Pete's Walks- Cowleaze Wood, Studdridge Farm, Christmas Common (page 3 of 5)

I crossed the road and started walking half-right across Ibstone Common, heading first towards the prominent Millennium Stone. Beyond the stone I continued roughly in the same direction, on a path heading towards a corner of the common (I had a chat with a dog walker here, who wondered if I'd seen any deer). I sat on a seat on the edge of the common to eat my lunch, then went through a metal pedestrian gate a few yards from the corner of the common. I was now back on the route of the Chiltern Way, as it descended on a bridleway through Commonhill Wood (possibly the same one I'd been through on the other side of the road earlier) back to the Wormsley Valley. Part way down the hill, I stayed on the the Chiltern Way when it took a path that went left from the bridleway, soon leaving the wood and bearing right along a field edge to continue downhill to the bottom of the Wormsley Valley. This was a very pleasant section of the walk, but again the usual good views of the Wormsley Valley were restricted by the low cloud and misty condition.

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Ibstone Common

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The start of the bridleway from Ibstone into Commonhill Wood

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The bridleway from Ibstone in Commonhill Wood

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The bridleway from Ibstone in Commonhill Wood

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The bridleway from Ibstone in Commonhill Wood

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View over the Wormsley valley from the edge of Commonhill Wood

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The path from Commonhill Wood down into the Wormsley Valley

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The path from Commonhill Wood down into the Wormsley Valley - you can see the path continuing across the next field

In the valley bottom the path crossed a bridleway on a farm track. I stayed on the path as it continued across a large grassy field. It then crossed another of the drives on the Wormsley estate, and then dropped slightly downhill across the corner of another field. I went a few yards right along another drive, then took a footpath on the left. A short distance further on I came to a path junction, where I turned left, keeping on the Chiltern Way

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The path continuing across the next field, after crossing a bridleway

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The next field, after crossing a Wormsley Estate drive

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The Chiltern Way after it goes left from another Wormsley Estate drive

The path ran through Blackmoor Wood, at first through a fairly flat area, then turning right and going gradually uphill. Here most of the trees seemed to be young beech with a few silver birch, similar to Hartmoor wood earlier. Eventually the path reached a slightly more open area, an 'Open Access' area which was more like a common than a wood, and then ended at a minor road in Northend (part of the parish of Turville).

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The Chiltern Way in Blackmoor Wood, just after it goes left at a path junction

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The Chiltern Way in Blackmoor Wood, now rising quite steeply

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The Chiltern Way in Blackmoor Wood

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The Chiltern Way emerging from Blackmoor Wood into the Open Access area at Northend

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The Open Access area at Northend