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

Millom Circular via Millom Park (Cumberland)
5 minutes direct from Silecroft.
Low fells, wide salt marshes and the Duddon Estuary sea wall, with Millom Park and its open-air geology museum.
Millom Park: A wooded park above Millom with looping paths, optional viewing points and the open-air Rock Park geology museum.
Time: 4h30
Walk details: Visit Lake District / Lakes Line Rail User Group (PDF).

Seascale Circular via Ponsonby Fell (Cumberland)
30 minutes direct from Silecroft.
A long, demanding fell walk to the isolated grassy summit of Ponsonby Fell — an outstanding viewpoint — descending through Blengdale Forest.
Ponsonby Fell: An isolated fell whose elevation gives wide-ranging views including a revealing perspective of Scafell Pike and Scafell.
Time: 7h
Warnings: A long, demanding 22.5km fell walk best suited to experienced hill walkers; open fell, route-finding and over 500m of ascent.
Walk details: Visit Lake District / Lakes Line Rail User Group (PDF).

Ulverston Circular via Conishead Priory (Lancashire)
1 hour direct from Silecroft.
Circular of minor roads, woodland and the Morecambe Bay shore, past the Gothic-revival Conishead Priory and the Ulverston Canal towpath.
Conishead Priory: A Gothic-revival mansion in woodland on the Morecambe Bay shore, with a terrace cafe.
Walk details: Community Rail Cumbria (PDF).

Drigg to Sellafield (Cumberland)
15 minutes direct from Silecroft.
Mainly level shore and Drigg Dunes Nature Reserve, with views over the Irish Sea to Black Combe.
Drigg Dunes Nature Reserve: A coastal dune nature reserve between Drigg and Seascale with views over the Irish Sea.
Warnings: Drigg is a request stop. Not suitable for wheelchairs or pushchairs. Beach section can be cut off by exceptional spring tides; check tide times.
Walk details: Community Rail Cumbria (PDF).

St Bees to Whitehaven (Cumberland)
30 minutes direct from Silecroft.
Dramatic sandstone clifftops of St Bees Head, with two promontories split by Fleswick Bay, to Whitehaven Harbour — the start of the Coast-to-Coast.
Hilly: a third on high ground, rising above the surrounding land.
Coastal: nine tenths along the coast.
St Bees Head: A dramatic sandstone headland of two promontories split by the secluded cove of Fleswick Bay, marking the start of Wainwright's Coast-to-Coast walk.
Time: 4h30–8h30
Warnings: Exposed clifftop paths with steep, undulating sections; take care near cliff edges in windy conditions.
Walk details: Visit Lake District / Lakes Line Rail User Group (PDF).

Barrow-in-Furness to Roose (Lancashire)
45 minutes direct from Silecroft.
Largely pavement through Barrow-in-Furness and its docklands, the Dock Museum and the Cavendish Dock seawall.
Walk details: Community Rail Cumbria (PDF).

Dalton to Ulverston (Lancashire)
45 minutes direct from Silecroft.
Fields and lanes, the two Urswick villages, Urswick Tarn and Elizabethan Swarthmoor Hall with its early Quaker links, between Dalton and Ulverston.
Swarthmoor Hall: An Elizabethan manor near Ulverston with strong early Quaker associations.
Time: 3h–5h30
Walk details: Community Rail Cumbria (PDF).

Foxfield to Green Road (Lancashire)
15 minutes direct from Silecroft.

Braystones to St Bees (Cumberland)
30 minutes direct from Silecroft.

Barrow-in-Furness to Askam (Lancashire)
45 minutes direct from Silecroft.

Ulverston to Barrow-in-Furness (Lancashire)
1 hour direct from Silecroft.
Recommended: A mixed route, much of it hard-surfaced, along lanes, the coastal A road and a concrete promenade; last part industrial.
Coastal: three quarters along the coast.
Time: 7h–13h30
Warnings: Follows a busy road for a sixth of the walk. Stretches alongside the coastal A road.
Walk details: Railwalks.

Cark and Cartmel to Ulverston (Lancashire)
1 hour direct from Silecroft.
Recommended: A hilly walk, nearly all inland with some stretches on quiet lanes.
Walk details: Railwalks.