Leeds to Reeth and Gunnerside: Private day trip
Private ride with a local driver
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About your trip
What to expect
Your day trip begins wherever you are
Meet our professional driver right where you prefer in Leeds whenever suits you best. No time wasted getting to the pickup point, grab your bag and start your trip right away.Discover more with local expertise
Your driverâs local insights will set the tone for your day trip. A hidden cafĂ© here, a must-try restaurant there; insider tips youâll love sharing later. This isnât a guided tour but your ride will be rich with stories and discoveries along the way. And throughout the day, your driver will be available for you as needed, ready to assist, happy to help, making your trip stress-free.Explore at your own pace
Perfect for any private group
Whether you're traveling solo, as a family with kids, or as a large group, this service is tailored for your comfort and flexibility. It's the ideal option especially if you have limited time or a busy schedule.Good to know
- Two-way private car transfer
- Air-conditioned vehicle
- Personalized pickup and drop-off
- Professional English-speaking driver
- Complimentary bottled water
- Free cancellation 24 hours before departure
- Entry/Admission tickets to paid attractions Reeth and Gunnerside should be purchased separately unless specified otherwise
- Meals, snacks, and gratuity are not included
Your trip at a glance
Your trip at a glance




Main attractions
- The wide village green â one of the largest in the Yorkshire Dales â sits at the confluence of Swaledale and Arklegarthdale, giving expansive views across the Norse field systems that appear throughout the film
- The Swaledale Museum on the green documents the dale's lead-mining heritage with maps, artefacts, and personal accounts â essential context for the industrial ruin that defines the landscape further up the valley
- The view west from Reeth toward Gunnerside is one of the dale's most cinematic â drystone walls stepping up the fellside, the Swale threading the valley floor, and the moorland beyond exactly as Fennell framed it
What to eat
- The Black Bull on the green is the dale's most reliable lunch stop â traditional pub food, local ale and an outlook across the green to the hills; book ahead on weekends as covers are limited




Main attractions
- The village â a tight cluster of stone cottages where the gill meets the Swale â has the enclosed, self-contained atmosphere that runs through the film's domestic scenes; genuinely remote without being inaccessible
- The gill path north from the village climbs through spoil heaps, ruined mine shops and crushing floors before reaching Old Gang Smelting Mill â the film's most recognisable location, approximately 3km from the village
- The peat store archways and collapsed flue walls of Old Gang are the structures most visible on screen; the surrounding moorland appears in the film's most exposed sequences
What to eat
- The Farmer's Arms in the village is a simple, traditional Dales pub â good for a pre-walk coffee or a post-walk drink; food is straightforward and portions are generous
Take note
- Waterproof boots are essential â the gill path becomes boggy after rain and the moorland around Old Gang holds water year-round. Carry layers regardless of the morning forecast. Mobile signal is absent on the gill path â download maps before leaving Leeds.
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Frequently Asked Questions
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