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

Castle Cary Circular via Cadbury Castle (Camelot) (Somerset)
30 minutes direct from Pewsey.
Somerset Levels fringes, hillock, quiet residential streets, charming market town, dry green valley, ancient holloway, pastures, shallow river valley, hillfort plateau, steep ascents, large WWII airfield remains and broad plateau with views.
Time: 7h
Warnings: Steep ascents and descents.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Reading to Henley-on-Thames (Berkshire)
45 minutes direct from Pewsey.
Flat Thames towpath, riverside parks, wooded sections, pasture fields, meadows and riverside gardens.
Waterway: four fifths along the River Thames.
Time: 4h–8h
Warnings: Flood risk sections.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Reading to Shiplake (Berkshire)
45 minutes direct from Pewsey.
Flat Thames Path riverside countryside, the Horseshoe Bridge and the historic Bull Inn at Sonning (of Three Men in a Boat).
The River Thames: England's best-known river, whose towpath (the Thames Path National Trail) carries long stretches of nearly every walk in this set.
Time: 2h30
Warnings: Shared with cyclists between Reading and Sonning; walkers only beyond.
Walk details: Reading to Basingstoke Community Rail Partnership (turn-by-turn directions).

Westbury to Warminster (Wiltshire)
15 minutes direct from Pewsey.
Chalk downland, Iron Age hillforts, five hills, Salisbury Plain military range, abandoned village and sweeping views over Wiltshire and Somerset.
Time: 7h
Warnings: MOD closures apply.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Newbury to Goring & Streatley (Berkshire)
15 minutes direct from Pewsey.
Great views back over the Goring Gap. A long, varied country route through fields, woodland and along a canal, with few road sections and those mostly quiet country lanes. Crosses the undulating North Wessex Downs, with a couple of hills; the steepest is Streatley Hill near Goring. Mostly easy underfoot in dry weather and though some sections can be tricky in winter and a few paths have brambles to push through. Crosses the North Wessex Downs AONB; passes close to a shooting range at Growcroft Copse where dogs should be kept on leads. Can be broken at Yattendon, roughly two-thirds of the way along.
Woodland: a fifth under tree cover.
Time: 7h–14h
Lunch: There are also a convenience store at Yattendon and two pubs at Cold Ash, roughly a third of the way along.
Warnings: Cattle are present in fields along the route, including a field west of the Pot Kiln at Frilsham, where some walkers have been approached by a frisky herd; alternative footpaths can avoid this field.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Bedwyn to Hungerford (Wiltshire)
15 minutes direct from Pewsey.
A flat, easy canal towpath walk, mostly dry and firm underfoot but with some seasonal mud after wet weather; one short section can be especially bad. Some uneven ground and kissing gates and a narrow bridge. Railway stations at both ends make it an easy there-and-back by train.
Waterway: nine tenths along the Kennet and Avon Canal.
Time: 2h–4h30
Lunch: A cafe in Great Bedwyn, but it closes at 3pm.
Warnings: A railway crossing and a section of road through Great Bedwyn with no pavement, though traffic is light.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Goring & Streatley to Reading (Oxfordshire)
45 minutes direct from Pewsey.
Residential streets and a short lane out of Goring join the Thames Path to Whitchurch, a wooded stretch with steep inclines and steps. Then quiet lanes, gravel and metalled tracks and concrete farm paths north of the Thames through Mapledurham and with steep hills on the north side. The final water-meadow section near Goring can get muddy and flood in winter. Follows the Thames Path National Trail as far as Whitchurch, then lanes and footpaths north of the river. The route passes the Mapledurham and Hardwick estates with their horses and organic farm. The walk can be shortened by dropping into Pangbourne at Whitchurch.
Time: 4h–8h
1 lunch spot: the Greyhound Inn
End-of-walk reward: Caversham's Church Street, near the end, has plenty of amenities.
Warnings: Some residential roads have no pavement, though good verge paths exist on each side. The Hartslock woods section has steep inclines and steps. The water meadows can get muddy and sometimes flood in winter.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Taunton Circular via the East Dean Way (Somerset)
1 hour direct from Pewsey.

Hungerford to Newbury (Berkshire)
15 minutes direct from Pewsey.
A pleasant, flat and very direct walk almost entirely along the Kennet & Avon Canal towpath, with very few road crossings. Surface is mainly paved or gravelled and suitable for wheels and with a couple of mile-long grassy stretches that get muddy after rain and narrow in places when vegetation grows. Also follows National Cycle Network Route 4. Kintbury makes a convenient break, with public toilets by the canal, pubs, a shop and rail and bus links. Several benches near the bridges and locks.
Waterway: almost all along the Kennet and Avon Canal.
Time: 3h30–7h30
Lunch: Various shops and pubs at Kintbury, the natural break point.
Warnings: Two mile-long grassy stretches get muddy and slippery after rain and in winter, and the path narrows where vegetation grows.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Westbury to Melksham (Wiltshire)
15 minutes direct from Pewsey.

Westbury to Freshford (Wiltshire)
15 minutes direct from Pewsey.

Reading to Twyford (Berkshire)
45 minutes direct from Pewsey.
A largely riverside route following the River Kennet and then the Thames Path for a long stretch and with open fields and shaded paths. A narrow path past Sonning Lock with barbed-wire fences can become muddy in wet weather; the approach to Twyford is on a metalled road and through a country park. Follows the Thames Path and the Oscar Wilde Memorial Walk past the walls of Reading Gaol; passes Reading Abbey ruins and Abbey Gardens. A detour through Charvil Country Park gives respite from the main road.
Waterway: two thirds along the River Thames.
Reading Abbey: the ruins of a major medieval abbey founded by Henry I, beside the former Reading Gaol where Oscar Wilde was imprisoned.
Time: 3h–5h30
Lunch: Refreshments available at Sonning, roughly midway.
Warnings: An unavoidable stretch of the A3032 Old Bath Road has a narrow pavement near Twyford, and there is an annoying crossing of the A4.
Walk details: Slow Ways.