Keep your distance from the animals and don't feed or pet them - you may be fined.

Small red-brick chapel with arched windows in a grassy cemetery with scattered headstones under a pale sky

Difficulty: Moderate

It's 17:49 Overcast, 16°C

Stuckton Iron Works

By creo

This walk is one of five Historic Routes. This walk is one of the five historic routes. This historic trail is one of our longer routes, with views across the Avon Valley and Dorset. We journey through the New Forest; a working landscape, as well as a place people come to relax and retire. The … Continued

Tatchbury Mount

By creo

This walk is one of five Historic Routes. This trail starts at Hanger Farm Arts Centre, a restored Grade II listed timber framed barn, and heads up and around the Iron Age hillfort of Tatchbury Mount. Walk along some of our oldest routes, now covered with a canopy of trees, and in the spring, areas are … Continued

Hale & Woodgreen

By creo

Follows a section of the Avon Valley Path through fields and woods to the charming village of Hatchet Green. You then pass Hale House and St Mary’s Church before walking alongside the peaceful River Avon. At Woodgreen you can explore a rural community with a strong village identity. The walk returns via shady tracks and … Continued

Walhampton Monument

By creo

Visit the monument to Admiral Sir Harry Burrard-Neale (1765-1835) Burrard-Neale was a prominent Naval officer and former MP for Lymington who was greatly admired for the changes he brought to the town. This walk also enjoys good views over the Solent and is easily accessible by train and bus. It is part of the Rail … Continued

Buckland Rings

By creo

From the village of Brockenhurst this walk passes through Roydon Woods nature reserve over Setley Plain and onto Buckland Rings,  the site of a former Iron Age hill fort near Lymington. This is part of the Rail Trail series of walks from the Lymington-Brockenhurst branch line.

Radnor Trail

By creo

Head deep into ancient and ornamental woodland. Once past the Radnor Stone, this trail passes through sweet chestnut, oak and beech dating from the 1860s. It then skirts the fenced boundary of Mark Ash Wood, an ancient and ornamental woodland, where you can see pollarded beech trees. Bratley Water, flowing south to join the Blackwater, … Continued