Around Kingley Vale - East Ashling to Walderton

 A relaxing 8¼ km stroll onto the South Downs surrounding the mystical Kingley Vale. Rural villages, quiet tracks and a magnificent setting with stunning views as far as the Isle of Wight make this an ideal family walk for exploring and picnicking.

This route can be extended to link up to the mainline rail service at Rowlands Castle (an additional 5¾ kms / 3½ miles).


 Pubs & refreshments

There are three pubs that link to this walk, providing plenty of opportunity for refreshments at the start or along the way.

The Horse & Groom, East Ashling
The Horse & Groom is a delightful traditional English Pub, serving well kept real ales
and the high-quality food is hearty and diverse which includes regularly changing specials and seasonal local ingredients. The Horse & Groom also provides accommodation.
http://www.thehorseandgroomchichester.co.uk/

The Hare & Hounds, Stoughton
A privately owned free house, the pub has been a focal point of the village since the nineteenth century, the pub retains a traditional feel in unspoilt surroundings. The Hare and Hounds takes it’s beer very seriously and offers finely conditioned cask ales including award winning bitters, along with premium draught cider and top flight lagers. There is also a carefully selected wine list offering fine classic wines.
If you’re looking for some peace and quiet or time to yourselves, the chance to loose the children in the garden watching the cows and horses, or sustenance after a long walk with the dog, a warm welcome awaits.
http://www.hareandhoundspub.co.uk/





The Barley Mow, Walderton
The Barley Mow offers a warm and friendly welcome with cosy log fires in the winter and a pretty garden to sit in the Summer. Open every day and evening the pub offers home cooked pub food, superb service with local real ales and fine wines. Food is available from ‘specials’ to an extensive pub grub menu and a popular lunch time Sunday Carvery. Look for bar skittles & jazz nights.
http://www.thebarleymowpub.co.uk/



The walk
You can open this link to view the Around Kingley Vale walk in a larger map window or to open the walk on your smartphone in Google Maps. This is a fully interactive map that will enable you to follow the route as you walk and to access additional information such as bus timetables and pub or tea room websites, You can use Street View to check features on the route, for example, to recognise the route on the ground and to identify where the bus stops are or what to look out for. By activating your phone's GPS you can identify your location and follow your progress as you move along the route. This is usually best viewed with the aerial photography in the 'satellite' mode.




Route Description
A few words of warning. Use caution whilst on country roads as the traffic can be faster than expected and can appear suddenly around bends. As a rule, if there is no pavement or verge, you should walk on the right-hand side of the road so that you can see oncoming traffic. You should also be prepared to walk in single file, especially on narrow roads or in poor light. Keep close to the side of the road and it may be safer to cross the road well before a sharp right-hand bend (so that oncoming traffic has a better chance of seeing you). Cross back after the bend.


 .      1.     Arriving in East Ashling on the Countryliner 54 service from either the Chichester or Petersfield direction. The bus stop is directly outside the Horse & Groom. Leave the pub and turn left and take the first turning on the right, signposted to National Nature Reserve. As the road enters the woodland, go through the green access gate on the left hand side and follow the track straight ahead into Stoke Wood. These peaceful coppiced woods have a good display of bluebells in the springtime. After a few minutes turn right at the first crosspaths and then straight across the second crosspaths. The footpath rejoins the road at a stile and gap and you turn left. At the road junction, follow the road to the left (signed National Nature Reserve). Pass the West Stoke car park, go through the kissing gate and follow the footpath to Kingley Vale (¾ of a mile).

      At the end of the footpath it meets a public bridleway and straight ahead of you is the entrance to Kingley Vale. Our route does not go through Kingley Vale but it is well worth allowing plenty of time (an hour or more) to leave the route and to explore the nature reserve – the chalk grassland  makes an ideal picnic stop or you might follow the nature trail and explore this hidden valley.




Some of the yew trees at Kingley Vale have stood for 2,000 years,
giving it a mysterious and magical atmosphere

      2.    At the entrance to Kingley Vale, having arrived at the top of the footpath from the West Stoke car park, turn left onto the bridleway (if leaving Kingley Vale, turn right onto the bridleway). Take the turning on your right and follow the bridleway uphill, alongside the edge of Kingley Vale. The view to your left opens up to reveal a panorama across Chichester Harbour and the Solent to the Isle of Wight.

      As the bridleway rises and passes a side entrance to Kingley Vale, the bridleway forks. Take the left fork, maintaining the splendid views. Follow the bridleway as it continues into the woods. Take the right fork where the path splits, and continue uphill to the top of the hill, where it begins to level out.
    
      3.  At the top of the hill you are now at a height of 185 metres above sea level – 153 metres (502 feet) higher than the starting point at East Ashling!

 The view extends right across the Solent

      Ignore the turnings to your right and carry on straight ahead, over the top of the chalk ridge and follow the bridleway as it descends the other side, with views (left) across to Portsmouth Harbour. Take care as the chalk track descends as this can be slippery when wet! At the edge of the woods is a stone bench which offers a welcome rest and fabulous views.

      In the hedgerow on the right hand side is a memorial to Pilot Officer Bolestaw Wtasnowolski, of the Royal Airforce 213 Squadron, who died when his Hurricane aeroplane crashed in this field following aerial combat with a German aircraft.

     At the junction with the road, turn right. The Hare & Hounds is approximately 300m ahead.
 The Saxon church of St. Mary, in Stoughton
     
      4.    Leaving the Hare & Hounds, turn right (back the way you have come), and then right at the village green, past the footpath to St. Mary’s church, to follow the public bridleway past the cottages. Take the left fork signed as The Monarch’s Way along the edge of the woodland. At the junction with a footpath, turn left into a field. In the hedgerow behind you, once you are in the field, is a bench with fabulous views. Follow the crossfield path as it winds its way through the fields and hedgerows, across a small lane, and continue through more fields and hedgerows, until reaching the back gardens of the houses in Walderton.

 The crossfield path winds its way through the landscape
      
      Ignore the path that turns right and continue straight ahead and then left, passing between two gardens, to bring you out at the road.

      5.      Turn right into Cooks Lane and then follow the footpath on the left, where the road bends to the right. At the end of the footpath, to reach the Barley Mow continue on the road round to the left.

     To reach the bus stops, turn right and follow the road to the next junction (with the B2146) and the bus shelter is to your right.

      Buses to Chichester depart from the bus shelter; buses for Petersfield stop on the opposite side of the road, but there is no bus stop sign to indicate this!


Getting There & Away  


The start (East Ashling) and finish (Walderton) points are both served by Countryliner's service 54 to & from Petersfield and Chichester

For journey planning to and from the walk please use the following tools provided by Transport Direct



For directions to arrive at the start of the walk (East Ashling, West Sussex) by public transport

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For directions on leaving the end of the walk (Walderton, West Sussex) by public transport

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Amberley to Arundel

A relaxing 9¼ km stroll along the beautiful Arun Valley with magnificent views of Arundel Castle. Walking alongside the river, through water meadows, low-lying woodlands and alongside a wetland nature reserve gives this route an abundance of wildlife and a spirit of adventure!

This route can be joined to the Arundel to Amberley walk to form a circular walk of twice the length - 18½ km (11½ miles).


 Pubs & cream teas

There are two pubs and a tea room that link to this walk, providing plenty of opportunity for refreshments at the start or along the way.

The Bridge Inn, Amberley
The Bridge Inn is a delightful traditional English Pub, serving well kept real ales and delicious, locally sourced, home cooked food.
http://www.bridgeinnamberley.com/

Riverside Tea Rooms, Amberley
For breakfast, lunch or a cup of tea and a slice of cake at the end of the walk, then the Riverside Tea Rooms are hard to beat.  Located on the bank of the River Arun, the Riverside enjoys fantastic views across the river and south downs.
http://riversidetearooms.co.uk/





The Black Rabbit,Offham

The Black Rabbit sits on the bank of the River Arun, overlooking the water, with views as far as Arundel Castle.  A Hall & Woodhouse pub, The Black Rabbit offers fresh, unpretentious seasonal food and a range of real ales.
http://theblackrabbitarundel.co.uk/


The walk

You can open this link to view the Amberley to Arundel walk in a larger map window or to open the walk on your smartphone in Google Maps. This is a fully interactive map that will enable you to follow the route as you walk and to access additional information such as bus timetables and pub or tea room websites, You can use Street View to check features on the route, for example, to recognise the route on the ground and to identify where the bus stops are or what to look out for. By activating your phone's GPS you can identify your location and follow your progress as you move along the route.





 


Route Description
A few words of warning. Use caution whilst on country roads as the traffic can be faster than expected and can appear suddenly around bends. As a rule, if there is no pavement or verge, you should walk on the right-hand side of the road so that you can see oncoming traffic. You should also be prepared to walk in single file, especially on narrow roads or in poor light. Keep close to the side of the road and it may be safer to cross the road well before a sharp right-hand bend (so that oncoming traffic has a better chance of seeing you). Cross back after the bend.



 .      1.     Arriving in Amberley by train, leave the station access road and turn left under the railway bridge and towards the bridge over the river. The Bridge Inn is located in the road to your left, sign-posted North Stoke, just before the bridge. The Riverside Tea Rooms are situated on the river bank adjacent to the bridge.



      Cross Houghton Bridge. The bridge was erected in 1875 but is built in the medieval tradition. The traffic can be heavy so you should approach this with caution and shelter in the recesses to let traffic pass.



      At the far end of the bridge go through the kissing gate on the left hand side to join the footpath along the river bank.

Follow the path along the river bank and then through the water meadows. Continue along the path as it enters the low-lying woodlands on boardwalks, ignoring the footpaths that join from the right hand side. The water meadows and wooded area are prone to flooding so extra care should be taken at times of high water.




Much of the Arun Valley forms part of a site of
special scientific interest (SSSI) and is known for its variety of birds and wild fowl

      2.      The path runs alongside the perimeter wall of Arundel Park before moving slightly inland and rises up through the woodland into a field. Follow the field boundary on your left as you approach South Stoke Farm. Take a sharp right turn as the path passes between the brick building and the field wall.

The perimeter wall of Arundel Park
         

      3.  Turn left into the lane and then immediately right to rejoin the bridleway. Cross the stile into the next meadow and keep to the boundary on the right-hand edge.

     
      4.     At Foxes Oven Cottage the path once again rises up on a chalk path through the woods. Join the lane at the top and turn left and then right. The lane, which has been cut through the chalk banks on either side, descends to the Black Rabbit at Offham.


      5.      Leaving the Black Rabbit, walk through the car park to rejoin the river bank footpath. Follow this as it passes the Arundel Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust on your right and then across the water meadows back to Arundel.



      6.   As you approach Arundel the path goes through a kissing gate, over a sluice and past a slipway. The path lthen eads you into Arundel town centre. Turn left at the roundabout to cross the River Arun on the road bridge. Follow the road straight ahead to join the A27 and the bus stops. Continue ahead and cross the busy A27 at the pedestrian crossing for westbound bus services and the railway station.


Getting There & Away  


Amberley is on the Arun Valley line, providing one service an hour in either direction, Monday to Saturday. The Arun Valley Rail Line provides a link between the Sussex coast and Gatwick Airport to London and beyond, crossing right through the centre of the South Downs National Park. It provides rail access to Arundel, Pulborough, Billingshurst, Horsham and Crawley and links to the south coast line for services from Southampton, Portsmouth, Fareham, Havant, Littlehampton, Bognor Regis, Worthing and Brighton.

Arundel, at the end of the walk, is also on the Arun Valley line with two services an hour in either direction.

Stagecoach Coastliner 700 provides regular services from Arundel to Brighton*, Hove*, Shoreham*, Worthing* and Littlehampton*, Monday – Sunday.

Compass Bus84/85 provides services from Arundel to Worthing*, Chichester*, Billingshurst and Pulborough* at various times through the day, Monday – Saturday.

* Bus services connect to the national rail network at Brighton, Hove, Shoreham, Worthing, Littlehampton, Chichester and Pulborough.


For journey planning to and from the walk please use the following tools provided by Transport Direct



For directions to arrive at the start of the walk (Amberley, West Sussex) by public transport


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For directions on leaving the end of the walk (Arundel, West Sussex) by public transport


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