Long-distance footpaths in the United Kingdom
Many long-distance footpaths can be found crossing the United Kingdom, many of which are named, marked on maps and widely recognised. Some are termed by bureaucracy "National Trails" and maintained by the National Trails organisation.[1] Long Distance Routes or Great Trails within Scotland are administered and maintained by the local authority areas through which they pass, or in one case by its commercial sponsor.
A few of the routes are ancient ways, whose origins we may never know; the Icknield Way for example is so named in a document over a thousand years old and the way itself may be thousands older than that. Most others are new-minted, established in the twentieth or twenty-first centuries but created largely from pre-existing rights of way, of which countless cross the land.
The principal long-distance footpaths include:
Cleveland Way | 110 miles | round the edge of the North York Moors Yorkshire |
Cotswold Way | 101 miles | Somerset, Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire |
Glyndŵr's Way | 135 miles | Montgomeryshire, Radnorshire |
Great Glen Way | 73 miles | Inverness-shire |
Hadrian's Wall Path | 84 miles | Cumberland, Northumberland |
Moray Way | 95 miles | Morayshire, Banffshire |
North Downs Way | 153 miles | Kent, Surrey |
Offa's Dyke Path | 177 miles | Gloucestershire, Monmouthshire, Brecknockshire, Herefordshire, Radnorshire, Montgomeryshire, Shropshire, Denbighshire, Flintshire |
Peddars Way and Norfolk Coast Path (treated as one by National Trails) |
93 miles | Suffolk, Norfolk |
Pembrokeshire Coast Path | 185 miles | Pembrokeshire |
Pennine Bridleway | 119 miles | Derbyshire, Cheshire, Yorkshire, Lancashire, Co Durham, Cumberland, Northumberland, Roxburghshire |
Pennine Way | 267 miles | Derbyshire, Cheshire, Yorkshire, Lancashire, Co Durham, Cumberland, Northumberland, Roxburghshire |
The Ridgeway | 86 miles | Wiltshire, Berkshire, Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Hertfordshire |
Gore-Tex Scottish National Trail | 466 miles | from Kirk Yetholm to Cape Wrath |
South Downs Way | 99 miles | Sussex, Hampshire |
Southern Upland Way | 211 miles | Wigtownshire, Kirkcudbrightshire, Dumfriesshire, Peebleshire, Selkirkshire, Roxburghshire, Berwickshire |
South West Coast Path | 630 miles the UK's longest |
Somerset, Devon, Cornwall, Dorset |
Speyside Way | 84 miles | Morayshire, Inverness-shire, Banffshire |
Thames Path | 183 miles | Gloucestershire, Wiltshire, Berkshire, Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Middlesex, Surrey, Kent |
Ulster Way | 625 miles | Co Antrim, Co Londonderry, Tyrone, Fermanagh, Co Armagh, Co Down |
West Highland Way | 94 miles | Stirlingshire, Argyll, Perthshire, Inverness-shire |
Yorkshire Wolds Way | 79 miles | Yorkshire |
European walking routes
Several European walking routes pass through the United Kingdom, on the assumption that a man may walk from Constantinople to Edinburgh, to which certain physical objections may be raised, not to mention political ones. Nevertheless, European bureaucracy decrees them, maps them and spends our money to promote them for its own reason. They all use sections of British long-distance paths.
- E2 from Stranraer to Dover, with an alternative route to Harwich
- E8 from Liverpool to Hull
- E9 from Plymouth to Dover
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Long-distance footpaths in the United Kingdom) |
- The Long Distance Walkers Association: Long distance paths database
- Ramblers' Association: Paths and routes
- Scottish National Coastal Route
- Scotland's Great Trails