Devon Gorge Walking Outdoor Activity Providers (3)
Check out the providers below if your looking for somewhere in Devon to go Gorge Walking. They will be happy to organise a Gorge Walking trip for you or your group.
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Mount Batten Watersports & Activities Centre South Devon & Plymouth -> Devon
It's a shore thing!
Activities include Abseiling, Canoeing, Caving, Coasteering, Gorge Walking, Kayaking, Orienteering, Power Boating, Rock Climbing, Sailing and Wind Surfing View All
Full Details View on mapActivities from £14 per person
Min-age from 8 years (8 if unaccompanied)
Wet and High Adventures South Devon & Plymouth -> Devon
Fulfilling your High Hopes and Wet Dreams
Activities include Canoeing, Coasteering, Gorge Walking, Hill Walking, Ice/Winter Climbing, Kayaking, Mountain Biking, Mountaineering and Rock Climbing View All
Full Details View on mapActivities from £25 per person
Min-age from 12 years (18 if unaccompanied)
Adventure Okehampton West Devon & Dartmoor -> Devon
Get Active at Adventure Okehampton
Activities include Abseiling, Bushcraft, Gorge Walking and High Ropes View All
Full Details View on mapActivities from £10 per person
Min-age from 5 years (12 if unaccompanied)
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Gorge Walking Devon Providers MapView large map
Gorge Walking is known by many different names including 'Gorge Scrambling', 'Ghyll Scrambling', 'Gill Scrambling', 'Gully Bashing' and 'Stream Walking', but essentially, all of these names the same thing – to travel up or down a watercourse on foot, tackling any waterfall climbs, plunge pool jumps, rock slides and caves.
Tacking more difficult gorges that require abseiling down waterfalls, jumping off really big cliffs and using complex rope work technique are normally known as Canyoning or Canyoneering. Canyoning is normally undertaken by more experienced gorge walkers and is more common in Scotland and abroad in places such as the French Alps.
Gorge Walking is one of the most popular activities in many outdoor centres, and has featured on several recent TV programs including Country File in March 2010, which was filmed in the Lake District near Keswick in a gorge called Stoneycroft Ghyll.
There is a short video of some gorge walking in Stoneycroft Ghyll below, this gorge includes the famous “Washing Machine”, a jump and plunge pool, where the way out of the pool is to climb through and under the waterfall.
In the video above, the gorge walkers are descending the gorge. The gorge has been formed from the natural bedrock layers eroded away by many years of water to form narrow gorges with numerous drops, beautifully sculpted walls, and spectacular waterfalls. With the right technique and instruction, gorge walking is a...more



