This walk in west Dorset takes in an ancient sunken road and offers a glimpse of an unspoiled old-world village. Click into the photo gallery above to see a map of the route full-sized.  The medieval ...
Join a footpath at a gate/stile on the right and cross a paddock to a stile near the far right corner. Continue to the corner of the next field, cross a stile and then another on the right.
Carry straight on to another footbridge over the Marshaw Wyre then cross a gate stile and drop down to the riverbank with a wire fence and the river on the right. Keep on and cross a stile then ...
Take this fork and cross over a wall stile, ignoring the yellow arrow pointing left. Cross the field in a similar direction as you approached the wall and you see a gate in the opposite wall.
THE NATIONAL Trust announced that it has improved a 'popular' Wainwright route up to the Langdale Pikes from its Stickle ...
Use precise geolocation data and actively scan device characteristics for identification. This is done to store and access ...
Go over a stile beside a gate, forward across a paddock, through another gate and slightly left, downhill, across a second paddock. At the bottom of the hill, go through a gate, over a culvert ...
Turn right and follow the track around to a gate. There is a stile to the right of the gate. Cross this and follow the field edge with the boundary and the hill slope immediately on your right.
Leave the towpath on the right here following a stepped path down to a stile. Cross the paddock to a gate on the opposite side then enter a large field with two stiles on the far side. Aim for the ...
Dorset dialect poets William Barnes and Robert Young were both educated in Sturminster Newton. Barnes at the Endowed School for older boys before moving to Dorchester aged 16 in 1817; Young, after his ...
Stoops Bridge spans the Tarnbrook Wyre, and this joins the Marshaw Wyre just to the south of the hamlet. These two then become the river Wyre that eventually flows into the Irish Sea 28 miles away at ...