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Walking the  North Wessex Downs
10 Reasons to Visit the North Wessex Downs

10 reasons to visit the North Wessex Downs

The North Wessex Downs is the third largest area of outstanding natural beauty in the UK. If that one fact on its own is not enough to tempt you to visit this quintessentially English landscape of gently rolling hills and undulating chalklands then read on.

Steve Davison, author of the Cicerone guidebook to the area, gives us ten highlights of the North Wessex Downs.

Britain's largest display of wild purple crocuses

North Wessex Downs
Image credit: Peter Creed
Walking in the North Wessex Downs - Front Cover

Walking in the North Wessex Downs

30 walks exploring the AONB

£12.95

30 walking routes exploring the North Wessex Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB). The routes are between 7 and 20km through this peaceful rolling chalk landscape and cover parts of four counties: Berkshire, Hampshire, Wiltshire and Oxfordshire, with walks to reach the highest point in each one.

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The highest points in 4 counties

Although the downs are termed ‘hilly’, they don’t rise to any great height, which makes the walks here suitable for a wide range of abilities. Nevertheless, the walks in this guidebook take in not only the aforementioned highest chalk hill in England (and highest point in Berkshire), Walbury Hill (297m), but also the highest points in three other counties – Milk Hill in Wiltshire (295m), Pilot Hill in Hampshire (286m) and Whitehorse Hill in Oxfordshire (262m).

The White Horses

White Horses North Wessex Downs
White Horses on the North Wessex Downs

There are several white horses of interest in this area but the oldest, and perhaps most famous, is the 3000-year-old stylised galloping figure of the Uffington White Horse encountered in Walk 11.

This white horse is the oldest in the country, and although it was first mentioned in a medieval manuscript from Abingdon Abbey, recent excavations and new dating techniques have shown that the horse was carved around 3000 years ago in the Bronze Age. It was GK Chesterton (1874–1936), in his ‘Ballad of the White Horse’ (1911), who summed up the age of the horse perfectly:

Before the gods that made the gods Had seen their sunrise pass, The White Horse of the White Horse Vale Was cut out of the grass.

We may know the age of the carving with some degree of accuracy, but as to its purpose, we’ll probably never really know. The figure’s remarkable state of preservation has been put down to the ‘scouring fairs’, where local people would gather to help clean it. Thomas Hughes (1822–1896), who spent his childhood in the village of Uffington, wrote about the area in Tom Brown’s Schooldays (1856), and also about the scouring rituals in The Scouring of the White Horse (1859).

The small, flat-topped mound of Dragon Hill, beneath the White Horse, is where St George is reputed to have killed the dragon. The steep-sided coombe, or dry valley, to the left (west) of Dragon Hill is known as The Manger, and legend has it that the White Horse goes there to feed.

Avebury and other historic stone monuments

Avebury Stone Monuments North Wessex Down
Avebury Stone Monuments

Avebury is the site of one of the largest henge monuments in Britain. Dating from 2600 BC, the most impressive feature at Avebury is the large henge. This type of Neolithic earthwork consists of a circular or oval outer bank and an inner ditch (unlike a defensive Iron Age hill fort, which has an inner bank and outer ditch). Within this structure is an outer stone circle, one of Europe’s largest stone circles, originally marked with 98 sarsen stones, as well as two smaller stone circles and part of the present village.

Along with Stonehenge, the Avebury henge and associated sites have been designated a World Heritage Site. Linking the henge with The Sanctuary is the West Kennet Avenue, which originally consisted of 100 pairs of standing stones.

Long distance routes

A number of long-distance paths run through the North Wessex Downs AONB, including significant sections of the Lambourn Valley Way and the Ridgeway. Some of these paths intersect with walks in the guidebook, and offer the opportunity for walkers to create their own longer route.

Lambourn Valley Way: A 32km (20-mile) route from the Ridgeway at the Whitehorse Hill car park along the Lambourn Valley to Newbury, passing through Lambourn, Eastbury, East Garston, Great Shefford and Boxford.

Ridgeway National Trail: The southern section of the trail from Overton Hill near Avebury to the River Thames at Streatley travels for 68km (42¼ miles) along the northern scarp of the North Wessex Downs.

Test Way: Follows the Test Valley from Eling Wharf on the outskirts of Southampton to end at Inkpen Beacon (73km/45 miles).

Wayfarer’s Walk: A route through Hampshire from Inkpen Beacon to Emsworth (114km/71 miles).

White Horse Trail: A route visiting all eight white-horse hill figures within Wiltshire, seven of which are within the North Wessex Downs (145km/90 miles).

Brenda Parker Way: A 126km (78 mile) route developed by the North Hampshire Ramblers Group running between Andover and Aldershot.

Picture postcard villages

Walking The North Wessex Way
Pretty Picture Postcard Villages

East Hendred, the larger of the two Hendred villages, has a wealth of 16th- and 17th-century brick and timber-framed houses, including a fine example of Tudor brickwork at the village shop. Hendred House, based round a 15th-century hall house, was passed to the Eystons through marriage in the 15th century and it has been their family home ever since. The family are related by marriage to Sir Thomas More, one-time Chancellor to Henry VIII, who was executed along with John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, in 1535.

The Church of St Augustine of Canterbury has an interesting, but hidden, faceless clock. Built in 1525 by John Seymour of Wantage it is one of the oldest clocks in England, and still chimes the hours and quarters as it has for almost 500 years, while every three hours it plays the ‘Angel’s song’ by Orlando Gibbons. The small but interesting Champs Chapel Museum is housed is the former 15th-century Chapel of Jesus of Bethlehem built by Carthusian monks from Sheen, Surrey (open Sunday afternoons during the summer).

Picturesque Lambourn (Walk 9), said to have been the model for Maryland in Thomas Hardy’s novel Jude the Obscure, is centred around St Michael and all Angels Church and the adjoining Market Place, complete with its old stone market cross from the reign of Henry VI. Parts of the church, which is based on a typical cruciform design with a central tower, date back to Norman times. Inside there are several notable monuments, including the impressive alabaster tomb of Sir Thomas Essex of Lambourn Place (d.1558) and his wife, Margaret. Behind the church is the red-brick castellated entrance to the Isbury Almshouses, originally built by John Estbury in 1502.

Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty

The North Wessex Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), the third largest AONB in England, covers an area of 1730 sq km and takes in parts of four counties – Berkshire, Hampshire, Oxfordshire and Wiltshire. It encompasses one of the largest and least developed tracts of chalk downland in southern England.

Kennet and Avon canal

Kennet And Avon Canal
The Kennet and Avon Canal

The Kennet and Avon Canal, which opened in 1810, provided a transport link between Bristol and the River Thames at Reading until the development of much faster railway links brought about its gradual decline. Fortunately, after years of neglect the canal has now been fully restored.

The Kennet and Avon Canal - Front Cover

The Kennet and Avon Canal

The full canal walk and 20 day walks

£12.95

Guidebook to walking along the Kennet & Avon Canal. The 94 mile route from Reading to Bristol is split into 7 stages of fairly easy walking, and includes the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Bath and Bristol's Floating Harbour. 20 circular walks are also included, ranging from 4¼ to 9 miles, taking in the best sections of the canal.

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