Walking in Kent. Kev Reynolds

Walking in Kent - Kev Reynolds


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rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_12cb6a87-5d7d-5f54-bdd5-51952b0fb7a6">When to go

       What to take

       Footpaths

       Using this guide

       THE WALKS

       WEST KENT AND THE WEALD

       1 Lullingstone Park to Shoreham

       2 Shoreham to Romney Street

       3 Westerham to French Street and Chartwell

       4 Crockham Hill to Toys Hill and Obriss Farm

       5 Toys Hill to Ide Hill, Crockham Hill and French Street

       6 Ide Hill to Manor Farm

       7 Sevenoaks Weald to Boarhill

       8 Shipbourne to Underriver and Ightham Mote

       9 Four Elms to Winkhurst Green and Bough Beech

       10 Marsh Green to Crippenden Manor

       11 Cowden to Horseshoe Green and Bassett’s Farm

       12 Cowden to Hoath Corner

       13 Chiddingstone to Penshurst

       14 Penshurst to Salmans and Nashes Farm

       15 Penshurst to Fordcombe

       16 Groombridge to Speldhurst

       17 Brenchley to Matfield

       18 Yalding to Hunton and Buston Manor

       19 Teston Bridge to Wateringbury and East Farleigh

       20 Linton to Boughton Monchelsea Place

       21 Ulcombe Church to Boughton Malherbe and Grafty Green

       22 Pluckley to Little Chart and Egerton

       23 Wittersham Road station to Small Hythe and Tenterden

       24 Appledore to Stone-in-Oxney and Royal Military Canal

       NORTH AND EAST KENT

       25 Camer Country Park to Luddesdown and Great Buckland

       26 Stansted to Fairseat, Hodsoll Street and Ridley

       27 Trosley Country Park to Coldrum Stones and Ryarsh

       28 Newington to Upchurch and Lower Halstow

       29 Leysdown-on-Sea to Shellness and Harty

       30 Faversham to Oare Creek, Uplees and Oare

       31 Faversham to Ham Marshes and Oare Creek

       32 Wye to Crundale and Coombe Manor

       33 Wye to Wye Downs and Cold Blow

       34 Chilham to Stour Valley

       35 Stodmarsh Nature Reserve to Grove Ferry

       36 St Nicholas at Wade to Chitty and Sarre

       37 Bridge to Patrixbourne, Kingston and Bishopsbourne

       38 Elham to Breach

       39 Sandwich to Sandwich Bay

       40 Dover (White Cliffs Picnic Site) to St Margaret’s at Cliffe

       LONGER WALKS

       41 The Darent Valley Path

       42 The Eden Valley Walk

       43 The Elham Valley Way

       44 The Greensand Way

       45 The High Weald Walk

       46 The Medway Valley Walk

       47 The North Downs Way

       48 The Royal Military Canal Path

       49 The Saxon Shore Way

       50 The Stour Valley Walk

       51 The Wealdway

       Appendix A Route summary table

       Appendix B Useful addresses

       Appendix C Recommended reading

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      The 13th century church of St Mary’s was destroyed by a doodlebug in 1944 (Walk 22)

      PREFACE

      The first collection of Kent walks appeared in 1988, a few months after the landscape was drastically changed by the hurricane of October 1987. A second collection, with a broader reach across the county, was published in two volumes in 1994 and 1995. Later, in 2007, it was decided to select the best walks from previous collections and present them in a new edition. Having gone through three updated reprints, it’s now time for a complete revision. This is it.

      We’ve spent a year checking and re-checking the routes for this edition, travelling to every corner of Kent and being reminded, yet again, what a wonderfully diverse county this is. One day we might be wandering across the North Downs, plunging into what appeared to be a secretive little valley in which we’d discover a hamlet lost to the world. Another day might find us following a path beside saltings, whose exposed mudflats bore the prints of scores of gulls and waders that rose as one, wheeled across the water and returned to land as though they’d forgotten something important.

      Some days we’d take a clifftop path with a view across the Channel to France; on another we’d be tracing the Greensand Ridge, the Weald spreading into remote distances below and beyond. There were woodland walks, walks that took us through orchards, vineyards and (rarely nowadays) the once-ubiquitous hop gardens. Our paths have drawn us through fields of barley, wheat and oats. We’ve wandered beside streams and rivers, watched kingfisher, heron and more ducks and geese than we could count, and listened on so many outings to the mewing cry of a buzzard. A fallow deer has sometimes crossed our path; we’ve stood for ages, barely breathing, to study an adder curled asleep on a half-cut log in the sunshine. One morning I watched a mother ewe licking clean her moments-old lamb as she expelled the after-birth into the grass behind her.

      We’ve been walking in all weathers: in winter, muffled against the cold, frost on the ground, elm and oak producing stark outlines, naked without their leaves. In spring we’ve almost tiptoed among


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