| Length | 126 kilometres (78 mi) |
|---|---|
| Location | England |
| Designation | UK National Trail |
| Trailheads | Great Yarmouth 52°36′44″N 1°43′16″E / 52.6123°N 1.7211°E Knettishall Heath and East Harling/Harling Road railway station 52°23′21″N 0°52′25″E / 52.3892°N 0.8735°E |
| Use | Hiking |
The Angles Way is a long-distance footpath in Britain, along the Norfolk/Suffolk border between Great Yarmouth and Knettishall Heath. The route may be conveniently divided into seven stages:
1. Great Yarmouth to Fritton Lake, via Breydon Water and Burgh Castle.
2. Fritton Lake to Oulton Broad.
3. Oulton Broad to Beccles.
4. Beccles to Bungay.
5. Bungay to Harleston.
6. Harleston to Diss, via Hoxne.
7. Diss to Knettishall Heath, via Redgrave and Lopham Fen.
Each end of the footpath may be accessed from railway stations, enabling walkers of the path to make use of public transport.
The Angles Way connects with both the Peddars Way and Hereward Way at Knettishall, allowing longer walks to be undertaken.
Angles Way was voted the best waterside walk in Britain by waterscape.com in 2003.[1]
References
External links
- Norfolk Countryside Access including descriptions and detailed maps of each section
| This Norfolk location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
| This Suffolk location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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