Pete's Walks - Little Missenden, Winchmore Hill, Amersham Old Town (page 3 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 crossed this second street and continued straight on along another path, starting through a pub car park and passing left of the pub. It continued for a while between old hedgerows until it emerged in a field. It immediately turned right and shortly after turned left in a corner, continuing alongside a hedge. On reaching a path crossroads I turned left. This path ran along a grassy headland between fields. Further on it ran between a fence and a tall hedgerow on my right, rising gently uphill towards the right end of a row of large houses (one of which is Coleshill House according to the OS map).

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The path from Coleshill

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The path from Coleshill

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The path after I turned left, heading towards Coleshill House

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The path heading towards Coleshill House

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The path heading towards Coleshill House

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The path heading towards Coleshill House

The path ended at a bend in a road where I went straight on. When the road turned right, I took a footpath going half-left. This started downhill in a 'sunken lane' with hedges on each embankment. On reaching a field the gradient eased, and I just followed the path gently downhill (I soon spotted my first Field Pansies of 2026 along here) for over half a mile, with a pleasant view ahead of me.

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The road (near Coleshill House)

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The path to Amersham Old Town

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The path to Amersham Old Town

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Field Pansy

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The path to Amersham Old Town

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The path to Amersham Old Town

On reaching a paved path on the edge of Amersham, I turned left and went over a footbridge over the A413 main road. The path soon turned right and reached a path T-junction, where I went left. At the end of the path, I went a few yards left and turned right to follow a path downhill through an old meadow (it looked like something was about to be built there). On reaching a side street I turned left, and then turned left again at its end, into Whielden Street in Amersham Old Town. After one or two hundred yards I turned right along a footpath that started along a roughly surfaced street called The Platt.

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The bridge over the A413 main road

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Path through meadow on edge of Amersham Old Town

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Whielden Street