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.
I continued straight through the hamlet, the byway continuing through a gate and along a track a short way before descending through a wood. On the far side of the wood I went through a tall gate, and turned left onto a footpath which quickly reached the corner of an empty pasture.The footpath continued across a large meadow, gradually moving away from the left-hand hedge until it reached a gate in the right-hand hedge. It went left after the gate, following a hedge and then a fence to the next field corner. It then crossed the next field diagonally, half-right, towards Norcott Court Farm.
The path from Tom's Hill
The path from Tom's Hill
The path from Tom's Hill
View from where the path from Tom's Hill leaves the wood
The footpath to Norcott Court Farm
The footpath to Norcott Court Farm
The footpath to Norcott Court Farm
The footpath approaching Norcott Court Farm
In the far corner of the field I went through a gate and followed a short path past the outbuildings of Norcott Court Farm before turning left along the farm drive. After a few yards the footpath went right, along a track - sadly there were no Alpacas to be seen in any of the fields around the farm, there usually are. I followed the track until another path went right, between a hedge and a fence on the right. I soon reached another path junction, where I turned left and crossed a field to reach a footbridge over a railway line. The path continued across another field to reach a lane, where I turned right to head into the hamlet of Cow Roast. The lane soon turned left to go over the Grand Union Canal.
The footpath from Norcott Court Farm
The path from Norcott Court Farm approaching the railway line
The path from Norcott Court Farm just after the railway line
The Grand Union Canal at Cow Roast
At the end of the lane I crossed a main road (the A4521, the old A41 before the dual carriageway was built). I was saddened to see the Cow Roast Inn was still all boarded up, as it had been the last time I did this walk. Just to the right of the pub I took another byway, passing sports fields on my righ. The byway continued between hedgerows and past a cottage to reach a lane, where I turned left and went under a bridge carrying the A41 dual carriageway. A footpath then went right, initially along a concrete drive, then turning half-left between hedges. After a few yards I forked half-left through the hedge on my left, this path crossing a corner of a bean field. The path then continued along the bottom of a valley following a fenceline between paddocks. At the far side of the paddocks I entered Lower Wood.
The byway from Cow Roast
The byway from Cow Roast
The start of the footpath to Wigginton
The path to Wigginton
The path to Wigginton, running through the paddocks