Pete's Walks- Maidensgrove and Greys Court (page 2 of 5)

The path continued through Coney Burrow, joining a farm track at one point. After a while the path went straight on where the track went right, at this point moving from an area of conifers into a typical Chiltern beech wood, Bushey Copse. As usual, white arrows painted on trees every so often guided the way, then the path left the wood and crossed an arable field to reach the A4130 main road in the village of Bix.

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The path through Coney Burrow

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The path through Coney Burrow

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The path continuing through Bushy Wood

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The path continuing to Bix

Across the road, I went down what looked like a lane but which a fingerpost indicated was actually a 'Restricted Byway'. After a couple of hundred yards or so, I turned left onto a footpath through a wood named Hatch Copse. After a while I passed some farm buildings on my left, and soon after the path descended into a valley, continuing along a strip of grass in the valley bottom. I was now in Earl's Wood.

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The public byway from Bix, across the A4130 main road

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The start of the path through Hatch Copse

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Lesser Celandine

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The path through Hatch Copse

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The path through Hatch Copse

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The path through Hatch Copse

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The same path, roughly on the boundary between Hatch Copse and Earl's Wood

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The footpath continuing south through Earl's Wood

After a few hundred yards I turned left at the junction, initially along a gravelly track. When the track then turned left the footpath continued ahead, soon turning right and passing a pond or reservoir on the left just before it exited from Earl's Wood. The path then turned left and followed a fence on the left through a large empty meadow or pasture. Beyond this field I turned right and soon entered a wood, rather mysteriously named Famous Copse. I ignored a path going left immediately, and went straight on, close to the western edge of the wood on my right. On the southern edge of the wood, I turned left and then immediately half-right onto a permissive path along the edge of the wood again. I left the wood when this path met another path coming in from my left.

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The start of the path going east through Earl's Wood

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The path continuing east from Earl's Wood to Famous Copse

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The footpath going south through Famous Copse

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The permissive path along the edge of famous Copse

At this point there are two paths going south from the wood across a meadow or pasture. I took the left-most one (the other one, which I usually take, wasn't really visible in the grass today). The path went almost straight across to a gate in a corner. I then crossed a drive and took a footpath that ran to the left of a farmyard. Beyond the farm buildings or sheds the path went through two gates in quick succession, then followed a fence on my left. The path passed a pond and then continued across a meadow to reach the car park for Greys Court, a National Trust property (unsurprisingly the car park was very busy as today was a Bank Holiday).

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The leftmost of the two paths going south from Famous Copse

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Near the start of the path to Greys Court

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Lesser Celandine

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The path to Greys Court

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Pond beside the path to Greys Court

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The path to Greys Court

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The path to Greys Court