The
Wealdway,
Kent and
East Sussex, is a public footpath that runs from
Gravesend,
Kent on the
Thames estuary, to the A259 at
Eastbourne, 3km north of
Beachy Head.
The Wealdway was conceived in 1970 by members of the Ramblers' Association as route through the Kentish and Sussex Weald, providing a link between the routes north of the Thames and the start of the South Downs Way. It would also provide a return circuit for users of the Saxon Shore Way. The first route descriptions were published in the mid seventies, but the poor state of the rights of way between Uckfield and Eastbourne delayed publication until 1981. Motorway Construction work and the building of the Tonbridge Flood Relief Barrier forced many changes to the original route.
Route
Leave
Gravesend and cross the A2 at
Tollgate, on through
Sole Street and
Luddesdown climbing to the
North Downs Way at
Trottiscliffe. Descend the scarp slope of the
North Downs, cross the
M20 and
A20, go through
Platt, and
Meresworth Woods to
Gover Hill, where the
Medway valley comes into view. Down to
West Peckham, Barnes Street and thus to the Medway. The way now takes the riverside path upstream for a full 6 miles, through
Tonbridge to Hayesden, where it heads due south, under the railway and under the Tonbridge bypass climbing to the ridge at
Bidborough and through to Modest Corner,
Southborough. From here to the A264, at Stone Cross, the route follows a mixture of paths and roads. You now leave Kent, and follow the contour before dropping down into the upper Medway valley and on to
Withyham. The path follows a metalled drive, with good views to the north and south, leading to
Five Hundred Acre Wood, the setting of
A. A. Milne's,
Christopher Robin and
Pooh bear books. The wood was first enclosed in 1693, and the path dedicated as a right of way, by the owner in 1970. The path still rises to Greenwood Gate Clump, at the top of the
Ashdown Forest 720 ft above mean sea level, then on high ground to Camp Hill and on to Browns Brook Cottage. Now on to Buxted Park,
Uckfield, round
Blackboys, with its
Youth Hostel,
East Hoathy through
Chiddingly to Gun Hill walking through
arable and
pasture interspersed with
coppices. The path descends into the
Cuckmere valley at
Hellingly through to the
A22 south of Horsebridge. Now
Upper Dicker and the
River Cuckmere to
Arlington and to
Wilmington, East Sussex and the 226 ft high
chalk figure, the
Long Man. The path climbs then falls towards
Jevington, and climbs to
Willingdon Hill, 659ft. Here, it is 2 miles downhill to the
Eastbourne Youth Hostel on the
A259.
External links
Ramblers' Association.
References