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

Bures to Sudbury (Essex)
15 minutes direct from Marks Tey.
Gently rolling farmland, river meadows, woodland, open fields, historic market town and pastoral common lands.
Time: 4h30–9h
1 lunch spot: the Bulmer Fox (3h–5h30 in)
3 end-of-walk rewards: the Angel, the White Horse, or Ree's
Warnings: Can be muddy.
Adapted from: Time Out Country Walks Volume 1.
Similar walks: the Saturday Walkers Club and Essex & South Suffolk Community Rail Partnership.

Kelvedon Circular via Grange Barn (Essex)
5 minutes direct from Marks Tey.
Gentle valley, river stretches, country lanes, green lanes, field boundaries, rolling Essex countryside, fields and woods.
Time: 5h
Warnings: Can be muddy.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Manningtree Circular via Parish Church of Stratford St Mary (Essex)
15 minutes direct from Marks Tey.
River valley, water meadows, arable fields, light woodland, estuary embankment, quaint villages and Constable-painted landscapes.
Time: 5h
Warnings: Can flood after rain.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Chappel and Wakes Colne to Bures (Essex)
6 minutes direct from Marks Tey.
Undulating hills, brooks, farms, mixed woodland, fishing lakes, thatched cottages and barns, river valley and golf course diversion.
Time: 5h30
Warnings: Can be very muddy.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).
Similar walk: Essex & South Suffolk Community Rail Partnership.

Kings Cross to Liverpool Street (Middlesex)
1 hour direct from Marks Tey.
Entirely flat, urban city-centre streets, royal parks, riverside Thames path, canal towpath and historic financial district.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Chelmsford to Wickford (Essex)
30 minutes direct from Marks Tey.
Recommended: Beautiful buildings and churches and amazing woodlands. A largely green route from central Chelmsford out through Galleywood, with clear, well-signposted paths through woodlands and farmers' fields and plus a stretch through the village of Stock. Can be combined with onward routes heading down to the coast.
Woodland: a fifth under tree cover.
Time: 5h–9h30
Warnings: Follows a busy road for a sixth of the walk.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Bures to Colchester Town (Essex)
15 minutes direct from Marks Tey.

Chelmsford to South Woodham Ferrers (Essex)
30 minutes direct from Marks Tey.
A good route with lots of field walking, on marked footpaths and bridleways with some road walking and starting along the Chelmer navigation and passing around the south of an RHS garden on a charming footpath. Care needed where verges are limited; some field sections likely very muddy in winter. Passes a pedestrian entrance to RHS Hyde Hall, where a short diversion reaches the Clover Cafe (outside the ticketed area).
Time: 4h30–9h
1 lunch spot: the Crown
Warnings: Crossing the A1060 between the Water Works and Sandon needs care as the road can be busy with fast traffic; a stretch of road walking on Crephedge Lane has very little verge until pavement is reached; field sections can be very muddy in winter.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Ipswich to Harwich Town (Suffolk)
30 minutes direct from Marks Tey.
A pleasant, mainly rural walk on footpaths and farm tracks through farmland, with some stiles and a couple of kissing gates. The approach into Ipswich is along the busy Wherstead Road and which has a pavement but is tedious. A diversion to Pin Mill is highly recommended. St Michael's church near Ipswich high school is open to the public.
Time: 5h30–11h
Lunch: There is also a shop at Chelmondiston.
Warnings: Some stiles and a kissing gate; sheep in fields near the Ipswich high school.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Braintree to Witham (Essex)
15 minutes direct from Marks Tey.
A good-surfaced route between two historic Essex market towns, following the River Brain and a branch line through countryside, with farm tracks and wide grassed field edges and a delightful old tree-and-ditch-lined lane. Good even in winter with no deep mud; a few stiles and bridges to climb. Follows the Essex Way through old Cressing. A church cafe at Black Notley is open most days for lunch; Cressing also has a few amenities if you divert into the village.
Time: 4h–8h
Lunch: A church cafe and a few small shops at Black Notley, and amenities at Cressing, both a short detour.
Warnings: Two short no-pavement sections on the B1018 where the road is 50mph; locals use the field edges or grass verge. A footpath near Tye Green can flood.
Walk details: Slow Ways.
Reverse direction: Essex & South Suffolk Community Rail Partnership.

Billericay to Chelmsford (Essex)
30 minutes direct from Marks Tey.
A route on mostly easy paths that get waterlogged and very muddy in places, crossing a golf course where the path is unclear and with some confusing navigation points. The Billericay-to-Stock half is lower quality and very muddy; the Stock-to-Chelmsford half has nice views and varied paths.
Time: 5h30–11h
Warnings: The path across Stock golf course is unclear and badly marked, seeming to go through the middle of holes. Take care crossing the fast-moving A414, which the main route crosses twice. Can be muddy.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Chelmsford to Witham (Essex)
30 minutes direct from Marks Tey.
Great views. A route through farmland and fields with great views, on clear, easy-to-follow paths, becoming built-up and residential near the towns. Muddy and wet underfoot near the canal in winter, some footpath sections become very overgrown with brambles and nettles and narrowing to a foot wide. An alternative is to join the canal towpath at Paper Mill Lock to avoid the section through Boreham (though the towpath can be muddy in winter).
Time: 5h30–10h30
1 lunch spot: Paper Mill Lock Tearooms
Warnings: A section of footpath near the property Latney's (south of the A12 west of Witham) can be heavily overgrown with brambles; further sections towards Wickham Bishops and Witham can be very overgrown with nettles and brambles and at times unmaintained where the path disappears; muddy near the canal in winter.
Walk details: Slow Ways.