Fietsgids England North - South Cycle Route | EOS Cycling Holidays Ltd | ISBN 9780957661745
(ISBN: 9780957661745, 2022, 164 pagina's)
Whether you are cycling south from Scotland or took the train up from Newcastle, the coast of Northumberland between Berwick upon Tweed and Newcastle will take your breath away. Lindisfarne Holy Island with its unique causeway and five historic remote castles are the main attractions. One of them is Alnwick Castle, famous for the Harry Potter film appearances.
Newcastle is the largest city on the route. With the estuary of the River Tyne, things never feel crowded. You cycle via the famous Angel of the North, Millennium Bridge and historic Grainger Town to remains of the Roman Hadrian’s Wall.
Derwent Walk Country Park features a worldclass cycle path in a wooded valley, heading for World Heritage site Durham, with its historic city square, cathedral and castle. Returning to the North Sea Coast, Hartlepool Headland and the famous River Tees Transporter Bridge take you via industrial Middlesbrough into North York Moors National Park.
After a demanding ride in beautiful countryside with moors and valleys, Whitby town and abbey are at the start of the coastal Cinder Track to seaside resort Scarborough. Cycle to York via the Yorkshire Wolds or head for the Hull ferry.
From the Hull ferry, you can also join our route south via York. York is England’s most populair tourist destination after London, famous for its cathedral, city walls and National Railway and Jorvik Museums. Via the low lying Humberhead Levels, Selby Abbey and Doncaster, the Trans Pennines Trail takes you to higher grounds. The Don Valley Trail via the Wharncliffe Woods take you to Peak District National Park.
At remote Stanage Edge you’ll find yourself on the top of the world. This spectacular vaultline of rock continues to Castleton, famous for its caves and castle. The Monsal Trail features spectacular tunnels and high bridges and takes you to bustling Bakewell. The scenic Tissington Trail will finally take you out of the hilly Pennines.
Via the pretty Derbyshire Dales, Burton on Trent with its brewery museum and the National Forest you’ll arrive in Leicester. The National Space Centre and King Richard III Museum can keep you occupied before heading deeper south to the orginal rugby grounds of Rugby, stylish Royal Leamington Spa, grand Warwick Castle and the hustle and bustle of Shakespeare’s Stratford-upon-Avon.
The Cotswolds are remarkably quiet, featuring hilly countryside hardly affectted by modern times. Its marble is Blenheim Palace World Heritage just before arriving in famous Oxford. Then you make your way into the Wessex Downs via the Ridgeway, taking you via Uffington White Horse to the World Heritage stone circles of Avebury and Stonehenge. Salisbury is famous for its beautiful cathedral.
Deep south, forest tracks in the New Forest National Park take you to Isle of Wight ferry. The cliffs of The Needles are your ultimate ‘end of the land’-finale of the ride. Via the spectacular Tennyson Trail you’ll arrive at Sandown Beach before hovercrafting to bustling Portsmouth with its numerous railway and ferry connections.