Walks near Goole by train
MapA day hike in the countryside is just a simple train journey away — explore the most charmingly located railway stations near Goole and plan your next day of green.
Alternatively, view walks directly from Goole.

Driffield Circular via Driffield Canal (Yorkshire)
1 hour direct from Goole.
Flat Driffield Canal towpath with two-hundred-year-old relics, dyke and field paths and a village pub at Wansford.
Warnings: Can be muddy after heavy rain. Take care on the road section before Wansford and at the railway crossings.
Walk details: Yorkshire Coast Community Rail Partnership (PDF).

Hutton Cranswick Circular via Tophill Low Nature Reserve (Yorkshire)
1 hour from Goole, with one change.
Gentle, flat River Hull valley farmland: the lakes, hides and ponds of Tophill Low nature reserve and the dykes around Cranswick.
Warnings: Very flat and close to the river, so can be muddy after heavy rain. Listen for traffic on the narrow lanes.
Walk details: Yorkshire Coast Community Rail Partnership (PDF).

Sheffield to Meadowhall Interchange (Yorkshire)
1 hour from Goole, with one change.
Flat urban canal towpaths and riverside paths along the Sheffield & Tinsley Canal and Five Weirs Walk, past Victoria Quays and the Tinsley locks. An easy waterside start to the trail.
Victoria Quays: A large canal basin in Sheffield constructed 1816-1819 as the terminus of the Sheffield Canal.
The Sheffield & Tinsley Canal: A canal opened in 1819 to link the city with the navigable River Don, famous for featuring in the opening scenes of the film The Full Monty.
Walk details: Penistone Line Trail / Penistone Line Partnership (PDF).

Sheffield to Bamford (Yorkshire)
1 hour from Goole, with one change.
Urban streets, landscaped Victorian cemetery, municipal parkland, narrow wooded valley, open moorland, rugged gritstone edges and a scenic descent into lush valley.
Time: 6h30
Warnings: Can be muddy.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Meadowhall Interchange to Chapeltown (Yorkshire)
45 minutes direct from Goole.
Disused railway trackbed and the Blackburn Valley Trail through ancient Woolley Wood, following the Blackburn Brook past old mill sites into Chapeltown.
Woolley Wood: An ancient woodland continuously wooded since at least 1600, noted for its hornbeam trees and the locally uncommon Hawfinch.
Walk details: Penistone Line Trail / Penistone Line Partnership (PDF).

Chapeltown to Elsecar (Yorkshire)
1 hour from Goole, with one change.
Ancient woods, country park and reservoir, with Civil War history, the Kes-famous Tankersley Old Hall ruins and Elsecar Heritage Centre. A longer, facility-free section.
Woodland: a quarter under tree cover.
Westwood Country Park: A park with woodland walking trails, cycle routes and a reservoir.
Tankersley Old Hall: The ruins of a medieval hall destroyed during the English Civil War, later featured in the 1969 film Kes.
Elsecar Heritage Centre: A visitor attraction in former Victorian workshops housing the Newcomen Beam Engine, a steam railway and canal basin.
Time: 2h–3h30
Warnings: No facilities en route; bring refreshments. Take care crossing Tankersley Golf Course.
Walk details: Penistone Line Trail / Penistone Line Partnership (PDF).

Selby to Snaith (Yorkshire)
30 minutes from Goole, with one change.
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.

Scunthorpe to Brigg (Lincolnshire)
45 minutes from Goole, with one change.
Recommended: A pleasant walk including woodlands and a stretch along the river and part of it on the Ironstone Way. The first part leaving Scunthorpe can be a little tricky to follow. Part of the route follows the Ironstone Way.
Time: 4h–8h
Lunch: Refreshments at Broughton.
Warnings: Crossing the busy A18 can be hazardous; you could instead cross Brigg Road near Ashbyville. Brigg is served only by the Saturdays-only Brigg line — a few trains on Saturdays, none midweek.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Featherstone to Castleford (Yorkshire)
45 minutes from Goole, with one change.
Recommended: A largely step-free, fairly clear route on roads, paths and through a pair of parks, with a brief stretch of industrial ground between them. A field path leads out of Featherstone and the road into central Castleford is quite long.
Time: 2h–4h
Warnings: The path runs close beside the M62 for about ten minutes, with heavy traffic noise; you are safely behind a hedge.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Worksop to Retford (Nottinghamshire)
45 minutes from Goole, with one change.
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.
Time: 4h30–8h30
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.

Driffield to Bridlington (Yorkshire)
1 hour direct from Goole.

Sheffield to Rotherham Central (Yorkshire)
1 hour from Goole, with one change.
A great mix of nature, old and new industrial architecture. An easy and flat walk almost entirely along the canal towpath. The Sheffield half is a little uneven and can be slightly muddy underfoot; after Rotherham it is well-surfaced as part of the cycle route. Off-road for almost the whole way with no steps. Lined with interesting industrial archaeology and some street art at the Sheffield end. Suitable for dogs, buggies and cyclists. The Sheffield canal basin (off the published route) has the famous straddle warehouse plus shops, cafes and toilets.
Waterway: four fifths along the Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation.
Time: 3h–6h
Warnings: Sections of the towpath have been subject to temporary closures with diversions; check before relying on a continuous route.
Walk details: Slow Ways.