Cauldron Snout Waterfall — United Kingdom
England's longest cascade, Cauldron Snout thunders down dark dolerite rock on the remote Upper Teesdale moors in a raw, muscular spectacle.
About this spectacle
Cauldron Snout is a dramatic cascade on the River Tees in the North Pennines of England, where water churns over a long series of dolerite steps in a roaring, turbulent descent. Visitors approach via a rugged moorland path from Cow Green Reservoir, with the sound of the falls building as they near. The water foams white against dark volcanic rock, and on high-flow days the torrent fills the entire width of the gorge. The surrounding landscape is open moorland, peat bog, and rough grassland — remote, windswept, and austere. Wildlife such as dippers and grey wagtails frequent the river corridor. The falls are not tall in the classic sense but impressive in their raw, muscular energy and length, tumbling for roughly 200 metres of cascades. The walk-in from the reservoir car park is rocky and uneven but the effort is rewarded by a genuinely wild and unspoiled scene.
When to go
Apr — Nov, peak Nov — Mar
Getting there
Nearest airport: NCL. Nearest city: Darlington.
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