Pete's Walks- Hawridge, Chartridge End, Great Hivings (page 2 of 4)

If you are considering walking this route yourself, please see my disclaimer. You may also like to see these notes about the maps and GPX files.

Google map of the walk

I followed the lane up the opposite hillside, until it reached a minor road on the edge of Chartridge. I turned left and followed the road past a few houses and a couple of farms - I assume this hamlet is called Chartridge End, as that is the name of one of the farms and it is at the north-western end of Chartridge, about a mile from the main part of the village. After following the road for about half a mile, just before reaching a large white house called Chartridge Lodge, I turned left onto a public bridleway running along a track called Ashotts Lane. To begin with there were hedges either side, but after some distance, as I passed a white house on my right, the view opened up on my left. I could see along a valley to where I'd crossed it a short while before, and on towards some large farm buildings back at Dundridge Manor. The bridleway now dropped downhill into the valley

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Arrewig Lane (the name comes from the Saxon for 'way to the fields', apparently)

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View left from near the end of Arrewig Lane

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The minor road through Chartridge - I assume this first bit of the village is called Chartridge End, as that is the name of a farm here

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The minor road through Chartridge

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The start of Ashotts Lane

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Looking left from Ashotts Lane, taken from near the white house seen in an earlier photo (that was taken from the gap in the hedge in the valley bottom) - the farm buildings top right are at Dundridge Manor

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Ashotts Lane continuing down into the valley

The bridleway continued up the opposite side of the valley, still following a track with a hedgerow on my right. I then passed a small wood on my right. Where it ended, the bridleway turned slightly left but I chose to take a footpath going straight on. This ran through a rather overgrown meadow with a mature hedgerow on my left, then continued through a couple of paddocks to reach a minor road. Here I went left, following the road as it soon turned right. When the road then turned left, I went straight on along another minor road. I then turned right along a footpath starting near Bank Farm.

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Ashotts Lane continuing up the other side of the valley

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The start of the footpath that continues almost parallel to Ashotts Lane

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The footpath that continues almost parallel to Ashotts Lane

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The footpath that continues almost parallel to Ashotts Lane

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The start of the short road section

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The road after I went straight on where the first road turned left

I would now be following field paths south-eastwards for over a mile and a half to reach Captain's Wood I started by following a tall hedge on my left past some stable or farm buildings. Beyond this I passed a 'manège' where I saw a couple of goats. The path passed through a paddock or meadow, then crossed a stubble field, passing a lone tree in the middle of the field. It then continued along the left edge of a larger field of stubble, with pleasant views of the valley on my right. After a while the path turned left into a corner where it turned right. On reaching another corner it turned right for a few yards before turning left to continue southeastwards.

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The start of the footpath from Bank Farm southeast to Captain's Wood

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The path continuing past Bank Farm

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The path continuing southeast

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The path continuing southeast

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The path continuing southeast