Skip to Content

4 Routes for Old Man Of Coniston Walk! Hard, Easier, Circular!

This post may contain affiliate links. I will receive a small commission if you use these links.

The Old Man Of Coniston Walk is one of the most popular walks in the Lake District. It’s not one of the easy Lake District walks but it isn’t one of the hardest and highest like Scafell Pike and Helvellyn either… although it is more on the tough side!

There are a few different Old Man of Coniston walking routes like the circular route I did taking 4.5 hours, a longer circular route along Dow Crag too and a shorter, steeper circular route.

Old Man Of Coniston Walk

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk
Keep reading for the Old Man of Coniston walk!

In this post, I’m going to tell you how to do the different Old Man of Coniston walks and the best route based on my experience. Plus, I’ll give you information on the Old Man of Coniston parking.

Quick info for the Old Man of Coniston Walk:

Difficulty Level: Intermediate

Average Time Needed: 4-6 hours

Suitable for Children: Not young children but ok for older children who are fit and like hiking

Suitable for Wheelchairs / Pushchairs: No

Parking Location: Walna Scar Car Park

Accessible by Public Transport: No unless you get the bus to Coniston and walk to the car park from here which adds a long and steep extra walk

Old Man of Coniston Walking Routes

Here are 4 main Old Man of Coniston walking routes you can follow depending on how long you want your walk to be. However, remember they all require a push to the top and will take about 4 hours to 6 hours depending on your fitness and speed.

1. Old Man of Coniston Circular Walk

The walk I did is the main and most recommended circular walk because although it is steep in places and it does seem longer than the other options below, some of the footpaths are not consistently steep which gives you a break whereas the shorter paths on the Old Man of Coniston walk are all much steeper.

I have included an Old Man of Coniston walk map below. I recommend taking the longer western route first to the Old Man of Coniston summit via Goats Water and then take the shorter looking route down because this route is much steeper and easier to walk down than up.

This route starts in Walna Scar Car Park as do all of the walks up Old Man of Coniston on this list.

I go into more detail about this walk and how to do it below. It is a nearly 13km in length and took us 4.5 hours to do.

2. Old Man of Coniston Shorter Circular Route

This circular route up the Old Man of Coniston is shortened from about 13km to 6.5km because you cut a big section of the footpath out which goes via Goats Water as shown in the above Old Man of Coniston map and instead go straight through the middle and to the top of the Old Man of Coniston.

AllTrails details how to do this walk here.

I still recommend taking the footpath to the west first like in option 1 as if you were going to Goats Water, however only 1 km up the track you will see a sign pointing upwards that says ‘footpath to the Old Man’ and you take this steep path and continue up.

You will go down the same way as option 1 and all of the other options in this post.

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, footpath sign
Look out for this footpath sign to take the shorter and steeper way to the top.

3. Up & Down the Same Way

I do prefer a circular walk as it mixes up the scenery but of course you can go up and down the same way.

As per the the Old Man of Coniston map above, you can see that the western route goes around and is longer, it is still steep but not steep the whole way, whereas the Northern route to the summit is shorter but it is much steeper.

The shorter route is technically best if you are in a rush, however because it is much steeper it will tire you out more and could be scary if you do not have experience hiking.

I found the shorter way ok coming down but going up will be tough, keep that in mind.

4. Old Man of Coniston Long Circular Route

Finally, there is an even longer circular route that you can do. You start off as I suggest in option 1 taking the western footpath.

However instead of veering off to the right towards Goats Water, you stay on the main footpath (we accidentally walked along this path for awhile without realising and had to turn back), over a bridge and up Dow Crag which is the Crag you follow and see for most of the walk.

Head over the top of this and onto the Old Man of Coniston before heading down.

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, footpath bridge
If you find yourself walking over this pretty bridge, you’re on the path to do the longest Old Man of Coniston walk. We walked over it and then turned back as it was the wrong way for us.

Old Man of Coniston Parking

The best Old Man of Coniston car park is Walna Scar Car Park, also just called Walna Scar on Google Maps.

The Walna Scar road from Coniston to Walna Scar is pretty steep to drive up so be prepared. It’s also a small country lane with access for 1 vehicle only but the only traffic coming should be hikers going to and from the Old Man of Coniston.

Walna Scar Road Car Park takes cash or you can pay via app and there is signal in the car park.

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, Walna Scar Car Park
Walna Scar Car Park

There is a car park on the edge of Coniston called Old Station Car Park which you can park in and walk up the road to Walna Scar to start the hike, however this road is steep to drive up and will definitely be steep and long to walk up adding a whole layer of extra difficultly to your Old Man of Coniston hike.

Old Man of Coniston Circular Walk

Let me go through how to do the Old Man of Coniston circular walk I did in 4.5 hours as I really enjoyed it and think it is the best route.

The Old Man of Coniston start point is Walna Scar car park.

Take the main looking footpath up going away continuing away from the road you drove up to get to the car park.

This footpath remains fairly flat and nice as you can see below.

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, footpath from car park
Footpath from car park

DO NOT follow the ‘footpath to the Old Man’ sign written on some slate as this takes you directly through the middle along a steep path. We took it by accident before realising it was wrong and I was fully out of breath just part the way up!

The footpath suddenly gets narrower and goes between the below 2 rocky areas before opening out again.

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, rocky footpath
Head through here,

This is where you need to look out for the footpath going right, it is just above the rocks in the above photo and it is alongside one of the streams that creates a small waterfall.

This footpath is also pretty nice, it is not really steep and continues straight all the way to Goats Water.

You DO NOT have to cross a nice stone bridge to go this way, so if you continue all the way up the main track to a nice stone bridge, you have taken the extra long Old Man of Coniston walk via Dow Crag so you need to go back about 10 minutes.

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, Old Man of Coniston walk circular path
This is me looking back at the straight path from near Goats Water.

At Goat’s Water the path gets a bit tricky to follow and to walk over as it’s mainly just rocks. It is best to keep fairly close to the water without going too high as this is where the official footpath is.

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, goats water
Goat’s Water
The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, Ellie Quinn at Goats Lake
It is great for photo opportunities,

At the end of Goat’s Lake you can see the path zig zagging up to the top (although not Old Man of Coniston summit just yet), the path is mainly made from stones and formed into steps so it is really easy to follow and although it is steep, it’s not scary steep.

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, stone footpath
Taking the steps towards the top.
The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, Goats Water from above
Be sure to look back at Goat’s Water from above,

Once at the top it’s time to walk along the ridge to the top of the Old Man of Coniston! Because we were high I thought we were close but we really weren’t and the incline continued.

As you can see from my photos, although it was clear when we started the Old Man of Coniston walk, we were up in the clouds now and my rain jacket was needed!

The Old Man of Coniston weather can change dramatically so always pack and be prepared for a variety of weather.

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, ridge walk
Walking along the ridge to the top!

You’ll know you’re at the summit because you’ll see the National Trust Summit Stone plus a big pile of stones.

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, Old Man of Coniston summit
The 2 Old man of Coniston summit markers,
The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, Ellie Quinn at top of Old man of Coniston

Now to head back down, we continued on the path away from the direction we came in.

The way back down is mostly steep and quite windy so take care and walk carefully. You can see in the photo below the zig zagging path.

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, shorter footpath down

As you get further down you’ll see remains from the old mines and quarries which are good to see and they also mark the hardest part of the hike down done.

From here, it is still a long way back to the Old Man of Coniston car park but once you get to the last corner you’ll see it is straight and mostly flat to the end which is well needed.

The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, Old Quarry
Remains from the Quarry Mines,
The Wandering Quinn Travel Blog Old Man of Coniston walk, end of the footpath
The last long stretch ahead, luckily its mostly straight and flat.

I hope this post has helped you plan your Old Man of Coniston Walk!


Jon

Monday 1st of May 2023

Hi, Just wanted to say thanks for your post, we followed your suggested circular route round past Goat water, and it was easy to navigate from your description.

TheWanderingQuinn

Wednesday 3rd of May 2023

Great to hear, thanks!

Helen

Tuesday 4th of April 2023

Hello. Just wanted to say thanks for a great walk. Your directions were spot on and made it really easy for us. The pictures helped too. We Just had to ask someone whether to turn left or right when we got above Goats Water. (That's what novices we are!) Thanks

TheWanderingQuinn

Thursday 6th of April 2023

Hello, Ah I'm so pleased to hear this, I'm glad you enjoyed it and my post helped!! Thank you for letting me know :)