Cotswold Way Association News

News

Surfacing work at Dovers Hill

The CWA has contributed £1,500 towards the recently completed re-surfacing of 250m of the Cotswold Way between Chipping Campden and Dover’s Hill which was muddy and slippery due to heavy use.  The work was carried out by Gloucestershire Highways and was also funded by Robert Welch the well known cutlery and tableware designer whose shop is in Chipping Campden. The new surface of crushed Cotswold stone looks very yellow at the moment but will weather nicely in the coming months and years.

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Contours Walking Holidays

For more than 25 years, Contours Holidays has specialised in providing unforgettable adventures in the Great British countryside. Whether you choose to walk, run, cycle or mountain bike, we can help you discover the UK landscapes at your own pace with our vast range of customisable, self-guided point-to-point holidays. Head out solo, with family, or even with your dog; we have fantastic tours to suit almost everyone. Let’s get out there!

Many thanks for your support in joining the CWA as a business member.

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Fixing a slippery path at Weston

One of the CWA’s first projects was to install a 40m handrail on a slippery slope of the Cotswold Way near Weston, Bath.  This has been so well used that walkers have eroded a gully which is getting washed out and slippery again.  We are pleased to report that the CWA have funded re-surfacing on this section with the work being carried out by the Cotswold Wardens using EcoGrid and gravel.  

We hope that this approach will be successful and that the approach can be used as an alternative to steps on other sections of our trails. Here is a detailed description of what was done  –  Note on surfacing of slippery paths  

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Cotswold Distillery

Nestled in the heart of the Cotswolds, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, The Cotswolds Distillery been lovingly crafting delicious, award-winning spirits since 2014. They have shops in both Broadway, Bourton-on-the-Water and Stourton where you can pop in and try their spirits!  Find out more information HERE

Many thanks for your support in joining the CWA as a business member.

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Cotswold Trail Events

The CWA welcomes “Cotswold Trail Events” as a business member.

Cotswold Trail Events is the new home of the Cotswold Way Century and Broadway Marathon & Half Marathon. The Cotswold Way Century is a single-stage trail running event that takes place along public rights of way. From Chipping Campden to Bath Abbey. The Broadway Marathon / Half Marathon starts and finishes in scenic Broadway village, the route follows trails and roads among picturesque villages, woodlands, and, most importantly, hills. The majority of the course is trail or unpaved track

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“Cotswold WayMarker” Newsletter

You can find up-to-date information about CWA activities on Facebook and Twitter, but if you would also like to receive copies of the CWA’s newsletter (the Cotswold WayMarker), just forward your email details to info@cwa.wpbrewery.com.  

Here is the latest edition Cotswold WayMarker – March 2022

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A new memorial bench to Cyril Trenfield

Those familiar with the Cotswold Way near Dyrham will have seen the memorial bench to Cyril Trenfield who, along with Tony Drake, created the Cotswold Way over 50 years ago.  Sadly the bench had rotted in the damp shaded ground, but the good news is that CWA has funded a replacement bench which has been recently erected by the Cotswold Voluntary Wardens a bit further up the trail with fine views across the Severn valley and Hinton Hill Fort.

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New Business and Life Members

We are pleased to welcome Martin Turner and Tim Lawrence as Life members and Cotswold Woodcraft and Willans Solicitors who all joined in October.

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Leckhampton Hill Project Completed

As you’ll see from the before and after photographs below, the project on Leckhampton Hill above Cheltenham was completed in September 2021 with the generous support of the HF Holidays Pathways Fund. The result is ALL users now have access to the hill’s escarpment. Practically, the project involved re-ramping, smoothing and grading a 2-3 metre wide path on both sides of a gate virtually impassable by a wheelchair or pushchair. Logistically, it meant having to deliver to the site some 150 tonnes of limestone dust and Cotswold stone.

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HF Holidays support CWA Accessibility Project

The CWA Trustees are delighted to report that HF Holidays  have agreed to fully fund a major accessibility project on Leckhampton Hill.  To quote from HF’s response to the CWA’s application to its Pathway Fund:

‘Were particularly encouraged by the opportunity that this project allows us to support our strategic goal of driving sustainability and that this project will allow walkers, families and disabled users to have access coupled with the opportunity to recover damage to the SSSI area of the Leckhampton Hill escarpment area of outstanding natural beauty’.

The background is that, on the Cotswold Way on Leckhampton Hill (SO 9523 1850), there’s a gate with extremely rough stony ground either side. The west side is barely passable by a disabled outdoor mobility scooter or pushchair. The east side is NOT passable at all. A flat area to the side of the path is being used to bypass the gate, but is damaging the SSSI (Site of Special Scientific Interest) in the process. 

The completed project will allow ALL users (walkers, families and disabled users) to have access to the majority of the Leckhampton Hill escarpment. Essentially it will involve re-ramping, smoothing and grading a 2-3 metre wide path on both sides of the gates. The work will involve some 150 tonnes of limestone dust and Cotswold stone and is expected to cost £7,500. It’s hoped to start the work in September, which will in accordance with Cheltenham Borough Council and Gloucestershire Public Rights of Way Office specifications.

The HF Pathways Fund has, for many years, provided assisted holidays to those who could not otherwise afford one. In addition, since 1998, the fund has helped to protect and improve the countryside where HF Holidays’ guests walk. This is achieved through generous donations from HF Holidays’ members and guests. HF Holidays offers guided walking holidays along the Cotswold Way from Harrington House at Bourton on the Water.

Here is a Mark Richards’ pen & ink drawing of the Devil’s Chimney that’s one of Leckhampton Hill’s outstanding features.

 

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Many thanks Lucy …

Lucy Miller is a long-distance runner who hails from Bath. Since January, she’s been quietly improving her fitness running the Cotswold Way in short segments. The more she’s done so, she says, the more she’s fallen in love with the trail’s picturesque and rugged remoteness. She decided the best way she could celebrate the Cotswold Way’s 50th anniversary was to set herself the challenge of running the 50 miles or so from Combe to Bath. In doing so, she hopes to raise £250 to support the CWA’s trail maintenance and improvement work.

Lucy’s run will take place on Sunday 2nd May 2021. She’ll be starting at Coombe near Wotton-Under-Edge at 8.00 and hopes to make Great Pulteney St in Bath around 14.00  It’s not a race, Lucy emphasises, but a one-off unsupported event.

Please make a donation if you can. Just click on Virgin Money Giving for the dedicated fundraising page Lucy’s set up.

Please also look out for Lucy on 2 May and give her your encouragement and support. Here’s a rough idea of planned timetable and where you might see her:

Coombe: 8.00

Hawkesbury Upton (10km): 9.00

Coomb’s End (20km): 10.30

Dyrham Park (30km): 11.30

Pipley Barn Cafe (40 km); 12.45

Great Pulteney St, Bath (50 km)

Many thanks and very best wishes from the CWA Trustees

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Improvements at Wotton-under-Edge

The Cotswold Way at Coombe near Wotton-under-Edge was often flooded. Resurfacing work by the Gloucestershire Rights of Way team in partnership with the CWA should stop this happening again. Here are before and after photos:

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Improvements near Hamswell

The programme of improvements to the surface of the Cotswold Way in busy gateways continues with a repeat of the treatment recently carried out at Broadway, but this time near Hamswell, just north of Bath.  Cows have been encroaching on the area and making the area very difficult in the winter.  The work was carried out by a team of Cotswold Wardens from Avon District.

 

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New gate at Stumps Cross

The popularity of the Cotswold Way means that gates get very heavy use and eventually wear out.  This is the case at Stumps Cross, between Stanway and Hailes, and as a result the CWA has funded a smart new wooden kissing gate.  The installation was carried out by a work party from the North District of the Cotswold Wardens.

 

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Improved drainage near Broadway

The most popular section of the Cotswold Way is between Broadway and the Tower and walkers will probably notice an improvement to one of the soggiest parts of the route. Working with the Cotswold Wardens, we’ve put down geo-textile, ecogrid, stone and a french drain to fix the problem. Many thanks to Neil Hilton of Broadway for his generous donation to make this possible.

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Information Board on Selsley Common SSSI

The Cotswold Way Association is pleased to be supporting the installation of an information board near the Cotswold Way on the Selsley Common SSSI.  Selsley Common SSSI press release 

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Alan Hooper

The CWA Trustees deeply regret to announce that our Secretary Alan Hooper passed away on the 22nd March after bravely battling a long illness.  We are very appreciative of Alan’s work for the CWA and the Cotswold Voluntary Wardens.  He will be greatly missed.

 

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Tell us how we can improve our Trails …

 

The CWA is working with the Cotswold AONB Trails Officer to identify projects which the Trustees can support.  The sort of things we have in mind are …

  • Provision of handrails to help on the steeper slopes. 
  • Surface improvements in sections that are particularly muddy.
  • Modifications to gates and replacing stiles to make sections of the trails more accessible to child buggies, wheelchairs and  “Tramper” disability scooters.

The Cotswold Way and its circular routes are the CWA’s priority but the Trustees will also consider funding improvements on other named Cotswold trails.  These are the Winchcombe, Wardens, Windrush and Diamond Ways, plus the Cotswold sections of the Wychavon, Monarchs, Macmillan, Heart of England, Gloucestershire and Wysis Ways.

We hope to compile a list of projects at the end of April so that they can be prioritized for implementation during the summer.

Please send your suggestions to John Bartram at info@cwa.wpbrewery.com or Simon Mallatratt at admin@cwa.wpbrewery.com  

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More improvements to more muddy gates…

Just before Christmas, a small team of Cotswold Wardens used the successful model adopted in Broadway to improve the drainage of three muddy and flooded kissing gates on the Cotswold Way near Old Sodbury.  The locations are shown here

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Improving muddy kissing gates.

Kissing gates undoubtedly improve access on the Cotswold Way but their constant use often makes them wet and muddy so the CWA has embarked on a trial project to improve the surface around a few kissing gates.  The first project has been completed on a gate where the trail crosses West End Lane, SW of Broadway using eco plastic grid, geo-textile and gravel.  The location is point A as shown here.

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