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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.

Friday, 3 April 2026

Chilham to Canterbury

A Good Friday walk.  

Chilham to Canterbury Walk – A Good Friday Walk

Length: 20.09km (12.48 miles)

Toughness: 4 out of 10

From the SWC description of the walk: ‘This walk starts beside the Great Stour River and its attendant lakes, visits the church and green at Chartham and passes through hop fields and apple orchards to Chartham Hatch, where picnickers stop for lunch.

From Chartham Hatch the walk continues through Church Wood then Blean Woods Nature Reserve to the parklands of the University of Kent, with fine views down over Canterbury Cathedral. The entrance to the city is along the River Stour, through the Norman Westgate and down the medieval high street and alleys, entering the cathedral precincts through its ornate Christ Church Gate.’

Leave early to give yourself time for site seeing at the end. 

Travel:

9.34 from Charing X; 9.37 Waterloo East; 9.43 London Bridge.  Arrive Chilham 11.10

OR:

10.04 St. Pancras; arrive Ashford Int at 10.42 where you change to the 10.57 which arrives at Chilham at 11.10.

Return: After 4pm the train schedule is:

Canterbury West to Charing Cross is XX.06

Canterbury West to St. Pancras XX.23

Canterbury East to Victoria XX.47

Canterbury West to Charing Cross XX.06 and so on,

Ticket types: Buy a day return to Canterbury Stations

Lunch: Artichoke pub, and The Local Pub, both just off the route in Chartham.  Otherwise, there is The Hare in the village of Blean much later into the walk.  Picnickers usually stop in the village of Chartham Hatch in the playground where there are picnic tables and benches.

Plenty of tea rooms and pubs in Canterbury.

L=1.28

Full details of the walk can be found here: https://www.walkingclub.org.uk/walk/chilham-to-canterbury/

1 comment:

Sean said...

[Posted on behalf of Kevin] #9 #cloudy_and_dry

A friendly group of nine on this seasonal outing. Six of us enjoyed a pleasant lunch in the Origins Restaurant at the Canterbury Chartham Garden Centre, while the other three sped on. A large portrait of Rudyard Kipling benignly watched over us, with a caption announcing that he was the ‘instigator of cake’. While he was the instigator of many and varied things, Kipling cakes were not among them. Service was fairly slow in a busy restaurant, but the food was good, with decent portions at reasonable prices. While it is important to support country pubs, it is also good to see a better rhyme between price and portion size. After lunch, two more walkers sped off, needing to get back to London. Between Chartham Hatch and Upper Harbledown, we passed an uprooted orchard and met some very friendly pigs, who enjoyed having their backs scratched. They multi-tasked by vigorously rooting around in the soil while following us as far as the wire allowed. Later, three lively young horses chaperoned us very closely indeed. At one point, they engaged in what could only be described as horseplay, jumping on each other and biting. Anxious to afford them some privacy, we moved on. We lost one lady at Upper Harbledown, as she was keen to explore a shortcut to Canterbury. Plenty of wood anemones were visible as we moved through Church Wood/Rough Common. As we approached Blean, one lady gave a poised and moving reading of a Seamus Heaney poem that often finds its way into UK schoolrooms. Shortly afterwards, the triplet became a couplet, and I opted for the prose of walking down Whitstable Road to Canterbury West, getting the 5.06. I hope that everybody else got home safely, and that the Peak District trippers on this walk enjoy their adventures next week. Thank you to branchline for organising what is, I think, an underrated walk.