowe with the ancient cross-border of track of Clennell Street visible slightly downhill. The white square just left of centre in the distance is the corrugated shed which stands beside the scant remains of Wholehope, once an isolated shepherds cottage and, more latterly, a basic Youth Hostel. The trees form part of the vast Kidland Forest. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit <span class="nowrap"><a title="www.cheviotwalks.co.uk" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.cheviotwalks.co.uk">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span>
Uplaw Knowe
The sac marks the 371 metre high top of Uplaw Knowe with the ancient cross-border of track of Clennell Street visible slightly downhill. The white square just left of centre in the distance is the corrugated shed which stands beside the scant remains of Wholehope, once an isolated shepherds cottage and, more latterly, a basic Youth Hostel. The trees form part of the vast Kidland Forest. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit LinkExternal link
Fenced Sheepfold near Uplaw Knowe This is the same sheepfold as is shown in the photo at <a title="https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/5034825" href="https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/5034825">Link</a> although these days it appears to be more regularly utilised. The long-backed hill in the distance is Green Side. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit <span class="nowrap"><a title="www.cheviotwalks.co.uk" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.cheviotwalks.co.uk">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span>
Fenced Sheepfold near Uplaw Knowe
This is the same sheepfold as is shown in the photo at Link although these days it appears to be more regularly utilised. The long-backed hill in the distance is Green Side. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit LinkExternal link
Clennell Street at Hare Sheds Identified on William Roy's 18th century map as the 'Road from Morpeth to Kelso', the origins of this cross-border track are far more ancient, with evidence of Iron Age and Bronze Age activity along the route. At this point, the track is contouring the slopes of Hare Sheds as it makes its uphill way to Wholehope with the head of Kidlandlee Dean right of centre. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit <span class="nowrap"><a title="www.cheviotwalks.co.uk" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.cheviotwalks.co.uk">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span>
Clennell Street at Hare Sheds
Identified on William Roy's 18th century map as the 'Road from Morpeth to Kelso', the origins of this cross-border track are far more ancient, with evidence of Iron Age and Bronze Age activity along the route. At this point, the track is contouring the slopes of Hare Sheds as it makes its uphill way to Wholehope with the head of Kidlandlee Dean right of centre. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit LinkExternal link
Scant remains of Wholehope This is all that remains of Wholehope (pronounced locally as, 'Woollup'), once a lonely shepherd's cottage where generations of children spent their formative years and then, after the last occupant had packed their bags for pastures new, underwent something of a renaissance as an isolated Youth Hostel. The photo is taken from the same position as the one shown at <a title="https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/1221920" href="https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/1221920">Link</a> but since then (2009) sections of the Kidland Forest seen in the background have been harvested and, in parts, replanted. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit <span class="nowrap"><a title="www.cheviotwalks.co.uk" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.cheviotwalks.co.uk">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span>
Scant remains of Wholehope
This is all that remains of Wholehope (pronounced locally as, 'Woollup'), once a lonely shepherd's cottage where generations of children spent their formative years and then, after the last occupant had packed their bags for pastures new, underwent something of a renaissance as an isolated Youth Hostel. The photo is taken from the same position as the one shown at Link but since then (2009) sections of the Kidland Forest seen in the background have been harvested and, in parts, replanted. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit LinkExternal link
Track near Wholehope Knowe This track, which was originally constructed by the MoD, runs from Shillmoor in Upper Coquetdale to the edge of the Kidland Forest on Wholehope Knowe. Along the way it winds around the head of the beautiful Wholehope Burn. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit <span class="nowrap"><a title="www.cheviotwalks.co.uk" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.cheviotwalks.co.uk">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span>
Track near Wholehope Knowe
This track, which was originally constructed by the MoD, runs from Shillmoor in Upper Coquetdale to the edge of the Kidland Forest on Wholehope Knowe. Along the way it winds around the head of the beautiful Wholehope Burn. For a selection of detailed free to download walking routes in the area visit LinkExternal link
Old Boundary Marker by Clennel Street, Wholehope Parish Boundary Marker in parish of Alwinton (Alnwick District), Wholehope, 200m south of Wholehope, beside Clennel Street.

Surveyed

Milestone Society National ID: NB_ALWBID01pb
Old Boundary Marker by Clennel Street, Wholehope
Parish Boundary Marker in parish of Alwinton (Alnwick District), Wholehope, 200m south of Wholehope, beside Clennel Street. Surveyed Milestone Society National ID: NB_ALWBID01pb
A pond on summit of Wholehope Knowe A surprising find on the top of the hill.
A pond on summit of Wholehope Knowe
A surprising find on the top of the hill.
View from Wholehope Knowe Across Upper Coquetdale and into the Otterburn Ranges.
View from Wholehope Knowe
Across Upper Coquetdale and into the Otterburn Ranges.
On Wholehope Knowe A circular enclosure with low 'rampart' encloses a pond but is not marked on the map as anything significant.
On Wholehope Knowe
A circular enclosure with low 'rampart' encloses a pond but is not marked on the map as anything significant.
New plantation from Hare Sheds View south-west over the ridge of Copper Snout into Upper Coquetdale.
New plantation from Hare Sheds
View south-west over the ridge of Copper Snout into Upper Coquetdale.
Show me another place!

Peat Law is located at Grid Ref: NT9010 (Lat: 55.385235, Lng: -2.1499655)

Unitary Authority: Northumberland

Police Authority: Northumbria

What 3 Words

///childcare.starters.bars. Near Rochester, Northumberland

Nearby Locations

Straight Cleugh Peat Law

Related Wikis

Kidland

Kidland is a former civil parish, now in the parish of Alwinton in Northumberland, England, about 2 miles (3 km) northwest of Alwinton village. In 1951...

Usway Burn

The Usway Burn is an upland river on the southern flanks of the Cheviot Hills, in the Northumberland National Park, England. It is a tributary of the River...

Clennell, Northumberland

Clennell is a small village and as Clennel, a former civil parish, now in the parish of Alwinton, in Northumberland, England. It is about 1 mile (1.6 km...

Shillhope Law

Shillhope Law is a hill in the southern Cheviots, a range of hills in Northumberland, England. Shillhope Law is a relatively unremarkable member of this...

Clennell Hall

Clennell Hall is an historic manor house, now operated as a country hotel, situated at Clennell, near Alwinton, Northumberland, England. It is a Grade...

Barrow Burn Meadows

Barrow Burn Meadows is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) in north Northumberland, England. The site is a species-rich hay meadow of a sort now...

Barrow Burn

Barrowburn is a hamlet in Upper Coquetdale in the county of Northumberland, England. It comprises a working farm with associated buildings and two holiday...

Alwinton

Alwinton (previously named "Allenton" and sometimes still referred to as this) is a village and former parish in Northumberland, England. Alwinton is named...

Nearby Amenities

Located within 500m of 55.385235,-2.1499655
Peat Law
Ele: 472
Natural: peak
Lat/Long: 55.3845618/-2.1491582
The data included in this document is from www.openstreetmap.org. The data is made available under ODbL.

Have you been to Peat Law?

Leave your review of Peat Law below (or comments, questions and feedback).