Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The River Avon Trail is part of the Kennet and Avon Walk which goes cross country from Reading on the Thames to the Severn Estuary. The Severn Way includes Gloucestershire Way , Wye Valley Walk , Worcestershire Way , Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal Walk, Worcester & Birmingham Canal Walk, Three Choirs Way and Telford and Wrekin Walks ...
Connects the Thames Estuary with the English Channel and also traverses the Ashdown Forest. Wessex Ridgeway: 136 219: Wiltshire and Dorset: Marlborough: Lyme Regis: One of the four long-distance footpaths referred to as the Greater Ridgeway. West Deane Way: 45 72: Taunton Deane area of Somerset: Taunton: N/A: Circular walk in the Vale of ...
The upstream limit of the navigable Thames. Inglesham Footbridge Footbridge: 51°41′18″N 1°42′16″W: 1996: The original towpath extends upstream to this point, by the connection with the now disused Thames and Severn Canal. Hannington Bridge Road bridge: 51°39′48″N 1°44′57″W: 1841: Castle Eaton Bridge Road bridge
The series was called "Byways and Backwaters of Manchester", and one of the first visits was to a flight of nine locks on the Rochdale Canal, where the towpath had been restored by a Community Task Force. Some weeks later, a return visit found that a wall had been built across the towpath, preventing access, and the group decided to take action.
The Thames Estuary Path was established in 2014, it is part of the King Charles III England Coast Path and runs along the northern (Essex) side of the Thames estuary. [1] It is promoted by Essex County Council and c2c train company. [2] It complements the Saffron Trail from south-east to north-west Essex.
The Thames Path uses the existing Thames towpath between Inglesham and Putney Bridge wherever possible. The former Thames and Severn Canal entrance is the present-day limit of navigation [13] [14] for powered craft, and is one and a half miles upstream of the highest lock (St John's Lock), near Lechlade. [15]
Waymark on the walk. The Crown public house is located adjacent to towpath. Attractions in this area include a boat centre and Broxbourne Mill. Adjacent to the walk, the Lee Valley leisure pool closed in 2008. [2] The river is crossed to the west bank by bridge. On the opposite bank there are a number of riverside houses.
St Mary Redcliffe Pipe Walk is an annual tradition which sees participants follow the route of a conduit that runs from a water source in the Knowle area of Bristol to the church of St Mary Redcliffe, a distance of approximately 2 miles. New participants on the walk are traditionally 'bumped' on marker stones that record the route of the pipe.