Walks you can reach from Dullingham by train
MapA day hike is just a simple train journey away — plan your next day of green.
Alternatively, view walks directly from Dullingham.

Cambridge Circular via Grantchester (Cambridgeshire)
15 minutes direct from Dullingham.
Beginner-friendly: A straightforward walk along the River Cam with many lunch options in Granchester. Within Cambridge itself, feel free to wander about randomly rather than following the route — there’s plenty to appreciate.
Time: 3h30–6h30
4 lunch spots: Grantchester (1h30–3h in) — the Orchard Tea Garden, Grantchester, the Red Lion, the Rupert Brooke, or the Blue Ball Inn
1 end-of-walk reward: the Panton Arms
Warnings: A quarter urban.
Adapted from: The Rough Guide to Walks in London & the South East (3rd edition).
Similar walk: the Saturday Walkers Club.

Cambridge to Cambridge North (Cambridgeshire)
15 minutes direct from Dullingham.
A short city and riverside walk linking Cambridge's two stations, taking in some of the best-known views of the ancient colleges, punting on the upper river, and riverside paths across the commons where college and town crews race their traditional 'bumps'.
Time: 3h
Warnings: Shared with cyclists along most of the route, so watch out for bikes.
Walk details: Mid Anglia Rail Passengers Association (PDF).

Shelford to Cambridge (Cambridgeshire)
15 minutes direct from Dullingham.
Flat walk through traditional villages and along the River Cam, finishing through Grantchester Meadows into Cambridge city centre.
Great Shelford: Traditional village with thatched cottages and a striking parish church.
Little Shelford: Village with period architecture.
Hauxton Mill: Historic watermill on the River Cam.
Trumpington Meadows: Open meadow nature reserve on the edge of Cambridge.
Byron's Pool: Wild-swimming spot on the Cam named after the poet Lord Byron.
The Old Vicarage (Rupert Brooke's House): Former home of poet Rupert Brooke, with sculptures in the grounds.
Grantchester Meadows: Open riverside meadows along the Cam between Cambridge and Grantchester.
King's College: World-famous University of Cambridge college with its renowned chapel.
The Orchard Tea Garden
Time: 3h30–7h30
2 lunch spots: the Red Lion, or the Orchard Tea Garden
Warnings: Busy A10 road crossing; shared cyclist path before the M11 bridge.
Walk details: Walking Post (tips, photos and local insights).
Similar walk: the Saturday Walkers Club.

Thurston to Bury St Edmunds (Suffolk)
30 minutes direct from Dullingham.
A walk of outstanding historical and architectural interest on field paths and quiet lanes, passing Rougham and Rushbrooke churches and following a road of Roman origin at Eastlow Hill, with a memorable approach to the historic town of Bury St Edmunds across No Man's Meadows.
Rougham Church: a lofty medieval church with East Anglian flint flushwork and a magnificent timber roof.
Rushbrooke Estate: the little church and parkland surviving from a Tudor mansion demolished in 1961.
St Edmundsbury Cathedral: its Millennium gothic tower, completed in 2005, dominates the approach across No Man's Meadows.
Bury St Edmunds
Time: 4h
Walk details: Mid Anglia Rail Passengers Association (PDF).

Elmswell to Thurston (Suffolk)
30 minutes direct from Dullingham.
A varied walk through gentle Suffolk countryside with contrasting natural habitats. The longer route leads through Norton Wood, an ancient woodland, across marsh and rough grazing in the shallow Black Bourn valley and the Grove Farm nature reserve, then on via Pakenham's parish church and parkland.
Norton Wood: one of Suffolk's many ancient woodlands.
Grove Farm: a Suffolk Wildlife Trust nature reserve of marsh and rough grazing.
Pakenham Church: an interesting medieval parish church set in verdant parkland.
Time: 4h30
Lunch: A welcoming pub in the centre of Norton village (on both routes).
Warnings: The marsh and rough grazing in the Black Bourn valley may be very wet underfoot in winter and spring. Can be muddy.
Walk details: Mid Anglia Rail Passengers Association (PDF).

Stowmarket to Elmswell (Suffolk)
45 minutes direct from Dullingham.
Field and meadow paths from Stowmarket's Greens Meadow, passing a marshy wildlife reserve on the approach to the isolated settlement of Dagworth, then on by pleasant field paths to the attractive green at Haughley, once the site of a market and fair.
Time: 4h
Walk details: Mid Anglia Rail Passengers Association (PDF).

Kennett to Newmarket (Cambridgeshire)
5 minutes direct from Dullingham.
A walk through open countryside on the fringe of the Breckland, passing the attractive villages of Chippenham and Snailwell with their old chalk-rock ('clunch') buildings and the rare habitats of Chippenham Fen national nature reserve, before approaching Newmarket, the home of British horseracing.
Chippenham Fen: a National Nature Reserve where fen and breckland habitats merge, home to many rare species.
Newmarket
Time: 5h
Lunch: The villages of Chippenham and Snailwell offer good refreshment stops along the way.
Warnings: Keep well clear of racehorses where the path runs alongside exercise tracks or through paddocks near Newmarket.
Walk details: Mid Anglia Rail Passengers Association (PDF).

Kennett to Bury St Edmunds (Cambridgeshire)
30 minutes direct from Dullingham.
A long and rewarding cross-country walk, presented in two stages with a break point at Barrow village for those who prefer shorter rambles. From high ground near Desning there are long views towards the Fens, the route threading fields and pastures past the earthworks of ancient Denham Castle; the second half traverses the National Trust's Ickworth estate, with its rotunda house and Capability Brown parkland.
Denham Castle: the surviving earthworks of a medieval motte-and-bailey castle.
Ickworth Estate: a National Trust estate of 1,800 acres with a striking rotunda house and parkland partly laid out by Capability Brown.
Bury St Edmunds
Time: 9h
Lunch: Shops and pubs at Barrow, roughly the half-way point (buses from Barrow are infrequent, so check times and stops).
Walk details: Mid Anglia Rail Passengers Association (PDF).

Waterbeach to Newmarket (Cambridgeshire)
5 minutes direct from Dullingham.
A route across the fens on well-maintained but rutted field paths and climbing onto Devil's Dyke towards Newmarket. Crosses Newmarket racecourse. Take a copy of the route as turnings are easy to confuse.
Time: 5h30–10h30
Lunch: A pub at Swaffham Prior, roughly midway, plus pubs at both ends.
Warnings: The route crosses Newmarket racecourse, where access may be restricted on race days.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Bury St Edmunds to Stowmarket (Suffolk)
30 minutes direct from Dullingham.
Spectacular views. A long, direct route mixing waymarked footpaths, pavements and quiet country roads with no pavement. Narrow and uneven in places, especially crossing fields, with around ten stiles, a flight of steps and gates and several footbridges concentrated on the Drinkstone-to-Rougham stretch. Best broken at Woolpit, roughly the mid-point, which has shops and amenities. Not suitable for cyclists (use National Cycle Route 51).
Time: 6h30–12h30
Lunch: Woolpit has a Co-op, two pubs, a fish and chip shop and a bakery; Rougham has a convenience store en route.
Warnings: There is a fair amount of road walking on minor roads which can have more traffic on weekdays; numerous stiles and uneven field paths make it unsuitable for those with reduced mobility.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Soham to Newmarket (Cambridgeshire)
5 minutes direct from Dullingham.
A lengthened route taking in Wicken Fen and Devil's Dyke.
Time: 5h30–11h
Walk details: Slow Ways.
Reverse direction: Mid Anglia Rail Passengers Association (PDF).

Needham Market to Woodbridge (Suffolk)
45 minutes direct from Dullingham.
A long, varied route following the River Gipping out of Needham Market towards Ipswich, then crossing farmland with woodland and several villages before reaching Woodbridge. There is a long section of road walking from Barham through Henley. Path surfaces range from grass and soil to gravel and concrete drives, with cambers, muddy sections and some faint field paths. Many kissing gates and stiles and footbridges. Follows the River Gipping through Needham Lakes. Buses serve Henley and Grundisburgh for intermediate access. Benches in several churchyards en route.
Time: 7h–14h
Lunch: A shop at Grundisburgh; refreshments at Baylham rare breeds farm.
Warnings: The plotted route comes onto the B1079 between blind bends near Woodbridge, a rat-run road best avoided via Hasketon. Some lanes have only intermittent verges with two cars a minute. Many kissing gates and stiles; some field paths are faint; one footbridge needs repair. The path crosses the railway via two stiles.
Walk details: Slow Ways.