Breathtaking Views from Yes Tor - Dartmoor National Park

Top of the World

The weather here in the UK this winter has been miserable and has made my life as a landscape photographer a bit of a challenge! The longer the bad weather continued, the more risks I was willing to take on a weather forecast that would normally have me hitting the snooze button.

After what had seemed like weeks since I’d been out and captured a good photograph, I decided that the following morning’s weather forecast was worth a punt. Yes, there was lots of low-level cloud forecast, but the base of that cloud was very low (foggy) and there was no medium-level cloud forecast. Should I take a risk and see if I could get above it?

Getting above cloud on Dartmoor is tricky. Even its highest points are only around 600m above sea level, so the cloud level has to be very low and not too thick. Looking at my map, I decided to get up early and head to West Mill Tor. At 541m above sea level, it was a good balance between walking effort and the opportunity to get above the cloud.

Leaving Exeter, it was remarkably clear, but as I approached Okehampton, things got a little foggier. By the time I got to the parking area for West Mill Tor, I really didn’t hold out much hope.

As I stood on West Mill Tor questioning my life choices, I thought about whether it would be worth making the decision to continue my walk up to Yes Tor. At 619m it’s Dartmoor’s highest tor (if you don’t count High Willhays at 621m), so if there was any daylight to be found it would be there.

Was it worth the extra effort to get to Yes Tor? Well, yes and no. No in the sense that I never truly got out of the clouds and the photographs you see below are as clear as it got (but it was just enough to get a little light on the tor). But it wasn’t the photograph that made it worth the effort — it was the view. But Julian! You said it wasn’t clear? True, but there are times when even if you can’t make a great photograph, what you see can still take your breath away.

A Foggy Sunrise on Yes Tor #1, Dartmoor National Park, Devon - Nikon Z8 with Nikkor Z 14-30mm f/4 S at 14mm, f/13, 1/50 sec at ISO 800.

The wind was blowing hard on the summit of Yes Tor, so the cloud was moving quickly. Every now and again you would get a tantalising glimpse of the surrounding view. Not only would I see the beautiful orange glow of the rising sun, but I would also see the top of the cloud bank that was covering the landscape. I couldn’t see any land, just cloud, and it looked spectacular. If only I had been a few metres higher, I probably would have had a constant view of the area.

It was like standing on top of a mountain looking down on a temperature inversion. It took my breath away. But the glimpses were brief and infrequent, so rather than desperately trying to make a photograph, I just stood there, freezing in the wind, waiting for a light break in the cloud. It was magical! I’d never seen anything like it on Dartmoor before and, given the set of circumstances where the base of the cloud is low enough but the height of the cloud is lower than Dartmoor’s highest point, I might never again.

It’s hard to convey what I was seeing and pictures don’t do it justice, but hopefully the small video clip will give you an impression of what it was like.

I’m glad I took the risk to go out, and then take a further risk to get myself up to Yes Tor, because sometimes the best things come to those who take a risk. Let me know in the comments below if you’ve had a similar experience.

A Foggy Sunrise on Yes Tor #2, Dartmoor National Park, Devon - Nikon Z8 with Nikkor Z 14-30mm f/4 S at 14mm, f/13, 1/160 sec at ISO 800.