Simonside and Dove Crag Circular
You get proper crag-top views over the Cheviots and the coast for a genuinely modest amount of climbing, which makes this one of the best value short routes in the county.
Effort: Moderate distance, manageable climb
Underfoot: Some uneven or off-path ground
E2·T2 — how we grade routesYou get proper crag-top views over the Cheviots and the coast for a genuinely modest amount of climbing, which makes this one of the best value short routes in the county.
A short 8.4km loop from Lordenshaws taking in the sandstone tops of Simonside and Dove Crag, with 103m of climbing and some of the best views in Northumberland for very little effort.
The route
From the Lordenshaws car park south of Rothbury, this loop climbs onto the moor to take in both Dove Crag and Simonside, the sandstone outcrops that give the Simonside Hills their distinctive skyline. At 8.4km with only 274m of ascent, it's a short route by most standards here, but the crags themselves punch well above their modest height.
The crags
Dove Crag and Simonside are eroded sandstone tors rather than proper mountains, but they sit above the surrounding moor and forest with enough drama to make the short climb worthwhile. On a clear day the view stretches out over the Cheviots to the north and toward the Northumberland coast to the east, a wide panorama for very little vertical effort.
Lordenshaws
The car park itself sits beside Lordenshaws hillfort, an Iron Age site with some of the best-preserved Bronze Age cup-and-ring marked rocks in the country, worth a look either before or after the run. It's a reminder that this landscape has been used and valued for a very long time before it became a place for a short loop before breakfast.
Who it suits
The short distance and modest climbing make this a good choice for a quick evening loop, a warm-up before a bigger day elsewhere in Northumberland, or an introduction to fell-style terrain for anyone newer to running off road. It's also one of the more reliably scenic short routes in the county for the effort involved.
Getting it right
The going is generally good underfoot on moorland path, but the sandstone at the crag tops can be greasy when wet, and the open moor gives little shelter if the wind picks up. This is short enough to fit into most days, which makes it easy to underestimate how exposed the tops actually feel in poor weather.
Sandstone crag tops get slippery when wet, and the open moor offers little shelter in wind or rain. Managed grouse moor nearby may mean seasonal access restrictions between August and December.
Safety on this route
- No signal? Text 999 — pre-register first: text register to 999
- Tell someone your route and expected return time before you head out
Common questions
About the author
Runner reports
Ran this route? Log your time, rate it, share conditions — helps other runners plan their day.
No runs logged yet — be the first.





