Raisbeck splits just below here at Slapestone Bridge. One branch heads N towards the hamlet of Raisbeck and Sunbiggin, and the other becomes Tarn Sike and drains Sunbiggin Tarn. Tarn Sike disappears in dry weather.
The bridge is quite interesting and nearby is the rock oven for producing lime. A large quarry is adjacent to the road where the raw stone came from. Further NW is a second bridge with a pinfold, complete with work of art within. Worth a visit. Pinfolds were for impounding stray animals for collection by their owners. Several of the lanes around here are quite wide because they were old drove roads used for moving cattle and sheep south to markets.
The kiln is a good example of a small local oven producing lime for the farms. The cache is not in any wall or in the kiln structure. Don't get too near the crumbling structure!