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Routes
Mountain biking trails
United Kingdom
England
Yorkshire And The Humber
Calderdale
Todmorden

Mary Towneley Loop — Penine Bridleway

Hard

5.0

(5)

86

riders

Mary Towneley Loop — Penine Bridleway

06:54

72.0km

1,620m

Mountain biking

The Mary Towneley Loop, a challenging part of the Pennine Bridleway, offers a demanding mountain biking experience across 44.8 miles (72.0 km) with a significant 5304 feet (1616 metres) of elevation gain. You will navigate mixed terrain, from stone causeways and gravel paths to grassy tracks and rough packhorse trails, all while enjoying views across the Calder and Rossendale Valleys. Expect a difficult ride that typically takes around 6 hours and 54 minutes to complete, pushing your fitness and bike handling skills through varied landscapes that blend natural beauty with industrial heritage, including sights like Stoodley Pike.

Due to its demanding nature, proper preparation is key for tackling this route. Riders often prefer to complete the loop in an anti-clockwise direction, though it can be ridden both ways. Consider setting aside a long summer day if you plan to finish it in one go, or be prepared to split the journey over two or three days. The trail's constant ups and downs, combined with around 92 gates, mean you will need to stay focused and well-fueled throughout your ride.

This route is a purpose-built section of the Pennine Bridleway National Trail, designed for mountain bikers, horse riders, and walkers, and is clearly signposted. It's considered an epic challenge, rewarding those who complete it with a strong sense of achievement. The trail also offers a unique journey through history, utilizing ancient packhorse routes and showcasing the region's industrial past, like the Rooley Moor Road, which adds a distinctive cultural layer to the wild moorland scenery.

Last updated: April 23, 2026

Tips

Includes a very steep uphill segment

You may need to push your bike.

After 4.00 km for 524 m

Waypoints

A

Start point

Parking

Get Directions

1

114 m

Packhorse Trail to Rake End

Highlight (Segment) • Historical Site

The climb from The Shepherd's Rest to the top of Rake End is challenging in all weathers, steep in places and very rewarding to get to the top of without putting your foot down.

Like so many of the trails around here, it's an old pre-industrial pack-horse trail, made when the bottom of the valley was extremely boggy and the easiest way of getting things to the settlements was up and over the tops of the hills.

Tip by

2

19.9 km

Doing this clockwise from summit this is the first real climb of the mtl. Not overly steep but a long climb on cobbles and rough hardcore and gravel. Built by the cotton mill workers during the American civil war when the confederate army blockaded the ports in the southern states cutting off supplies of raw cotton to the Mills round Lancashire. Low interest loans from the government saw the mill workers employed to build this road over rooley Moor to improve links to the Rawtenstall Valley.

Tip by

3

25.8 km

Top of this good quality track. Wonderful views to the surrounding countryside.

Tip by

4

39.1 km

Mary Towneley Monument

Highlight • Viewpoint

Around 35km into the ride clockwise from summit, while dropping down from deerplay to the village of cliviger you pass through a gate into a field and just to your right is the monument to Lady Towneley who instigated the reopening of the ancient pathways for us to enjoy today. If you zoom in on the photo you can read the inscription.

Tip by

5

41.1 km

The Long Causeway Bridleway

Highlight (Segment) • Cycleway

Could be muddy in the wet as goes across a field

Tip by

6

44.6 km

Shedden Clough Gravel Track

Highlight • Trail

Gravel track. Keeps some traction when wet.

Tip by

7

45.6 km

Cant Clough Reservoir

Highlight • Viewpoint

If you're riding the Mary Towneley Loop clockwise, you'll likely be slightly tired by now. This is a view back south towards the windfarm at Bent's Pasture. There's a steep push and a long descent to Hurstwood Reservoir, but there's still quite a way to go yet!

Tip by

8

46.6 km

Hurstwood Reservoir

Highlight • MTB Park

Was there a week ago and the bottom half of the trail has been ruined by the weather and hooligan trail builders. i would give it a miss.

Tip by

9

53.6 km

Track to Gorple Lower Reservoir

Highlight (Segment) • Trail

Grass up the middle and lots of sheep

Tip by

10

54.9 km

Lower Gorple Reservoir Descent

Highlight (Segment) • Lake

Open, spectacular, and - if you've the nerve for it, very fast and drifty. It's definitely better as a descent than a climb - more because of what's to come rather than the quality of the trail itself. Be careful not to overcook the corners; it's super-easy to wash your front wheel out, and in Yorkshire the penalties for error are painful and gritty!

Tip by

11

56.4 km

That's a big climb done - you can relax a bit now and enjoy the views before the descent!

Tip by

12

65.6 km

Beaumont Clough Bridge

Highlight • Trail

Beaumont Clough bridge presents something of a mystery - it's surprisingly high up the valley (and there's a fun bit of trail riding down to it) but the precise reason for its existence is unknown. In this small valley, however, there is evidence of 16th century bloomers (iron workings) and slag heaps; perhaps they provide a clue.

Tip by

13

67.5 km

The view from here is spectacular all the way to the bottom of the valley - even if you haven't got an extraordinary cloud inversion like this one to enjoy.

To the south you can see the valley's memorial to the Battle of Waterloo and the Crimea War - Stoodley Pike - but the best bit is the lovely, fast descent all the way down to Mankinholes.

Tip by

14

68.0 km

View of Stoodley Pike

Highlight • Monument

Great climb up towards Stoodley Pike a 37 meter monument built in 1856

Tip by

B

72.0 km

End point

Parking

Loading

Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

22.5 km

19.4 km

17.6 km

5.88 km

5.70 km

994 m

Surfaces

41.2 km

12.2 km

8.62 km

3.89 km

3.36 km

2.82 km

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Elevation

Elevation

Nothing selected – click and drag below to see the stats for a specific part of the route.

Highest point (460 m)

Lowest point (110 m)

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Weather

Powered by Foreca

Saturday 11 July

24°C

13°C

0 %

Additional weather tips

Max wind speed: 23.0 km/h

to get more detailed weather forecasts along your route

Comments

September 16, 2022,Mary Townley Loop Day 1 - Rooley Moor Rd to Jack Bridge
We mountain biked the Mary Townley Loop over two days, staying at the Hebden Bridge Camping site next to the New Delight Inn. This site is right on MT Loop. In mid September we had lovely weather, dry, but on the cool side. I have also uploaded the second day which is a bit shorter.
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Hard

5.0

86

Mary Towneley Loop — Penine Bridleway

06:54h

72.0km

1,620m

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