Easy to strenuous excursion through the south westerly wooded valleys of Sheffield. Lots of bluebells and wild garlic.
Length: from 15.0 km (9.4 mi) to 27.7 km (17.3 mi)
Cumulative ascent/descent: from 325/259 to 664/618m.
Buses or trains take you back to the station from various points on the route,
for details see below
Net Walking Time: 4–8 hours.
Toughness: from 3/10 to 8/10
Meet at Sheffield
Station at 09.15.
From the Hope Valley, take the train arriving Sheffield at 09.05.
Return trains to London: frequent. Either direct to St. Pancras, last at 21.45; or indirect
into King’s Cross (change at Doncaster), last at 22.11.
This walk leads from the hustle and bustle at the
centre of one of the most populous British cities through gradually less urban
areas into excellent walking country – with ancient escarpment woodlands,
tumbling streams and panoramic views – through the scenic, wooded valleys of
Sheffield’s south west, the greenest and cleanest of Britain’s large towns.
Escape from Sheffield’s City Centre, first along
streets and through the atmospheric landscaped Victorian General Cemetery , then the woodlands of the
municipal Endcliffe
Park and the narrow wooded Porter Valley (part ancient woodlands, part plantation
or meadows) to a viewpoint on the edge of moorlands at the fringe of the Peak District ,
and from there to the early lunch option (with views) in Ringinglow.
Continue by descending through the steep-sided Limb Valley, Whirlow Brook Park
and Ecclesall Woods to Dore, a late lunch stop and your
first chance for an early finish: a train or a bus back to the City Centre.
Several other opportunities for early finishes by bus arise in the further
stages of the walk, whose following woodlands and valleys offer somewhat
diminishing returns in pleasure and in ‘otherness’. From Dore you climb once again through Ladies’ Spring Wood and Chancet Wood to
Graves Park.
From there the walk continues through the Gleadless Valley and
Meersbrook Park back to the City Centre, but for the return to Sheffield
Midland Station you will need to take a bus, regardless of where you finish.
The route includes large parts of the waymarked ‘Sheffield Round Walk’ , but diverges in places.
Opportunities to avoid most of the hard surface walking at the start are
described.
Walk Options:
To cut some – or all – of the tarmac-heavy urban
stretches at the start take one of the bus shortcut options from Sheffield
Interchange (see the walk directions for how to get there from the train
station). Details about bus frequency, bus stops to use, and the exact walk
route once off the bus are provided at the end of the main walk text under ‘Bus
Shortcuts’:
cut 1.6 km net: bus 218 to Sheffield Cemetery;
cut 3.2 km net: buses 6/65/181/271/272 to Endcliffe Park;
cut 3.8 km net: bus 120 to Whiteley Wood;
cut 6.2 km net: bus 120 to Forge Dam Café.
cut 6.2 km net: bus 120 to Forge Dam Café.
You can take a train back to Sheffield from Dore
& Totley Station (15.0 km/9.4 mi) on the Hope Valley Line (8 mins
journey time).
You can take a bus back to the City Centre from many places along the
route, from Dore onwards.
Lunch: The
Norfolk Arms in Ringinglow (10.2 km/6.4 mi, food served
all day) or The Summer House in Dore
(15.0 km/9.3 mi, food served all day).
Tea: The Rose
Garden Café (open to 16.00) plus plenty of
options in Sheffield City Centre.
For walk directions, map, height
profile , photos and gpx/kml files click here
. T=swc.267
2 comments:
Of the 14 on yesterday's walk, 1 returned last night, 3 this morning, and 1 walked the City of Sheffield short walk (but waved us off first).
N=9 therefore on this walk, 3 of those from the Hathersage Six who dropped off their luggage at storage in town, took a bus to Hunters Bar roundabout and started the route in Endcliffe Park. We met up at the Forge Dam Café, where we had the first refreshment stop (and waited out the one cloud that dropped some rain for a few minutes).
Still in evidence were plenty of celandines and anemones, and wild garlic in abundance (largely in flower). Bluebells initially only in small patches and not THAT far out, later though vast areas and full slopes were encountered, but again - very much not at their best yet. Lunch was had at The Norfolk Arms in their sunny garden.
2 then dropped out at Dore & Totley station, with all others taking buses over the next hour and a half of walking.
I then had a tea stop at The Rose Garden Café and finished the route at 18.20.
W=sunny
I would just like to say I thoroughly enjoyed Thomas s brilliant walk for Hathersage up the Hope Valley and on over to The Ladybower Inn on Good Friday even tho my version was slightly truncated. WELL done Thomas for leading another successful expedition up North ! Best Jane
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