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Hungarton Walks
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Hungarton Parish WalksAbout
HungertonWhere
is Hungarton? Hungarton is a pleasant village with houses showing the
red and buff brick chequer pattern as built by Shukbrugh Ashby who lived in the village in the mid 18th
century. Date stones between 1766 and 1755 can be seen on several buildings. Traveline which allows users to search by postcode and places of interest. There are other features including detailed maps of the journey, walking distances and public transport timetable downloads.
About
the Walks
- There are 2 walks in the Hungarton area: 3.5 and 4 miles.
- Starting
for both walks park in Church Lane, by the church
- All of the paths are waymarked.
To order a paper copy
of
the Parish Walk leaflet to be delivered to you, please email customerservices@leics.gov.uk
or telephone 0116 305 8160 quoting the leaflet you want and your name and address. The
Routes
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Walk 1 5.75km (3.5miles), allow 1 3/4 hours, undulating countryside,
some stretches can be very muddy.
From the church walk up the hill and around the bend. Take the track opposite the
chapel and onto the footpath through the field on the left. Continue to the right hand corner of the
field to reach the road. A. Turn right and cross to the footpath.
Follow the waymarks through the fields, passing to the right of a large house and ground, enjoying splendid
views of Charnwood Forest to your left. On reaching a field with a large farm to the far left corner
walk with the direction of the ridge and furrow to meet a stile and hand gate leading to a concrete
track. B. Turn right and proceed along the track. The
hawthorn hedges either side of this track are a haven for wildlife. Go straight
on to the unclassified county road into Baggrave Park. As the road bends to the right, leave it to continue
straight on following the bridleway. This path can be very muddy in winter Baggrave
was once a village with a church but was deserted by 1500. The site of the village lies south of the
Hall which is hidden in the valley to your left. C. Pass the
farm building on your left and cross the track to go through the wood beyond, to reach the road. Turn
right and right again onto Hungarton Road. Bear left at the bridleway to cross fields back to Hungarton
to complete the walk.
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Walk 2 6 3/4km (4 miles), allow 2 hours. Undulating countryside,
muddy in places.
Take the bridleway out of Church lane, past the farm buildings following the track
through the Hungarton Spinney. After the gate bear right and keep to the track with the hedge boundary
on your left. Then, go straight across three more fields following the waymarkers to reach Hungarton
Road. 1. Turn right and continue along the road to a T-junction.
Then turn left over the cattle grid. Leave the road taking the bridleway on your right. Slowly descend
as views of rolling hills and village beyond unfold. Very little remains
of Cold Newton village, which once had a small church (now gone) and a medieval manor. On
reaching the stream turn right, cross a small bridge and over a stile ahead into the wooded area. Follow
the path through and out onto a large field. 2. Turn left and continue
along the field edge. Cross the corner of the next field to a stile, then walk up the hill aiming for
the houses ahead. This route crosses the site of a deserted medieval
village where in 1799 only 15 families remained. Humps and hollows can clearly be seen in fields where
the lost village once stood. Continue past farm buildings, bearing right into Main
Street then turn right at the junction heading back to Hungarton. 3. Turn
left onto the bridleway, following the waymarkers for Quenby Hall and Park. Quenby
was depopulated in the late 15th century. It is sited within the grounds of the Hall, one of the finest
houses in the country. Built in the early 17th century, it is a tall, undecorated building except for
the attractive red brick diapering with dark blue bricks seen on the west front. The Ashbys and their
descendants owned the estate from the 13th century to 1904. It is now the seat of the De Lisle family.
As the route passes through the park, this splendid building can clearly be seen. Along
the drive just past the wet wooded area on the right, bear left aiming for the corner of the garden
wall. Keeping the wall to your right, walk the boundary of the garden to re-meet the drive on the other
side of the Hall. 4. Continue along the drive. Good
views of Hungarton can be seen in the distance. Just past the Lodge Gatehouse bear right following
the waymarkers across two large fields, leading back into Church lane. As
you descend back to the village you can clearly see the ridge-and-furrow pattern left by medieval ploughing
methods. The up and down ploughing of long narrow strips, with a certain type of plough, threw the soil
towards the centre of the strip, so producing a high ridge. Much ridge-and-furrow disappeared with the
intense ploughing during the Second World War, however a good deal remains in Leicestershire.
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