Roseberry Topping from Guisborough

A summit with a genuinely unusual profile - half sharp peak, half sheared-off cliff face - that Captain Cook is said to have climbed as a boy from the village right below it.

HARD

Effort: Good distance, solid climb

Underfoot: Some uneven or off-path ground

E3·T2 how we grade routes
Distance
17.3km
Ascent
514m
Descent
511m
High point
315m
Est. time
3h 40m – 5h
Route type
Loop
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Elevation profile0km5km10km15km313m90m
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A summit with a genuinely unusual profile - half sharp peak, half sheared-off cliff face - that Captain Cook is said to have climbed as a boy from the village right below it.

A 17.3km loop from Guisborough climbing Roseberry Topping, the distinctive collapsed peak known locally as Yorkshire's Matterhorn, with 334m of climbing through forest and open moor.

The route

Roseberry Topping's shape is the whole story here - a small, sharply pointed hill with one side collapsed into a near-vertical cliff, the result of old ironstone and alum workings undermining the summit in the 1900s. It's often called Yorkshire's Matterhorn, which oversells the scale but not the drama of the silhouette against the flat Tees lowlands. This route climbs from Guisborough through forest before crossing open moor to the final approach.

The summit

The last stretch to the top is steep and rocky, more of a scramble than a run, and worth taking slowly, especially descending in wet conditions when the worn rock gets genuinely slippery. From the top, the view stretches from the North Sea to the Cleveland Hills, and locally the hill has a real claim to fame: a young James Cook, later the famous explorer, is said to have climbed it often as a boy from nearby Great Ayton village.

Why it works

At 17.3km with 514m of ascent, this route uses the approach from Guisborough rather than the shorter, busier path from Newton under Roseberry, giving you more genuine trail and forest running before the short, sharp finish. It's a good moderate day with a properly distinctive summit as the payoff.

Getting there

The Newton under Roseberry car park is the more popular start if you want the shortest route to the top, but starting from Guisborough gives a longer, quieter approach through Guisborough Woods, with the added bonus of passing the ruins of Guisborough Priory on the way out of town. Great Ayton, a few kilometres beyond Newton under Roseberry, makes a good extension if you want to add more distance and see more of the wider Cook family connections to this quiet stretch of North Yorkshire countryside.

Watch out for

The final approach to the summit is steep, rocky and worn smooth in places - take real care descending when wet. Exposed top in wind.

Kit for this route

INOV8 Men's MUDTALON Speed V2 Running Shoe

INOV8 Men's MUDTALON Speed V2 Running Shoe

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Salomon Supercross 4 Trail Running Shoes

Salomon Supercross 4 Trail Running Shoes

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Hoka Speedgoat 7

Hoka Speedgoat 7

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Salomon ADV Hydra Vest 4

Salomon ADV Hydra Vest 4

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Mountain Fuel Sports Jelly Hydrogel Energy Gel

Mountain Fuel Sports Jelly Hydrogel Energy Gel

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Garmin Forerunner 55 Running Watch

Garmin Forerunner 55 Running Watch

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Safety on this route

999 / 112
Ask for Police → Mountain Rescue
Grid ref
NZ572125
  • No signal? Text 999 — pre-register first: text register to 999
  • Tell someone your route and expected return time before you head out

More safety guides →

Common questions

About the author

JM

Jason Millward

Every route on this site has been run personally.

More about TRP →

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