This includes mountain, moor, heath, downland and registered common land, known as access land.
You can walk, ramble, run, climb and watch wildlife but you cannot cycle, horse ride, drive a vehicle or camp. Access land is marked in pale yellow on Ordnance Survey Explorer maps or is shown on the Natural England website.
For your safety, always carry an orange Ordnance Survey ‘Explorer’ map. Walking on open access land can be challenging, as you will often be a long way from recognised paths. Stiles and gates may be sparse. Make sure you have good navigation skills and suitable clothing.
Before setting out for a walk in an open access area, check that it is open, either on the Natural England website, by phoning 0845 100 3298 or at one of our access information points. These can be found on areas of moorland across the AONB and contain local information on where access land is and will display closure notices for that area. They are found at Askwith Moor, Blubberhouses, Greenhow, Harper Hill, Middlesmoor, Nought Moor, Scar House and Tom Corner.
The list below shows areas where right of access is not available at any time, even if it appears on maps of access land.
Landowners can close their moor for 28 days a year, usually for public safety reasons while carrying out management tasks. Natural England holds up-to-date closure information on its website. Key dates to note are:
The Countryside Code, launched in July 2004, urges people to:
Most of the access land in Nidderdale AONB is managed for grouse shooting and owners can exclude dogs at all times.
Check before you head out by looking at the open access pages of the Natural England website and keep an eye out for signs when out on the moors.
Even if dogs are allowed, they must be kept on short leads of no more than two metres between 1 March and 31 July to protect ground nesting disturbance or at any time of year when near livestock.
Access land is sometimes closed due to the risk of uncontrolled fires. Large areas of moorland in the AONB have been lost to wildfires in the past and the risk increases as the summer unfolds.
It is all too easy for uncontrolled fires on the moors to start. A dropped match, smouldering cigarette ends or even a carelessly discarded bottle can set the dry heather and the peat underneath, ablaze. The open and often windy conditions of moorland mean that fires can easily burn out of control and can go unnoticed for miles causing vast devastation.
In order to avoid this devastation there are a few simple rules that should be followed:
** Please note that the tourism information on this website is designed to provide an overview of opportunities in the area. The Nidderdale AONB team do not have the facilities or resources to deal with individual tourism enquiries and these should be directed to the tourist information office at Nidderdale Plus or one of the other local Tourist Information Centres.