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

Selby to Snaith (Yorkshire)
15 minutes direct from Gilberdyke.
Recommended: Great views. Very flat and easy walking: a canal towpath, a good-surfaced path across a former airfield, then open countryside, lanes and tracks and a flood bank and a bridge over the River Aire. Just short stretches of busy and verge-only road. Follows the Trans Pennine Trail across Burn Airfield, which has benches and interpretation boards; you may see gliders taking off and landing.
Time: 4h–7h30
Warnings: A short stretch of busy road at the start, and a section of roadside walking with no pavement on a straight part of Hirst Road. Snaith has only around three trains a day.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Selby to Goole (Yorkshire)
15 minutes direct from Gilberdyke.

Hull Paragon Interchange Circular (Yorkshire)
30 minutes direct from Gilberdyke.

Thorne North to Goole (Yorkshire)
15 minutes direct from Gilberdyke.

Hessle to Cottingham (Yorkshire)
15 minutes direct from Gilberdyke.
An urban route with more green space than expected and much of it following a surfaced cycle path. Generally easy going. Follows National Cycle Route 1 for much of the way; bus and rail options at both ends. Easier to follow with a GPX track as the urban setting makes navigation tricky.
Time: 2h30–5h30
Lunch: Plenty of shops along the way in this built-up area.
1 end-of-walk reward: the Old Lamp Room
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Hessle to Barrow Haven (Yorkshire)
15 minutes direct from Gilberdyke.
Across the Humber Bridge, then estuary path.
Walk details: Railwalks.

Snaith to Goole (Yorkshire)
8 minutes direct from Gilberdyke.
A pleasant, easy-to-navigate route following the bank of the River Aire, with some muddy patches and evidence of cattle on the riverbank, then easy tarmac and pavements through villages. Generally flat; gates rather than stiles, but there are narrow and uneven field paths. Passes the villages of Rawcliffe and Airmyn with their historic buildings; West Park in Goole has a community cafe and toilets.
Waterway: three fifths along the River Aire.
Time: 3h30–7h30
Lunch: A fish and chip shop, tearoom, pub and food store in Rawcliffe, and a cafe at West Park, Goole, near the end.
Warnings: There may be cattle on the riverbank, with warning signs in places, and the first cross-field path and riverbank can be muddy after rain. Beware traffic crossing the M62 bridge into Goole. Snaith has only around three trains a day.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Snaith to Thorne North (Yorkshire)
15 minutes direct from Gilberdyke.
Wonderful open country scenery. A long but flat, largely traffic-free walk following the Trans Pennine Trail and long stretches of canal-side towpath through pleasant open countryside, alongside rivers and canals. Generally safe and easy underfoot; some lanes without footpath and areas prone to winter flooding near the Rivers Went and Don. Follows the Trans Pennine Trail and canal towpaths. Passes the site of a medieval hunting lodge with a surviving moat near the M62. Thorne Park has a miniature railway. The route passes through the garden of the New Inn at Stainforth.
Time: 6h30–13h
Lunch: Pubs for refreshment at Sykehouse, Braithwaite (summer only) and Stainforth along the way.
Warnings: Several lanes (around the M62 crossing and canal bridges) have no pavement, so take care. The areas by the River Went and River Don are prone to flooding in winter and can become impassable after heavy rain. Snaith has only around three trains a day.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Knottingley to Selby (Yorkshire)
15 minutes direct from Gilberdyke.

Beverley to Hull Paragon Interchange (Yorkshire)
30 minutes direct from Gilberdyke.
A lengthy walk out through Beverley's suburbs to Figham Common, then a riverside path along the River Hull, before following the main Beverley Road into the centre of Hull. Lots of kissing gates and stiles and with a main-road section (with pavement) at Thearne. Passes the only remaining World War 2 bombed-out building in the UK, a former cinema on Beverley Road undergoing restoration.
Time: 4h–8h
Warnings: Follows a busy road for a quarter of the walk.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Conisbrough to Doncaster (Yorkshire)
45 minutes direct from Gilberdyke.
The view from the viaduct makes the tour worthwhile. A varied riverside walk crossing the River Don by the Conisbrough Viaduct, then following the Trans Pennine Trail and Don riverside into Doncaster. Mostly good bonded-surface cycle track and easy riverside path, with some compacted-earth and open flood-bank sections that can flood and plus steps and stiles. From Conisbrough Viaduct it's possible to stay on the Trans Pennine Trail much further west.
Waterway: two thirds along the River Don.
Woodland: a third under tree cover.
Time: 3h30–6h30
1 lunch spot: the Boat Inn
Warnings: Stiles and steps along the way, and the compacted-earth riverside section shows signs of flooding at times. Care needed taking the right-hand uphill fork approaching the viaduct.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Adwick to Doncaster (Yorkshire)
45 minutes direct from Gilberdyke.
An easy, direct route mostly on well-signposted cycletracks and entirely on hard surfaces, with no stiles. It starts past a stone church, follows a segregated pavement and cycle track along a busy road, then an old-railway cycle track in a green corridor into Doncaster, with a fiddly but well-mapped finish through the town's roundabout and footbridges and bus station. Some steps above the bus station (avoidable). Largely follows the Doncaster Cycleway / Sustrans routes along old railway lines. The Draughtsman Alehouse micropub is on Doncaster station platform 3 (no train ticket needed).
Time: 2h–4h
Lunch: A large pub/food outlet at the junction with the Great North Road.
Warnings: Follows a busy road for a quarter of the walk. Some steps above Doncaster bus station (avoidable by a detour). Lockable gates at a shopping area (in practice left open). Endless traffic alongside the segregated pavement.
Walk details: Slow Ways.