Stonegate Circular Walk

Remote, rolling Hills, Burwash for Lunch and Batemans (NT, Rudyard Kipling's home)

View into the valley Nearing Burwash Stonegate to Robertsbridge
View into the valley

Nearing Burwash Stonegate to Robertsbridge

Feb-10 • moontiger on Flickr

book2 burwash walk19 walkicon swcwalks 4375075625

Greenery Stonegate Circular
Greenery

Stonegate Circular

Jun-15 • moontiger on Flickr

book2 walk19 walkicon swcwalks 18502246434

walk_19_pc_Morning
walk_19_pc_Morning

Feb-05 • Peter Conway on Flickr

swcwalks book2 walk19 37152221782

walk_19_pc_View_from_near_Burwash
walk_19_pc_View_from_near_Burwash

Feb-05 • Peter Conway on Flickr

swcwalks book2 walk19 36487235184

walk_19_pc_Approaching_Burwash
walk_19_pc_Approaching_Burwash

Feb-05 • Peter Conway on Flickr

swcwalks book2 walk19 37152221012

Burwash Weald & Bateman's

Length

Standard walk: 15.5 km (9.6 miles) 4 hours 45mins. For the whole outing including trains, sights and meals allow 9 hours 15mins

Short walk: 10km (6.2 miles) 3 hours walking time.

Long walk: 29.5km (18.3 miles), 6 hours (fast pace) 9 hours (relaxed pace) walking time.

Maps

OS LandRanger Map No. 199. OS Explorer Map Nos. 136 and 124 (for part of the long walk). Stonegate (station), (map 199) reference TQ 659 272 is in East Sussex, 14km south east of Tunbridge Wells.

Toughness

3 out of 10

Features

This walk is an good introduction to the Weald, a part of East Sussex which is less well known by walkers than the Chilterns. But its relative quiteness is one of its attractions. Passing over gentle hills and into tranquil valleys, through classic English wood and pastureland, its attractions include the unspoiled village of Burwash for lunch, and Bateman's, the one time rural retreat of Rudyard Kipling. In summer one stretch before lunch through Upper Collingtons wood can become quite overgrown with nettles and brambles, so wear long trousers and select a suitable stick on entering the wood. For those venturing on the long walk section after lunch at Burwash Common, this could with some justification be described as a wilderness walk.

Walk Options

Shortcuts

You may reduce the length of the walk by over 4km to 10km (6.2 miles) by following the main route directions given until [5]. Then follow the shortened route directions to then pick up the main route directions at [8]

Alternatively you may catch the 318 bus (Mon - Fri hourly service until 18.00, Sat every other hour until 16.00. Not Sun) from Burwash High Street to Etchingham station (one stop down the line from Stonegate) Traveline 0870 6082608. Note: Buy a return rail ticket to Etchingham.

Longer Walk

You may increase the length of the walk by 14km to 29.5km (18.3 miles) by following the main route directions given until [6]. Then follow the Lengthened route directions and then pick up the main route directions at [10].

You may vary the end of this walk and finish in Wadhurst for tea. This increases the length of the long walk by 3km to 32.5km (20.2 miles). Follow the Lengthened route directions to [L5], then follow the Alternative Ending for the Long walk at Wadhurst directions, to link up with the standard Wadhurst directions at [8].

Finish in Robertsbridge

The Stonegate Variations document (see top of page) offers an alternative ending in Robertsbridge.

SWC Walk 112 Stonegate to Robertsbridge offers a different, more direct route to Robertsbridge.

History

Burwash dates back to Norman times. The Church of St. Bartholomew was built in 1090 although the tower is all that remains of the original Norman structure. The church houses the rare 16th century Geneva Bible discovered in 1954 among a collection of old books in the church vestry. During the late 17th and 18th centuries Burwash along with many other villages in the area was a haven for smuggling, a capital crime for which several villagers were executed. Originally the Revenue had been insistent that the smugglers may not be buried in consecrated ground; although a compromise was reached whereby their headstones were carved with the skull and cross bones. Several such headstones are to be found in the churchyard; although some are fairly weathered the marking is still quite distinguishable.

There is also a memorial plaque in the church to John Kipling (Rudyard's son) who was reported missing, believed killed at the age of 18, in his first battle (the Battle of Loos) on the Western Front in 1915.

Bateman's (tel 01435 882302, www.nationaltrust.org.uk) Bateman's House (former home of Rudyard Kipling) is now owned by the National Trust. Kipling lived at Bateman's from 1902 until his death in 1936. His wife, Carrie, who died in 1939, left Bateman's to the National Trust, as a memorial to her husband.

The house is open daily except Thursday and Friday from late March until late September 11am - 5pm.

Travel

Take the train nearest to 10.15am (before or after) from Charing Cross station to Stonegate. Journey time is just over an hour. Trains back from Stonegate run once an hour.

If you are intending to cut the walk short at Burwash by taking a bus to Etchingham buy a day return to Etchingham.

By car

Stonegate station car park currently costs £2.00 weekdays and is free at weekends.

Lunch

Standard walk / Short walk The suggested lunchtime stop is the Rose and Crown (tel 01435 882600), 6km from the start of the walk, which serves pub food from 12 to 2pm Monday to Friday, and from 12 to 2.30pm Saturday and Sunday - 160 metres west down the High Street from the church. Alternatively you could try The Bear Inn (tel 01435 882260), 90 metres further west.

Long walk / Standard walk late alternate The Wheel Inn (tel 01435 882299), Burwash Weald, 10km from the start of the walk, which is open all day and serves inventive lunchtime food from 12 to 3pm daily. (The Bell Inn, opposite the Church of St. Bartholomew has closed.)

Picnic Virtually anywhere along the route would be a good picnic spot.

Tea

Standard walk The suggested tea stop is at The Wheel Inn (tel 01435-882299) Alternatively, for those who visit Bateman's there is a tea-room in the grounds.

Long walk / Short walk There is no tea stop after Burwash Weald / Burwash. However near the end of the walk at point [9] you may continue straight ahead (detailed in the instructions) to a Farm shop which sells cold drinks. (If finishing the Long walk at Wadhurst then there is the recommended Wealden Wholefoods Gallery Café; or if closed then the White Hart pub.)

Book

This walk was originally published in Time Out Country Walks near London volume 2. We now recommend using this online version as the book is dated.

Profile
Help Us!

After the walk, please leave a comment, it really helps. Thanks!

You can also upload photos to the SWC Group on Flickr (upload your photos) and videos to Youtube. This walk's tags are:

swcwalks
book2
walk19
By Train

Out (not a train station)

Back (not a train station)

By Car

Start Map Directions

Amazon
Help

National Rail: 03457 48 49 50 • Traveline (bus times): 0871 200 22 33 (12p/min) • TFL (London) : 0343 222 1234

Version

Feb-22 DAC

Copyright © Saturday Walkers Club. All Rights Reserved. No commercial use. No copying. No derivatives. Free with attribution for one time non-commercial use only. www.walkingclub.org.uk/site/license.shtml

Walk Directions

Full directions for this walk are in a PDF file (link above) which you can print, or download on to a Kindle, tablet, or smartphone.

This is just the introduction. This walk's detailed directions are in a PDF available from wwww.walkingclub.org.uk