Walks you can reach from Langwith-Whaley Thorns by train
MapA day hike is just a simple train journey away — plan your next day of green.

Nottingham Circular via Attenborough Nature Reserve (Nottinghamshire)
1 hour direct from Langwith-Whaley Thorns.
Off-road walking and cycling alongside canal and river — a waterside network of paths. Passes the historic Trent Bridge.
Walk details: Derwent Valley Line Community Rail Partnership (local insights).

Hucknall to Newstead (Nottinghamshire)
45 minutes direct from Langwith-Whaley Thorns.
Tranquil river crossing through gently hilly, wooded Sherwood Forest country. Suburban footpaths, parkland, field paths, woodland, riverside and gravel tracks. Newstead Abbey was Lord Byron's ancestral seat; Byron is buried at the Church of St Mary Magdalene in Hucknall. Newstead Colliery (closed 1987) has a pit-wheel monument on the route. Extensive woodland.
Walk details: Walk Midlands (tips, photos and local insights).

Nottingham to East Midlands Parkway (Nottinghamshire)
1 hour direct from Langwith-Whaley Thorns.
Canal, river, wooded track and roadside footpath.
Time: 4h30–9h30
2 lunch spots: Wilford Farm (1h30–3h in), or Dovecote Barn Café (3h–6h in)
Warnings: Short stretch on busy A453.
Adapted from: the Leicester Ramblers.

Derby to Nottingham (Derbyshire)
1 hour direct from Langwith-Whaley Thorns.
Mixture of off-road cycle path and on-road sections. Part of the longer London-to-Lake-District route.
Walk details: Derwent Valley Line Community Rail Partnership (local insights).

Worksop to Retford (Nottinghamshire)
15 minutes direct from Langwith-Whaley Thorns.
Recommended: An excellent route; very enjoyable. An off-road and peaceful route using byways, the Chesterfield Canal towpath, farm tracks and with some walking through housed areas on safe pavements at either end. The canal section can get hemmed in by bracken and undergrowth; no serious hills. Follows the Chesterfield Canal towpath; passes Babworth Church, linked to the Pilgrim Fathers, with a display board; few benches in the middle third.
Lunch: The Chequers pub at Ranby is the only refreshment option in the middle third and needs a detour off the towpath; stock up at the start otherwise.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Kirkby-in-Ashfield to Hucknall (Nottinghamshire)
30 minutes direct from Langwith-Whaley Thorns.
Recommended: A quiet, mostly green suburban route on shared paths, cycle tracks and quiet streets with plenty of tree cover, plus small stretches of pavement by busy roads and a short field path. It is largely level and step- and stile-free, with one short and slightly rough and steep section descending through a wood east of the A611. Largely follows old railway paths and cycletracks. Kirkby and Hucknall are linked by the Robin Hood line and the Trentbarton Threes bus. Extensive woodland.
Warnings: A short, steep and slightly rough wooded section east of the A611, with side paths to ignore, may be tough for heavier wheels.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Beeston to Nottingham (Nottinghamshire)
1 hour direct from Langwith-Whaley Thorns.
Recommended: A flat, mostly level walk: busy city and built-up streets at each end with a quiet, scenic, well-maintained towpath along the Beeston Canal in the middle. A cobbled bridge joins the towpath and there are a few short and steep inclines. Frequent buses and trams also run between Beeston and Nottingham; the route passes Beeston Station too.
Lunch: A quieter alternative at the Beeston side passes the Star Inn, the Victoria Hotel and a café at the Canalside Heritage Centre.
Warnings: Cobbled bridge to join the towpath and a few short, steep inclines. Some busy street walking at the ends.
Walk details: Slow Ways.
Reverse direction: Derwent Valley Line Community Rail Partnership.

Shirebrook to Worksop (Derbyshire)
4 minutes direct from Langwith-Whaley Thorns.
An excellent route. A fairly direct, mostly off-road route on good traffic-free tracks, old railway path and field/parkland through the Welbeck Estate, with some pasture (potential cattle) and 3 stiles and 4 short flights of steps near Worksop. Some pavement walking from the stations at either end. Passes through the Welbeck Estate and Creswell Crags; the path runs over a tunnel created by the 5th Duke of Portland; a loop into Creswell village offers shops, buses and trains halfway. Extensive woodland.
1 lunch spot: Creswell Crags Visitor Centre cafe
Warnings: Steps at the crossing of the A57, which has no assistance for walkers; two further road crossings need care; pasture fields on the fringe of parkland mean potential cattle.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Kiveton Bridge to Worksop (Yorkshire)
15 minutes direct from Langwith-Whaley Thorns.
An excellent route; There are always good views, changing with the seasons. Highly recommended; This is a route to be enjoyed! An easy, flat, direct route running virtually all along the Chesterfield Canal towpath, part of the well-signed Cuckoo Way. The towpath is mostly a bonded or stone surface, with some muddy stretches where the right-of-way path runs north of the canal and plus passages through landscaped former-colliery land and community woodland. A few steps at Turnerwood. Follows the Cuckoo Way along the Chesterfield Canal, with many locks and canal information boards. Turnerwood is a Conservation Area. Served by four stations along the way for bailing out, and passes Kiveton Community Woodland.
Lunch: Pubs and cafes along or just off the route at Kiveton Park station and Shireoaks, plus a shop at the Shireoaks road crossing.
Warnings: Parts of the path on the north side of the canal can be muddy after wet weather. A few steps at Turnerwood spoil the otherwise easy going.
Walk details: Slow Ways.