Walks from Bingham

Nottinghamshire · East Midlands

Map

Beautiful walks starting or ending at Bingham Station.

Alternatively, view walks you can reach directly from Bingham by train.

Bingham
Bingham Sunrise by terry135jackson

Bingham Circular via Screveton

Village greens and countryside.

Time: 3h30–6h30

2 lunch spots: Caffe Velo Verde (1h30–3h in), or the Royal Oak (2h–4h30 in)

1 end-of-walk reward: the Butter Cross

Adapted from: the Leicester Ramblers.

GPX
Flat
13
KM
Bingham
SOFT BLUE MIST By Angela Wilson by angelawilson2222

Bingham to Newark Castle

A most enjoyable walk. A long, pleasant but indirect walk through quiet arable farmland, mostly on good unsurfaced field paths with mown grass headlands and cross-field paths and plus quiet roads and riverside sections. Clay soil is sticky when wet; there are stiles and one short flight of steps. Passes Beacon Hill, Cranmer's Mound, a motte and bailey, the Elston Old Chapel and 3-metre green-man sculptures at Screveton; the riverside finish passes Newark Castle. A community shop at Elston (mornings, serves coffee); cafe/tea room at Screveton; garden centre cafe near the A46. Pubs bypassed at Flintham and Elston.

Lunch: A cafe/tea room at Screveton and a garden centre cafe near the A46; pubs at Flintham and Elston are just off route and may not be open midday.

Warnings: The unavoidable road section into Bottesford is the busiest, with a constant stream of large lorries and no pavement, only a narrow verge. There is one short flight of steps south of Flintham, and a level footpath crossing of the railway at Bingham. Cross-field paths are often not reinstated by farmers, so the plot is essential. The route avoids a A46 crossing.

Walk details: Slow Ways.

GPX
23
KM
Carlton
Holme Pierrepont Country Park aerial image - Nottingham by John D Fielding

Carlton to Bingham

An exceptional walk over the meadow. A typical country walk with a few stiles but lots of easy gates, following the delightful Trent riverside path on a good surface shared with bikes and horses, with meadows where cattle may graze, an in-summer overgrown woodland path. There are quiet lanes and bridleways and a path alongside the Ouse Dyke; the riverside may flood in extreme conditions. Follows the River Trent riverside path. Carlton and Bingham are linked to Nottingham by rail and frequent buses.

Lunch: Services in abundance at Gunthorpe.

Warnings: The riverside path may flood in extreme conditions. Cattle may be grazing the meadow. A summer-overgrown woodland path. A narrow no-pavement bridge on Chandos Street, though the road is fairly quiet.

Walk details: Slow Ways.

GPX
15
KM
Radcliffe
_MG_0659.jpg by Daniel KG

Radcliffe to Bingham

Superb view of the Trent Valley. Mostly quiet field paths, some surfaced and free of stiles and with a final short climb up to The Cliffs above the River Trent. Some muddy patches when very wet. Uses parts of the Trent Valley Way. A substantial housing development at Newton means the bridleway nearby may be subject to temporary closures. Both ends are served by trains and a frequent bus service.

Walk details: Slow Ways.

GPX
Rolling
12
KM
Bingham
The Residence of the Rutlands by CoasterMadMatt

Bingham to Bottesford

An excellent view of the Vale of Belvoir. A pleasant but indirect country walk, mostly on good unsurfaced field paths along the flood banks of the River Smite and tributaries, with some clay soil that gets muddy and sticky when wet. A road section leaves Bottesford and with stiles and a slightly overgrown nettly section out of Bingham. An out-and-back detour up Beacon Hill from Bingham offers a view of the Vale of Belvoir, with a First World War centenary memorial at the top. Passes Cranmer's Mound and a motte and bailey near Aslockton, birthplace of Thomas Cranmer, and crosses Crow Close, the remains of a medieval settlement. Pubs and shops at Bingham, Orston and Aslockton; ideally suited to arrival by train.

Lunch: Some facilities along the way which may not be open: a pub at Orston just off route by the church, and an inn and takeaway-coffee shop at Aslockton.

Warnings: The road out of Bottesford towards Orston has a constant stream of large lorries and general traffic with little consideration for pedestrians; there is some verge but care is needed. Waymarking around Abbey Lane and New Lane near Aslockton is poor. Muddy field-edge sections after rain.

Walk details: Slow Ways.

GPX
14
KM
Bingham
See You Later, Gunthorpe by alexbaxterca

Bingham to Melton Mowbray

The views across the vale of Belvoir are good. A long, hard but mostly off-road walk across the Vale of Belvoir, scenic with good views from the hill south of Long Clawson, but with little-used, poorly signed field paths that are hard to follow, several diversions around field boundaries and building sites and awkward stiles and some muddy and wet sections. Crosses a section of the Grantham canal. Facilities are sparse: pubs and a shop at Barnstone, Long Clawson and (off route) Hose; Holwell has none.

Lunch: There is a shop and a pub a short distance off route in Hose, and a pub and small shop in Long Clawson.

Warnings: The A52 crossing near Bingham has steps both sides and no central refuge. Several field paths are poorly signed and hard to follow; a significant diversion runs around a building site north of Melton, with awkward stiles in places.

Walk details: Slow Ways.

GPX
Gentle
27
KM
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