Backup Only

This Week's Walks - Archive

Please see the Saturday Walker's Club This Week's Walks page.

This is an archive of walks done by the Saturday Walker's Club. You should only need to use this page if the SWC website is down.

Sunday, 31 May 2015

Sunday Walk – A variation on a theme

Extra Walk 174c – Balcombe Circular, via Ardingly
Length: 16½ km (10.3 miles). Toughness: 5/10

10:27 Brighton train from Victoria (Clapham Jct 10:33, East Croydon 10:43), arriving Balcombe at 11:17.

Trains back from Balcombe are hourly at 30 minutes past.

The main Extra Walk 174 requires a bus journey to the starting village of Horsted Keynes, but as these no longer run on Sundays I've chosen this walk's circular option. In the last ten years there have in fact been nearly 40 “Balcombe Circular” outings of one sort or another, and I hope the author of the original walk via Ardingly Reservoir forgives the shameless way in which this one mixes'n'matches chunks of its route as well as (in reverse) part of the Book 1 walk. I thought walkers ought to get the chance to try this one before the fracking industry returns to Balcombe with a vengeance and little oil wells start popping up along the walk route.

For the time being, then, there should be good views from the mainly high-level route to Ardingly. In the afternoon you go through the grounds of a leading independent school, followed by a long (and doubtless familiar) section alongside Ardingly Reservoir.

Unless the Oak Inn has reopened Ardingly now has just one pub, the Ardingly Inn. You should get there at around 1.15pm; make a booking if you want a table inside. Faster walkers should reach the ever-popular Balcombe Tea Rooms by 4pm but call ahead if you won't: they may stay open later. The Half Moon Inn is a good alternative. The walk document gives several possible routes from the village to the station so you can choose the one which best coincides with the arrival of the hourly train.

You'll need to print the directions from the Extra Walk 174 page. Clicking the 'c. Circular Walk' option will save a good few pages on this multi-option walk. If you also bring along the directions for Extra Walk 22 you'll find that you can switch between the two at several places, eg. if you want to do a longer afternoon route via Wakehurst Place.

Sunday Walk – Burnham Beeches and the Thames

Book 1 Walk 40 (extended) – Gerrards Cross to Maidenhead
Length: 21.2 km (13.2 miles). Toughness: 3/10

10:20 Beaconsfield train from Marylebone (West Ruislip [Central Line] 10:42), arriving Gerrards Cross at 10:55.

There are three trains an hour from Maidenhead to Paddington, at irregular times but fairly evenly spaced out. The fastest ones (calling only at Slough) are at around 45-50 minutes past the hour.

You can't get a day return for this walk as the two stations are on lines operated by different rail companies. You may find it cheaper to get an All Zones Travelcard plus singles to/from the Zone 6 boundary.

The standard Book 1 walk is a nicely varied stroll through parkland and the extensive woods of Burnham Beeches to the riverside village of Cookham, and if you take the suggested extension to Maidenhead you'll finish the day along one of the loveliest stretches of the Thames. Lunch is at the Jolly Woodman after about two hours' walking; as usual on a Sunday, call ahead if you want to be sure of a table inside. Cookham has several nice places for a mid-afternoon refreshment stop and you could also visit the Stanley Spencer Gallery.

You'll need to bring Book 1 or print the directions from the Walk 40 and Walk 24 pages. You don't really need the latter for the riverside extension, of course, but it describes a route to Maidenhead station which enables you to bypass the large town centre.

Saturday, 30 May 2015

Saturday Third Walk

Extra Walk 11:  Amberley Circular:   Out Along the Foot of the South Downs above Wild Brook Wetland and Back along the Ridge of the Downs

Distance:  11.1 Miles

Difficulty:  5 out of 10, mainly flat with one long, but well-graded, hill

Train:  Take the 9:32 Southampton Central Southern train from London Victoria, arriving at Amberley at 10:57.  Return trains from Amberley are at 17:17, 18:17, 18:59, 19:29, 20:29 and 21:29.   Buy a day return to Amberley. 
This lovely walk around Amberley and along the Downs -- covering both the lowlands and the magnificent South Downs ridge itself. More information and the instructions can be found here.
The recommended lunchtime pub is The Crown Inn in Cootham (tel 01903 742 625), about 5.5 miles into the walk.  The Sportsman in Cross Gate (tel 01798 831 787) or Parham House in Parham Park (01803 744 888) are both possible earlier lunch stops at (2.6 miles and 4.6 miles into the walk, respectively).  Larger groups should call ahead and provide some warning. 
The Bridge Inn near the train station in Amberley provides refreshing post walk libations.

Enjoy the walk!

Rolling Buckinghamshire Hills and a National Trust mansion

SWC Walk 192 - Haddenham to Aylesbury via Waddesdon
Length: 25.2km (15.6 miles) but shorter options from 11.2km (7 miles): see below
Toughness: 6 out of 10

9.36 train from Marylebone to Haddenham and Thame Parkway, arriving 10.14.

Buy a day return to Aylesbury, making sure it is "any route permitted" and not "via Chalfont and Latimer". Only the former is valid via Princes Risborough, which is the stop before Haddenham. You might have to pay on the train for a single extension from Princes Risborough to Haddenham.

For walk directions click here.

This is a long walk in the Buckinghamshire hills if you do the whole thing, and there are some who will relish that prospect. Lesser mortals might like to consider the shorter options outlined below.

Lunch for all options is in the pretty village of Waddesdon, which has several pubs as outlined in the walk document.

Options:

1) It is 13.7km (8.7 miles) to Waddesdon by the standard walk route, but a short cut in the walk directions reduces that to 11.2km (7 miles). Once there you might like to spend the afternoon visiting Waddesdon Manor (National Trust), a show mansion built on the summit of a ridge at vast expense by the Rothschilds in the late 19th century to impress their society friends. Like all NT places it has a tea room.

You can then get buses back to Aylesbury - either number 16 or 17 - from outside The Lion pub in the village - at 15.24, 16.01, 17.24, 17.31, 19.01 19.19. Note the hour and a half gap between 17.31 and 19.01 (though no doubt one of the village pubs will entertain you).

2) The walk document has a shorter ending to Aylesbury Vale Parkway station reducing the walk to 19.8km (12.3 miles) - or 17.3km (10.8 miles) if you also did the short cut before lunch. The station is a strange place, surrounded by a new half-built suburb of Aylesbury: there are no refreshment options and only a bare platform to wait on, so you might want to time your arrival there carefully. Trains are at 30 past the hour till 18.30, then 19.50, 20.50.

3) This is an option of my own devising, not in the walk document, but if you continue south on the bridleway (track?) after leaving Eythrope Park in the afternoon (see map) you come in a couple of kilometres to the village of Stone, which is served by Oxford to Aylesbury buses (route 280) at 13 and 43 past the hour until 18.43, then 18.27, 19.11, 20.06, 21.05, 22.05. Turning left along the main road that the bus runs along for 3-400 metres brings you to the Rose and Crown, which looks from the web to be a very pleasant pub, open all afternoon (if it is not, stay on the road a similar distance to the Bugle Horn, also on the bus route). Minus the walks to the pub, I calculate this reduces the walk to 21.3km (13.2 miles) - or 18.8 km (11.6 miles) if you did the short cut before lunch.

If completing the full walk, tea options in Aylesbury are outlined in the walk document.

Trains back from Aylesbury are at 05 and 35 until 18.35, then 19.05, 19.27, 20.05, 21.05, 21.27, 22.05


Saturday First Walk Mayflies on the test hopefully





19.0km (11.8 miles)


Explorers 131 & 144 or Landranger 185. 


From London Waterloo catch the 09:50 to Salisbury (leaving Woking 10:16) arriving at Whitchurch (Hants) 10:51.
Return trains from Andover are at xx:06 and xx:38 until 19:06 when they are hourly at xx:45 until 22:45

Buy a day return to Andover. 

I post this walk in the hope that the Mayfly ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mayfly ) will hatch this weekend and the trout should rise to catch them on the Test river 
It looks like the mayfly have arrived so this Saturday should be good for them 
http://testvalleyriverkeeper.blogspot.co.uk/2015_05_01_archive.html
Aside from time spent on the Test there is also some wonderful scenery and villages so a treat for the eyes and quite a gentle walk.
At lunchtime the walk comes to so many thatched cottages that a visitor to this country might suppose thatch to be the most popular roofing material for English country villages.
Stocks for the punishment of offenders were erected in every village during the reign of Edward III. Those in Longparish are among the few still remaining.





Lunch 
Best if you phone to check that they will have room for you when you set off from the station
From the comments 

Cricketers Inn ( 01264720335 )
01264720335
I recommend as an excellent pub, which good food, nice atmosphere and friendly staff. No local ale on offer though, unfortunately

Plough Inn ( http://theploughinn.info/index.html 01264720358 )  lunch was very good and not horrendously expensive. The waiter/ress service was very good with free wonderful freshly baked bread rolls and a little petit fours at the end of homemade fudge for each of us.

Tea
There are a selection of tea shops in Andover. 


See here for the walk directions and more details. 

Time flies like an arrow
Fruit flies like a banana

Thursday, 28 May 2015

Extra Midweek Walk: The Sky Gardens and Jubilee Walk

SWC.122 Jubilee Walk - Central London Circular

Meet at the SkyGardens (on top of the walkie-talkie building) for coffee at 10:45, followed by the Jubilee Walk. Views (and prices in the restaurant) are stunning. Entry free, but ID required, and  book ASAP. Arrive earlier, and take photos. Tube: Monument If its full, meet up as 12:00 at the Tower of London Wetherspoons. http://www.20fenchurchstreet.co.uk/sky-garden.html

Wednesday, 27 May 2015

Mid-week Day Walk - Dorking to Reigate

Dorking to Reigate

Greensand Way

Book 3* Walk 16

* online only
Length: 13 Km or 8 miles
Toughness: 3 out of 10

Getting there: Catch the 10:01 am train from London Victoria (currently advertised as departing platform 11) to Dorking (main)

Calling Stations:
  1. Clapham Junction dep 10:07 am
  2. Sutton  dep 10:28 am

Meeting point: Dorking (Main) Station at 10:50 am

Tickets:  Buy a Cheap Day Return to Dorking which should be valid for the return journey from Reigate.

Brief Description: This mainly level walk follows the river Mole upstream from the foot of Box Hill through the picturesque villages of Brockham, Betchworth and Skimmington, ending in the grounds of Reigate Priory. Part of the route follows the Greensand Way long-distance footpath along the sandstone rock stratum that separates the chalk downland of the North Downs from the more varied soils of the Low Weald.
The walk doesn't exactly follow the Greensand Way - take an OS map if you wish to do that as the way-marking isn't perfect.

You may find full details here

Suggested Lunch and Tea stops

The suggested lunchtime pub is the Dolphin Inn in Betchworth, which offers good home-cooked food. It serves lunch from noon to 2.30pm Mon-Sat, 5pm Sun. Large groups are advised to phone ahead and book (01737-842288). Earlier in the walk you pass the Royal Oak in Brockham (01737-843241), and later the Skimmington Castle (01737-243100) on Reigate Heath. The suggested tea place is the Vintage Tea House (01737-226561), 17 Church Street Reigate. There are many alternatives, including Café Rouge at 1 Church Street and the café in Priory Park on the way into the town.

Explorer Map 146


Return train times from Reigate:
Depart from platform 1 and arrive into London Victoria calling at East Croydon and Clapham Junction.
Train departure times are at:
16:14
16:38 *
17:12
17:34 *
17:44
18:14

* Change at Redhill (I know, too much information!)



Monday, 25 May 2015

Extra Bank Holiday walk - Sgoran Dubh Mor circular

A fairly vigorous walk in the Cairngorms
Distance 10 miles
Difficulty 3 out of 10 on the Thomas scale
Getting there: see scotrail timetable.
This is a new map led walk and is bluebell free.

Bank Holiday Monday Walk (train-free)

Extra Walk 42 – Greenford to Osterley
Length: 12 km (7.5 miles). Toughness: 1/10

Take a Central Line tube which will arrive at Greenford by 10:40. On the West Ruislip line these run every 5-10 minutes and take about 30 minutes from central London (Oxford Circus).

Return is by Piccadilly Line tube from Osterley, or local buses if these are more convenient. Greenford and Osterley are both in TfL Zone 4.

In view of the threatened rail strike I'll post this outer London walk which should be feasible for anyone on the tube network. TfL have confirmed that these two lines will be running as normal. [If the strike is called off a longer country walk will be posted as well.]

While not exactly a country walk, this one goes through pleasant green spaces and passes some interesting features, not least an unusual triple bridge for road, rail and canal. It finishes in Osterley Park where National Trust members might be able to visit Osterley House, although their web site says that most of the house is only open for guided tours on Mondays.

The suggested lunchtime stop is the Plough in Norwood Green. This is quite close to the end of the walk so you could simply carry on to Osterley Park; there's no charge to visit the NT's Stables Café.

You'll need to print the directions from the Extra Walk 42 page. These haven't been updated recently so it's worth noting some helpful clarifications on the walk's Comments page.

Bank Holiday Monday Walk – rock climbers and steam trains

Extra Walk 19c – Tunbridge Wells Circular (long walk, via Groombridge)
Length: 23½ km (14.6 miles), with shorter options. Toughness: 7/10

09:33 Hastings train from London Bridge (East Croydon 09:52, Redhill 10:08), arriving Tunbridge Wells at 10:39.

Late Start option: You could take the train half an hour later (10:03) and start from Frant (one stop further down the line) at 11:16. This is the original version of Walk 19, now option b. I reckon that both groups will get to the old well on Frant village green at the same time and so could do the rest of the walk together.

Trains back from Tunbridge Wells are half-hourly, at around 03 & 33 minutes past the hour.

Note that the Hastings trains are being diverted this weekend with a slightly longer journey time (but a bonus for south Londoners who can connect with them at East Croydon or Redhill).

When you head out of Tunbridge Wells station beware those walkers following the route on a gizmo, as there's a 50-50 chance they'll set off on the longer way out of town: on this option c you should be starting at §3 in the printed directions. You'll pass a nice pub in Frant village but I suggest pressing on to the Nevill Crest and Gun in Eridge Green, after about 10 km. After lunch you can switch to the shorter return route via Broadwater Warren, but the long walk will take you past one of the finest sandstone outcrops in the south-east, Harrison's Rocks. On the final stretch back to Tunbridge Wells you're never far from the Spa Valley Railway and could decide to save your legs by boarding one of their heritage trains at Groombridge (steam loco at 15:46, diesel at 17:22). There are several places where you can break for tea during the afternoon, and of course plenty of opportunities for further refreshment in Tunbridge Wells itself.

You'll need to print the directions from the Extra Walk 19 page. If you're sure which route you're taking you can minimise the amount printed by clicking on the relevant Walk Option.

Sunday, 24 May 2015

NGS Gardens Open Day - Penge

A garden designer neighbour and myself are opening our 2 gardens for charity on Sunday 24th May from 2pm to 5pm. The cost is £6.00. Teas, coffee, home-made cream cakes..... provided.  The 2 gardens are 43 Clevedon Rd, SE20 7QQ (Eliz Parker) and 26 Kenilworth Rd SE20 7QQ. Very short walk between the two gardens- 0.5/10! More info at www.ngs.org.uk - see Penge Gardens. Elizabeth

Sunday Walk 2 – Ambling through Hertfordshire

Extra Walk  69 Welwyn circular

17km (10.6m); toughness 2/10

Trains: London Kings Cross10.05 (Finsbury Park 10.11) Welwyn Garden City 10.31

Fast return trains from Welwyn Garden City at xx:52 and slower stopping trains at xx:29 and xx:59.

A gentle amble through attractive Hertfordshire countryside including the landscaped parkland of Brocket Hall and Lamer House.


See here for further information about the walk and the lunch and refreshment options.

Sunday Walk 1 – A Chilterns Mystery Tour

Extra Walk 223 Henley circular via Turville

24km (15m); toughness 4/10

Trains: London Paddington 09.32 (Ealing Broadway 09.40) to Twyford 10.18. Then Twyford 10.43 to Henley 10.55

Return trains from Henley to Twyford to connect with trains back to London are at  xx:01

This “Midsomers Murders” walk had its first outing last summer and we had no reports of any “losses”! It traverses lovely open countryside before lunch and woodland tracks in the afternoon, and visits some beautiful hamlets and villages. (If you have the energy when you reach Turville you can climb a path to a windmill at the top of a hill and enjoy stupendous views   of the village and surrounding countryside).

It’s a long walk but not overly strenuous and you can shorten the walk by taking one of the bus options at the start or end of the walk. (See walk options).

As this is a bank holiday Sunday this walk has a number of pub and lunch options but you must ring beforehand as they are all popular and bound to be busy if the weather is warm and sunny.

Further information about the walk with all the pub lunch and other refreshment options plus full walk instructions can be found here.

Saturday, 23 May 2015

Walk 3-83: Crowthorne to Blackwater

Length: 20.5km (12.7 miles), Toughness: 3/10

Train: 10:30 from Waterloo changing at Guildford (arr. 11:03, dep. 11:09) to Crowthorne arriving at 11:38. Buy a day return to Crowthorne. Return trains from Blackwater are at 16:25,17:25,19:25,20:25 (change at Farnborough North, walk to Farnborough Main) and xx:51 (change at Guildford). It is also possible to return to Paddington (change at Reading) at xx:02, xx:31.

Options: The walk can be shortened by 2km by taking a short-cut through Finchampstead omitting Eversley.

Lunch: The Queens Oak (0118 973 4855) in Finchampstead about 8km into the walk. About 2.5k further is the Tally Ho (01189 732 134). If taking the short-cut through Finchampstead another option is The Greyhound (0118 973 2269) about 9km into the walk.

Tea: Pistachios in the Park at Sandhurst Memorial Park. It's about 40 minutes from here to Blackwater station.

Directions: For more information including directions, maps, GPS etc. see SWC.83

Downland and lowlands

SWC walk 108 - Burgess Hill to Hassocks
Length: various options from 13.4km (8.3 miles) to 26.7km (16.8 miles): see below
Toughness: 6 to 8 out of 10 (mainly due to one big climb onto the downs)

9.12 train from London Bridge (9.25 East Croydon) to Burgess Hill, arriving 10.03

or

9.16 train from Victoria (9.22 Clapham Junction, 9.32 East Croydon) to Burgess Hill, arriving 10.08

London Bridge walkers please wait for the Victoria train before starting!

Buy a day return to Hassocks

For walk directions click here.

This walk had a truly horrid outing in February due to some of the worst weather I have ever encountered on a Saturday walk. I thought it deserved an outing in better conditions and at a nicer time of year, so am crossing my fingers that the weather today is more clement…

The full walk in the walk document is a very long one, and in February some of us shortened it by starting it from Hassocks. But this time I have a different idea. With everyone starting from Burgess Hill, the normal start, you have a four mile walk across the lowlands to the village of Ditchling, where more relaxed types may like to try The Bull pub for lunch (there is also a nice deli, or there used to be).

Faster walkers can hammer on, climbing up onto the South Downs escarpment by a very scenic path to have lunch at the Plough in Pyecombe, a nice pub with a fine menu, but eight miles into the walk (nevertheless a good few got there in February in reasonable time).

Those who lunched in Ditchling will do the climb onto the South Downs after lunch. Once up there it is relatively easy to depart from the walk route and follow the South Downs Way to the Jack and Jill windmills. descend the downs from there to the village of Clayton and follow a path alongside the railway line to Hassocks. This is a 13.4km (8.3 mile) walk from Burgess Hill. Once up on the downs you are off the walk route but you could probably follow this route pretty easily even without a map, providing conditions are clear.

Alternatively, continuing on the walk 108 route to Pyecombe (a possible tea stop for those who have lunched in Ditchling), and then carrying on beyond it, you find yourself on Wolstonbury Hill, familiar from Book 2, walk 23 Hassocks to Upper Beeding. Should you a) have a map or b) be familiar with the route of that walk you can reverse its start to Hassocks, making a total walk of 18.8km (11.7 miles).

Alternatively, continue with the walk 108 route from Wolstonbury Hill brings you to the pleasant village of Hurstpierpoint, 20.2km (12.6 miles) from the start of the walk. From the war memorial in this village you can get bus no 33 at 4.54pm to Hassocks station. There is no later bus from Hurstpierpoint, but you can either walk another 2.7km (1.7 miles) down the road from Hurstpierpoint to Hassocks station, or walk 1km or so west along the main street of Hurstpierpoint to the village of Albourne and get a no 100 bus from there to Burgess Hill station at 17.45 or 18.43.

Or you can finish the walk as specified to Hassocks, 26.7km (16.8 miles).

Trains back from Hassocks are at 06 and 38 past the hour to London Bridge and 34 past the hour to Victoria until 19.06, then at 19.40 and 20.12 to Blackfriars and St Pancras, 20.30 to Victoria, 20.40 to Blackfriars and St Pancras (after that check for yourself!): all trains go to East Croydon.




Saturday First Walk

Book 1 Walk 8 – Bures to Sudbury
Length: 16 km (9.9 miles), with shorter option. Toughness: 4/10
Map of the route is here 
http://www.walkingclub.org.uk/book_1/walk_08/map.shtml
10:02 Ipswich train from Liverpool Street, calling at Stratford (10:09). Change at Marks Tey (arr 10.57 on Platform 2 , dep 11:01 from Platform 3 ) onto the Sudbury branch line, arriving Bures at 11:13.
Return trains from Sudbury are hourly at 26 minutes past, changing at Marks Tey.
Buy a return to Sudbury (Suffolk).
 
An easy going walk with few hills and some pleasant scenery

One of the posters may recognise the following bit of script but the say plagarism is the sincerest form of flattery so thanks Sean
If you look at the Walk Map you'll see that you have to take a dog-leg route out to the west to reach the Bulmer Fox, which describes itself as “a bistro style restaurant in a country pub setting”. According to its website this suggested lunch place doesn't take bookings, so if you decide to give it a miss I suggest taking the short cut at Great Henny church, heading north to rejoin the main route at [6]. This is definitely worth doing if you've stopped earlier at the Lamarsh Lion pub, or if you're happy to wait until you reach Sudbury for refreshment. As well as the town's pubs the comfortable Mill Hotel is recommended for its cream teas; note that it's a 20-minute walk through the town to the station.

See comments below re the alternative lunch time pub - you will find directions here
http://www.walkingclub.org.uk/book_1/walk_08/index.shtml

Wednesday, 20 May 2015

Mid-week walk - Princes Risborough to Great Missenden

Princes Risborough to Great Missenden

The Chilterns and Bryants Bottom

Book 1 Walk 45

Length: 16 Km or 10 miles
Toughness: 5 out of 10

Getting there: Catch the 10:18am from London Marylebone to Princes Risborough

Meeting point: Princes Risborough Station at 10:56 am

Tickets:  Buy a Cheap Day Return to Aylesbury

Brief Description:
This walk across the Chilterns – the walker’s heaven – is through sloping fields and beech woods and hamlets, past upmarket farms and upgraded cottages. The walk is not difficult but it does have two short, steep hills (with fine views) near the lunch stop which account for the toughness rating , although the walk directions do offer an alternative route which avoids the first of the inclines. Small sections of the route can be muddy in wet weather, particularly the leg through Monkton Wood before the lunch stop.

You may find full details here


Suggested Lunch and Tea stops
The suggested lunchtime stop is the Gate Inn (tel. 01494 488 632) at Bryant’s Bottom, 9.3km into the walk, with an aviary in its garden. This walker-friendly and family-friendly pub serves reasonably priced food – main meals, pub favourites and light meals - until 2.30 pm, Monday to Sunday. The pub has a large outdoor dining area for summertime use, at the far-end of which is a refurbished children’s playground for the youngsters
The suggested tea place is the Café Twit part of the Roald Dahl Museum and Story Centre, open until 5 pm (last orders 4.45 pm), Tuesday to Sunday,

There remain two pubs in Great Missenden’s High Street which are still pubs and not wine bars or restaurants, which you pass on your way to the railway station and which are usually open during the afternoon for those who prefer a stronger drink at walk-end. In order as you pass them, they are: The George Inn (tel 01494 868 455) and The Cross Keys (tel 01494 865 373)

Explorer Maps 172 and 181


Return train times from Great Missenden:
16:49
17:02
17:19
17:46
18:18
Trains return to Marylebone via Harrow on the Hill and the journey time is about 45 minutes.

It looks like Strike Action on the Railways may occur occur on the late May Bank Holiday, but do keep an eye open to see if train travel to any of our walks will be disrupted

Sunday, 17 May 2015

Sunday Second Walk - Surrey heathlands

Extra Walk 184 – Bentley to Farnham
Length: 25.9km (16.2 miles) Toughness: 7/10; or 18.7km (11.7 miles) Toughness 3/10

10.07 Alton/Basingstoke train from Waterloo (Clapham Junction 10:15) arriving at Bentley at 11:20. Buy an off-peak day return to Bentley, and make sure you are in the Alton section of the train, which divides at Woking.

Return trains from Farnham are on the hour and half-hour (journey time 1 hour 10 mins).

This varied walk, taking in Surrey hills’ ancient forests, heather-filled heathlands and a swimming pond, has attracted some very favourable comments. The shorter version of the walk was done on its two previous outings, but today could be an opportunity for more ambitious walkers to try the longer option, which explores the remote Kettlebury Hill and Hankley Common. You don't have to decide which option to choose until you reach Frensham Little Pond 10.2km into the walk.

The lunchtime options are not great, and it’s probably sensible to enjoy a packed lunch beside one of Frensham’s ponds or on Frensham Common. For a late pub lunch you must wait till you reach the Barley Mow (01252 792205) beside Tilford cricket green. This is 13.2km (short option) or 19km (long option) from the start.

You will need to download the Walk Directions.

Sunday First Walk - Essex riverside and ferry

Book 1 Walk 30 – Wivenhoe Circular
Length: 14.8km (9.2 miles) Toughness: 2/10

09:32 Clacton-on-Sea train from Liverpool Street (Stratford 09:39) arriving at Wivenhoe at 10:53.

Return trains from Wivenhoe are at xx.57 (journey time 1 hour 17 mins).

This walk is made up of two loops – one on the Wivenhoe side of the tidal River Colne, and one on the Rowhedge side, linked by a ferry that operates only during the period around high tide. Today high tide is at 12:22 and the ferry will run from 10:15 to 14:45. This means that you’ll need to head straight for the ferry on arrival at Wivenhoe and do the Rowhedge side first before crossing back for the Wivenhoe loop.

If you complete the Rowhedge loop in a couple of hours, you’ll have time for lunch at The Anchor pub (01206 728382) in Rowhedge, just yards from the ferry’s jetty. But make sure you don’t miss the last ferry! On the Wivenhoe side the recommended lunch pub is the Rose & Crown (01206 826371) on The Quay.

The afternoon walk is along the mudflats of the River Colne, and there are several options for tea in Wivenhoe. These, together with the walk directions, can be found here.

Saturday, 16 May 2015

Saturday Third Walk – A manor house by the M25

New Walk – Woldingham Circular, via Titsey Place
Length: 17½ km (10.9 miles). Toughness: 7/10

09:53 East Grinstead train from Victoria (Clapham Jct 09:59, East Croydon 10:11), arriving Woldingham at 10:27. Buy a day return to Woldingham, or (for an extra 40p) a return to Oxted if you might want to take the shorter ending (see below).

Trains back from Woldingham are essentially half-hourly, at 30 & 59 minutes past. If you finish at Oxted these Victoria trains leave at xx:24 & xx:53, and there's also a fast hourly service to London Bridge at xx:20.

This walk has been specially devised for the British Deaf Association, and I can confidently predict that your enjoyment of it will be greatly enhanced if you're deaf in the right ear (or bring a wad of cotton wool). A glance at the Walk Map will show a 1 km stretch within spitting distance of the M25, where you'll be obliged to practice your sign language or lapse into silent contemplation. At any rate there's no point getting your ears syringed the day before.

If you can blot out this intrusion you might enjoy a short woodland stretch in Marden Park Woods and some longer ones through the wooded hillside of the Titsey Plantation, part of the large estate surrounding Titsey Place. In theory you can stop off to visit this manor house and its gardens but a last-minute notice on its website apologising that they're unable to offer light lunches in its Tea Room has made this rather inconvenient.

Assuming that you leave a visit to a day when they've got their kitchen sorted out, a steep climb back up the North Downs will bring you in a further half-hour to the lunch pub, the Botley Hill Farmhouse. If your GPS device is accurate you'll observe that you can eat in either the western or the eastern hemisphere. There are yet more hills in the afternoon (hence the walk's 7/10 rating) but eventually you descend to the Dene Coffee Shop, ten minutes before Woldingham station.

Shorter ending: If you want to relax in a pub at the end of the walk I suggest following the Short Walk directions in the afternoon to finish in Oxted: Woldingham has nothing to offer beside its tearoom.

You'll need to print the directions from this New Walk page.

T=swc.244

A new section of the Greensand Way

SWC walk 151 - Sutton Valence to Pluckley
Length: 18km (11.2 miles)
Toughness: 3 out of 10

9.40 train from Charing Cross (9.42 Waterloo East) to Headcorn, arriving 10.43.

Then catch the 10.49 number 12 bus (ultimate destination Maidstone: not the Tenterden bus which arrives at a similar time) from Headcorn station forecourt to Sutton Valence, arriving 10.59. For details of the bus journey and when to get off, see Transport on page two of the walk directions.

Buy a day return to Pluckley, from where trains return at 11 and 41 past the hour till late.

For walk directions click here.

This is a brand new section of the Greensand Way, never before done by the SWC. It almost entirely follows a fine ridge with extensive views, ending in familiar territory around Pluckley. Previously a map walk, this walk now has full directions, which are getting their first outing today.

This is gentle territory, with plenty of pretty features, including several remote and interesting churches, apple orchards (probably no longer in blossom, but you never know), and a country mansion that is in fact an open prison.

Lunch is after 7.4 miles at the George Inn in Egerton. I have never actually lunched here so don't know how busy or otherwise it is, but it has often proved a friendly place for tea on the extension to the Pluckley walk and it is open for food all afternoon apparently. An alternative just 3.5 miles into the walk is the very pleasant Pepper Box Inn: this is a popular pub and somewhat restauranty, and so might not react well to a large group turning up, but if the weather is fine it does have an extensive area of outside tables.

For tea/drinks towards the end of the walk there is the Black Horse in Pluckley and (after 6pm) the Dering Arms by the station. The latter is also a posh gourmet restaurant, but has a cosy old-fashioned bar and is happy enough to do tea etc if not busy.

If anyone wants to try it, there is an alternative start to this walk, 1.7km/1.1 miles shorter, though less attractive than the Sutton Valence start. For this get the 10.22 train from Victoria to Harrietsham arriving 11.32. Train tickets for this option are a bit trickier. Harrietsham and Pluckley are on entirely different lines though both operated by Southeastern, so you might get away with a Harrietsham return, but a safer bet would be as return to Ashford International, which is on both routes.


Saturday First Walk

SWC 3 41 Yalding to 7oaks
21K (13 miles)
5 out of 10

Map of the route here
http://www.walkingclub.org.uk/book_3/walk_41/map.shtml

London Canon St at 10.03 ( London Bridge 10.07 New Cross 10.13 ) arriving Tonbridge at 10.46 and then take the 11.04 from Tonbridge to Yalding
OR
Charing Cross at 10.10 ( Waterloo East 10.13 ) arriving Tonbridge at 10.50 and then take the 11.04 from Tonbridge to Yalding
Arrive Yalding 11.19
(The train websites suggest taking a later train and having only 7 minutes connection time at Tonbridge but experience has shown that this is a bit risky so I have opted for an earlier train into Tonbridge)

There are trains frequent trains out of Sevenoaks returning to Blackfriars or Cannon Street or Charing Cross
Get a day return to Yalding 


According to the Comments Section
One of the best walks in SWC collection. Three worthwhile pubs but the first, The Swan in West Peckham, is the one

See the comments section for buses to shorten the walk in the afternoon

Lunch
The Swan Inn West Peckham ( www.swan-on-the-green.co.uk/ 01622 812271 ) for lunch  - you should arrive here 75 mins after starting off from the station so say just after 12.30
This will leave about 16 Km to walk after lunch but there are a couple of opportunities for tea in the afternoon - or take a later pub for lunch
A small and very popular pub so best phone them to book a table as soon as you leave the station ( or a few days before hand if you can plan that far ahead )

Kentish Rifleman is 9.7 Km (two and a half hours walking so you should arrive around 1.45 pm ) into the walk and finishes serving food at 2.30 pm

Chaser Inn ( 01732 810360 http://www.thechaser.co.uk ) at 11.9 Km ( three hours walking) into the walk and it serves food all afternoon apparently


Tea
At Igtham Mote or Knole House or Sevenoaks


More info and full walk details available here    
http://www.walkingclub.org.uk/book_3/walk_41/index.shtml



Thursday, 14 May 2015

The Father at Tricycle Theatre

WINNER of three Moliere Awards including Best Play 2014, the Royal Bath Theatre's production comes to Tricycle.  To book, please click here.  Pre-theatre Food and Drink will be at The Black Lion on 274 Kilburn High Road from 6pm.  The pub is literally opposite Tricycle Theatre. Click here for menu 

Wednesday, 13 May 2015

Midweek Day Walk - Petersfield to Cocking

Petersfield to Cocking

The South Downs

Book 3* Walk 155

* Online only

Length: 20 Km or 12.5 miles
Toughness: 4 out of 10

Getting there: Catch the 10:00am from London Waterloo to Petersfield
Calling stations are :
  • Woking  dep 10:25
  • Guildford    dep 10:34
Clapham Junctioneers should catch the 9:52am to Woking to arrive there at 10:11 and wait for the 10:25 described above.

Meeting point: Petersfield Station at 11:00 am

Tickets:  Buy a Cheap Day Return to Petersfield 
Or buy a Cheap Day Return to Chichester (valid via Petersfield) if you wish to travel on the bus from Cocking to Chichester

Brief Description:
This is a request by a regular Wednesday strider and is a ridge walk along the South Downs Way (SDW). A good, easy to follow path, with only gentle ups and downs, and fine 360 degree views for most of the way. It is best to bring a picnic, as the only pubs are very early, or at the bottom of the South Downs ridge which you need to re-ascend afterwards.
From Petersfield Station, the walk goes through the town square, then heads south from to Buriton (4 km) along the Hangars Way following a small stream. There is an option for very early pub lunch in Buriton
Then its up on to the ridge for the main part of the walk (15 km) which follows the SDW along the crest of the South Downs ridge, with only gentle ups and downs, past Tower Hill (has a folly), Beacon Hill (242 metres, ancient hill fort, free admission), Treyford Hill and Linch Ball (hill, trig point just north of the SDW path).
At Harting Down, just before Beacon Hill, you can head 1km north head, down off the ridge to the pub in South Harting. A little further, you can head 1km south to Uppark, a NT Historic Country House with a tea room (you need to pay admission to enter). These are the only refreshment possibilities on this part of the walk.
The SDW meets the A286 road just south of Cocking which has a bus stop. Optionally, leave the SDW 1.5k earlier on Cocking Down, and head north east along a path towards Cocking village (1km north along the A286 road) which has the Blue Bell Inn  ( appropriately named for this time of year!). This opens at 6pm and gives you a chance to take refreshments while waiting for your bus. There is a good bus connections south to Chichester, or catch the same bus north to Midhurst, where you can change for Haslemere (on the same line as Petersfield, so a much cheaper train ticket).

You may find full details here


Suggested Lunch and Tea stops


The Five Bells High Street, Buriton GU31 5RX (01730 263584) Food served every day 12 - 2.30pm. Located 4 km from the start of the walk.
The White Hart, South Harting, GU31 5QB, 01730 825124, 1km off the route, below the ridge.
Uppark NT cafe - admission required (don't forget your NT card if you're a member) - Open to 5:00pm
The Blue Bell Inn Cocking open from 6:00pm

Explorer Maps 133 and 120

Buses from Cocking to Haslemere
Take the #60 north to Midhurst, then change to the #70 to Haslemere. This costs a reasonable £4.60 ("transfer ticket") and works quite well.
Check the last bus time!


Return train times from Haslemere:

17:15 Haslemere [HSL] Platform 2 London Waterloo [WAT] at 18:14
17:32 Haslemere [HSL] Platform 3 London Waterloo [WAT] at 18:27
17:37 Haslemere [HSL] Platform 2 London Waterloo [WAT] at 18:43
18:02 Haslemere [HSL] Platform 3 London Waterloo [WAT] at 18:59
18:15 Haslemere [HSL] Platform 3 London Waterloo [WAT] at 19:13
18:32 Haslemere [HSL] Platform 3 London Waterloo [WAT] at 19:29
19:02 Haslemere [HSL] Platform 2 London Waterloo [WAT] at 19:59
19:15 Haslemere [HSL] Platform 2 London Waterloo [WAT] at 20:14
19:32 Haslemere [HSL] Platform 3 London Waterloo [WAT] at 20:24

Return trains from Chichester are at 17:43, 18:13, 18:37, 19:06 and 20:07 and terminate at London Victoria - Journey time about 1 hour 40 mins

Sunday, 10 May 2015

Sunday Walk Yalding to Borough Green

Length 16.8km (10.4 miles)

Toughness 3 out of 10

Trains: Take the 9.43 Dover Priory train from London Victoria changing at Paddock Wood (arrive 10.32) to catch the 10.40 Strood train, arriving Yalding 10.47. Buy a day return to Yalding

On arrival, set off in small groups (no more than six), allowing gaps between each departure. You will be asked to provide your email address for contact tracing purposes. Please email swc.wanderer@gmail.com if you intend to come on the walk.  Exchange names with those in your group. In the event that you develop COVID symptoms in the week following the walk, please email swc.wanderer@gmail.com. Your contact details will not be shared with anyone.

This is an easy walk through the woods and fields of the Kent countryside, without too much in the way of hills. The walk starts beside the River Medway, follows the Greensand Way to Roydon Hall and then heads gently uphill to East Peckham and St Michaels Church. The route now takes you to the village of Merewerth, Mereworth Woods, the village of Crouch, then through woodland to Basted and on to Borough Green.

Lunch: Bring a packed lunch as there may not be any refreshment options open. Mereworth is around the midpoint of the walk and the route passes the parish church of St Lawrence which may be a good picnic spot.

Tea: Melias Place coffee shop in Borough Green may be doing takeaways.

 L=1.50

Sunday Walk 2

Staplehurst to Headcorn with Sissinghurst options
Extra Walk 80
Length 14km 7.8m - extendable to 19.4km 12.1 miles.
Difficulty 2 out of 10

An easy walk in the Kentish Weald. Said to be good for wild flowers in spring. If you're lucky, there may still be bluebells about. The walk can be extended to include Sissinghurst Castle, famous for the gardens designed by Vita Sackville-West.

Trains: Get the 10:10 Ramsgate train from Cannon Street  (London Bridge 10:14 ) arrives Staplehurst 11:07.
Trains return from Headcorn at xx:18 and xx:48. Get a return to Headcorn.
Cannon Street underground on the District and Circle Line has been open on recent Sundays, but icoming in from the east, note that a section near Aldgate East is closed today. Bank Station is within easy reach (as are Monument and Mansion House) here's a map. (From Bank, take Exit 5, cross over Lombard St and head down St Swithins Lane, off to the right. Takes about 5 minutes)
Lunch:
The Bell and Jorrocks, Frittenden (01580 852415) or
Theres a National Trust Coffee Shop and the Granary restaurant at Sissinghurst Castle 01580 710700 (The restaurant can be accessed without paying the entrance fee)
Tea: In Headcorn High Street, you have the George and Dragon, the Village Tea rooms and the Kings Arms.
Walk Directions here

Sissinghurst options:
Option (a) extends the basic walk to include Sissinghurst. Entry to the castle gardens costs £11.70 unless you're an NT member.
If you want to spend time there, you could finish there by following option (b) (30 mins walk) to get the 15:07 or 17:07 number 5 bus from Sissinghurst village back to Staplehurst. Trains leave Staplehurst at xx:23 and xx:53.
A new option (c) takes you on from Sissinghurst to Cranbrook where you can catch the same no 5 bus at 15:02 or 17:02
Anyone contemplating option (d) (which starts at Sissinghurst) would need to catch a 9:10 or 11:10 train to meet the 10:17 and 12:17 buses from Staplehurst.

Sunday walk 1 "Ashwell at home"

Baldock Circular Extra Walk 91
17km. 10.6 miles (or 7.6 miles)
Difficulty 2/10

This "relaxing amble through flat Hertfordshire countryside“ incorporates a section of the Icknield Way, one of Britain's oldest trackways, on its way to the ancient settlement of Ashwell. The 14th century church there has the highest tower in Hertfordshire and it is adorned with medieval graffiti, some of which refers to the great plague.
Today is “Ashwell at Home" day, an annual celebration benefiting local organisations. For the full experience, visiting buildings, gardens etc. you'll need a £6 ticket but you'll still be able to look round the village and church for free. Not the tower though, that'll cost you.
Trains
Get the 09:53 Cambridge train from Kings Cross, arrives Baldock10:30
Trains return from Baldock at xx:26 and xx:50
A return to Baldock will do. A return to "Ashwell and Morden" (one stop further) costs no more and will cover both endings.
Lunch: There are three pubs in Ashwell:  the Rose and Crown, the Bushel and Strike, and the Three Tuns.
Tea: The Old White Horse near Baldock station.
Walk directions: here
 - The walk can be shortened by 3 miles to finish at "Ashwell and Morden" station  - worth bearing in mind if you get sucked into Ashwell's dizzying maelstrom of attractions.  Trains back at xx:21.
 - At point 32, the footpath may prove hard to find but, assuming the ground is firm, it is worth seeking out. The alternative, a roadside stretch, can be unpleasant if traffic is heavy. 

Saturday, 9 May 2015

Third Walk

Extra Walk - Tisbury Circular (via Ludwell and Berwick St. John)
Length: 26.3 km (16.4 miles).
Toughness: 10/10
(Shortcut option: 17.2 km Toughness: 5/10)

This is the penultimate walk in the Tisbury series. This walk is via Ludwell and Berwick St. John (a circular southern loop). Catch the 9:20 from London Waterloo arrives Tisbury 11:06. Return trains xx:01. (For the first outing of this new walk by Thomas, we will be taking the opportunity to check the walk directions.) From the text: "This is one of the furthest and one of the most strenuous SWC daywalks from London. The walk explores parts of the Upper Nadder Valley (also known as the Vale of Wardour) in the south westerly parts of the West Wiltshire Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, which is spectacular walking country with some breathtaking views. Heading west from Tisbury, it initially follows the valley, while never being flat for long, before routing through Wardour Park with its large neoclassical mansion and its romantically ruined 14th century Castle to then bypass the Donheads via a hill crossing and pause for lunch in Ludwell. From lunch it is a long and steady ascent to South Wiltshire’s highest point: Win Green Hill, providing for 360°-views to the coast and the inland valleys. After a stretch along the Cranborne Chase ridge a steep descent into the Chalke Valley is followed by a re-ascent up Berwick Coombe to White Sheet Hill, followed by an exhilarating descent down the escarpment. A few woods, a boggy brook crossing and some smaller copses are followed by the final descent back into Tisbury, a remarkably unspoilt village."  Shortcut option: A Shortcut around lunch cuts 9.1 km (5.7 mi) and the ascent/descent by 267m. This reduces the effort to 5/10. Link to walk directions.
T=swc.251