I had a good look at this section on the ground yesterday - in good visibility - and can see that if you drift even just a little bit south of Stonesty Col that the terrain is very confusing and you could easily go wrong. The Col needs to be identified with absolute certainty - it is grassy, relatively rock free, has a small irregular boggy tarn at the very top on the south side,and like a true saddle, it goes up in both directions in one plane - north/south - and down in both directions at a right angle to that - east/west. There are three trods on it - one going north/south, and two going east/west. The E/W trods are at either end of the col. That at the southern end goes inches to the south of the tarn and then goes steeply downhill, across the very upper part of Gaitscale Gill and then up in almost a straight line just to the north of the rocky edge of Cold Pike, joining the path from Crinkle crags after crossing a section of boggy terrain. That at the northern end divides shortly after leaving the top of the col; if you go to the left - N/E - it contours on runnable terrain and joins the path from Crinkle Crags somewhat higher up. In good visibility the straight line route is probably best; in mist I would go for the latter.
I also had a look at the top of the Adam-a-Cove section: do people go up to just below the bad step - in other words just below and west of the gap between the first and second Crinkles, or do they follow the southern tributary of Swinside Gill up to the south side of the first Crinkle? The former seems to be longer and to involve more climbing, but I suspect the terrain will be more recognizable to many - the southern route was a bit vague at one stage.





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. I too went wrong, probably in exactly the same place on Saturday. I was in a group of maybe a dozen runners who, having got to the top of Stonesty Pike, thought we were too far to the right/south, not helped by no other runners materialising after us. Too far south meant Little Stand or quite possibly off the race map. (As it turns out, having looked at a proper map since, we could well have been close to bang on the race line. Doh!)
) at the Slight Side checkpoint previously and I'd overtaken a good few runners in Great Moss with my super duper river crossing 'techniques' since then.