Walks from Lancaster
MapSet out on beautiful walks directly from Lancaster Station.
Alternatively, view walks near Lancaster by train.

Lancaster to Carnforth
Recommended: The magnificent Lune Aqueduct; a canalside view of the sea, with mountains beyond. A long but very easy route, canal towpath nearly all the way, with short street sections at each end and no stiles, gates or steps. The towpath contours above the Lune valley over the magnificent Lune Aqueduct; surface is tarmac (partly broken) or fine gravel and lumpy in places with a couple of short muddy patches and a short cobbled section. Views across the fields, Morecambe Bay and the Lakeland hills; kingfishers sometimes seen. Cafés at St John's Hospice (Lancaster end) and a shoreside café and micropub at Hest Bank.
Waterway: nine tenths along the Lancaster Canal.
Time: 4h–7h30
Lunch: Canalside pubs and a supermarket at Bolton-le-Sands and a canalside pub at Hest Bank.
1 end-of-walk reward: the Canal Turn
Warnings: The towpath surface is lumpy where the tarmac has disintegrated, with a couple of slightly muddy patches.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Lancaster to Bentham
The views from the trig point (and some distance before and after) are incredible, covering Lancaster, Morecambe Bay, the Lake District, the Yorkshire Dales including Ingleborough, and the Forest of Bowland. A long route over Whit Moor, with remote middle miles of muddy to quite wet peat bog, open access land, trodden moorland tracks and a final well-maintained tarmac cycle track into Lancaster. Stiles, gates and steps and short steep sections. Designed to avoid the wet fields and busy roads of the alternative route. Main facilities are about 5 miles from each end, at Wray and at Brookhouse/Caton. Passes the Halton eco-village, Lune Aqueduct, Priory and Castle into Lancaster.
Lancaster Castle: A medieval castle above the city, long used as a court and prison.
Time: 7h30–14h30
3 lunch spots: the Station pub, licensed café at Wray, or the Woodie's
Warnings: The middle 7 miles are remote and can be wet peat bog; navigation on the moor relies on trodden tracks and waymark posts. The A683 at Brookhouse is fast but has big gaps for safe crossing. Can be muddy.
Walk details: Slow Ways.