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Path to Nash. Steps down from Westerham Road. 2 June 2016. |
This post is just a pile of iPhone shots from a walk that took me past the tiny village of Nash. I had walked nearly all of this route in sections in the past, at different times as parts of different routes, and the section leading to Nash only once a few years ago. There had been a lot of rain over the past two days which made the idea of going to look at woods and farmland sound really muddy, so I did this instead.
I took a bus to the end of Keston Common and found a steep path down from the main road. I was immediately in a very moody tunnel of trees (shown above).
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Path to Nash. Down from Westerham Road. 2 June 2016. |
A side view opened up showing a field of buttercups.
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Path to Nash. Down from Westerham Road. 2 June 2016. |
But mostly I was walking between two very tall hedgerows. It came out to a road at the bottom, and another path was available after a couple of hundred yards. This ran between less tall hedgerows but it was still hemmed in, so it was good to be able to hop over a piece of missing barbed wire and get a wider view of the fields.
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Path to Nash. From Jackass Lane to Fortune Bank Farm. 2 June 2016. |
Mostly it was like this.
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Path to Nash. From Jackass Lane to Fortune Bank Farm. 2 June 2016. |
The recent rain had caused a lot of the flowering plants to lean over.
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Path to Nash. From Jackass Lane to Fortune Bank Farm. 2 June 2016. |
The path took a right angle and ran along a more open section. There's a rather pretty small Hawthorn in flower, and you can see in the distance the pylons that distribute power across the London Borough of Bromley.
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Path to Nash. From Jackass Lane to Fortune Bank Farm. 2 June 2016. |
Then another right angle, and I was back to this. Someone must be taking regular care of this path, or it would soon be one solid impenetrable hedge.
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Path to Nash. From Jackass Lane to Fortune Bank Farm. 2 June 2016. |
A LOT of the Cow Parsley that looks so pretty on this route had been bowed down by the rain and had to be brushed through.
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Path to Nash. From Jackass Lane to Fortune Bank Farm. 2 June 2016. |
Resulting in wet legs and feet .. At this point I had emerged onto a farm track and saw signs of (modern) life; a delivery van went past me.
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Fortune Bank Farm, Nash, 2 June 2016. |
The path actually goes through the farmyard, which as you can see does business as riding stables. This is as much of Nash as I saw, and there is actually not much more to see! Then, another short road section.
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Nash Lane, 2 June 2016. |
The country roads are all narrow and have high hedges. Soon I turned off onto another track which joined another path, one I had walked several times between Well Wood and Coney Hall. Parts of it were strewn with petals, and though that was not specifically for me I still felt good.
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Path from Well Wood to Coney Hall. 2 June 2016. |
I turned towards Coney Hall.
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Path from Well Wood to Coney Hall. 2 June 2016. |
Now houses were visible over the hedge. This is Coney Hall.
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View over fields to Coney Hall. 2 June 2016. |
Though I was still very much in the countryside. Past this field I emerged into a road, and stuck to roads for a while to get a closer view of an interesting house I had caught a glimpse of - you can just see it two photos back.
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House on Harvest Bank Road, Coney Hall, 2 June 2016. |
Very interesting, part brutal and part deco, not at all like the 1930s mock Tudor things to the sides.
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Hayes Common, 2 June 2016. |
Then back to the woods for the last familiar section through Hayes Common.
Well, I enjoyed that!
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