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United Kingdom
Related: About this forum'You can walk virtually everywhere in England by using the train': the man connecting rail-based walks
Last edited Tue Apr 30, 2024, 05:41 PM - Edit history (1)
https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2024/apr/30/you-can-walk-virtually-everywhere-in-england-by-using-the-train-the-man-connecting-rail-based-walksYou can walk virtually everywhere in England by using the train: the man connecting rail-based walks
A new website aims to offer a wide network of walking routes from British train stations, and is calling on hikers to add their favourites. Our writer accompanies the founder on a ramble to Bath Spa station
Ben Lerwill
Tue 30 Apr 2024 02.00 EDT
A British railway station can be many things. A place of tended flowers and toytown paintwork. A concourse of shuttered ticket booths and overpriced pasties. A terminus, a meeting spot, a gateway to escape. It can be heart-lifting or drab, bathed in birdsong or heaving with commuters. It can also be the starting point for a properly good walk.
National Rail serves 2,593 stations, their locations scattered across the map like cartographic confetti. Many of them sit directly on longstanding hiking trails or within a short distance of paths worth exploring. In a large number of cases, its possible to walk between two stations following rights of way, rendering a car or taxi redundant.
Such routes are frequently scenic but often little-known, giving value to the prospect of a dedicated database of station-to-station walks. Might a disembarkation at Ffairfach, Whatstandwell or Crianlarich be the passport to your next hike? Quite possibly which is where the recently launched Railwalks.co.uk comes in. Its aim is to create a crowd-sourced national network of rail-based walking routes, mostly ranging from two to 20 miles.
If youd asked me 20 years ago how much of Britain you could walk through while using public transport, I would have imagined, like everyone else, not very much, says founder Steve Melia, an academic, author and one-time Lib Dem parliamentary candidate who gave up flying in 2005 and driving in 2009. I discovered that thats not true. You can walk virtually everywhere in England by train and bus, but mainly trains and a lot of Wales and Scotland.
[...]
A new website aims to offer a wide network of walking routes from British train stations, and is calling on hikers to add their favourites. Our writer accompanies the founder on a ramble to Bath Spa station
Ben Lerwill
Tue 30 Apr 2024 02.00 EDT
A British railway station can be many things. A place of tended flowers and toytown paintwork. A concourse of shuttered ticket booths and overpriced pasties. A terminus, a meeting spot, a gateway to escape. It can be heart-lifting or drab, bathed in birdsong or heaving with commuters. It can also be the starting point for a properly good walk.
National Rail serves 2,593 stations, their locations scattered across the map like cartographic confetti. Many of them sit directly on longstanding hiking trails or within a short distance of paths worth exploring. In a large number of cases, its possible to walk between two stations following rights of way, rendering a car or taxi redundant.
Such routes are frequently scenic but often little-known, giving value to the prospect of a dedicated database of station-to-station walks. Might a disembarkation at Ffairfach, Whatstandwell or Crianlarich be the passport to your next hike? Quite possibly which is where the recently launched Railwalks.co.uk comes in. Its aim is to create a crowd-sourced national network of rail-based walking routes, mostly ranging from two to 20 miles.
If youd asked me 20 years ago how much of Britain you could walk through while using public transport, I would have imagined, like everyone else, not very much, says founder Steve Melia, an academic, author and one-time Lib Dem parliamentary candidate who gave up flying in 2005 and driving in 2009. I discovered that thats not true. You can walk virtually everywhere in England by train and bus, but mainly trains and a lot of Wales and Scotland.
[...]
Railwalks:
https://www.railwalks.co.uk/
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'You can walk virtually everywhere in England by using the train': the man connecting rail-based walks (Original Post)
sl8
Apr 2024
OP
intrepidity
(8,254 posts)1. I can walk anywhere using my car. nt
sl8
(16,307 posts)3. LOL. The title *is* a bit odd.
I'm assuming it was deliberate, but maybe not.
Lonestarblue
(12,541 posts)2. Public transportation in Europe is so convenient compared to the US.
Wed rather have gas-guzzling cars and huge parking lots everywhere so people dont have to walk more than 20 whole steps to get to a store.
Martin68
(25,409 posts)4. Part of the point is that the public in the UK have a right to use walking trails that go through private land.