4.5
(299)
2,566
hikers
297
hikes
Hiking around Stretton Under Fosse features a landscape characterized by gentle rural paths, often following the historic Oxford Canal and passing through agricultural areas. The terrain typically includes low elevation changes, making many routes accessible for various fitness levels. This area provides opportunities for tranquil walks through the Warwickshire countryside, connecting villages and natural waterways.
Last updated: April 23, 2026
4.4
(20)
69
hikers
6.31km
01:39
50m
40m
Embark on the ACW Circular Walk 12C, an easy hiking route that guides you through pleasant rural landscapes. This trail offers glimpses of historical landmarks, including the impressive Brinklow Castle, and takes you past the Old Stone Bridge Over the Stream. Covering 3.9 miles (6.3 km) with a gentle elevation gain of 150 feet (46 metres), you can expect to complete this hike in about 1 hour and 38 minutes. It's a perfect choice for a relaxed outdoor experience.
This easy route is suitable for hikers of all fitness levels, featuring paths that are generally accessible. You can enjoy a casual outing without needing extensive preparation. While specific parking information is not detailed, the trail is manageable for a spontaneous visit. Consider starting your hike in the morning to make the most of the daylight and enjoy the tranquil countryside.
The route's charm lies in its blend of natural beauty and historical interest, showcasing typical English countryside. Beyond Brinklow Castle, you will also encounter Grimes Bridge No. 26 on the Oxford Canal, adding to the varied scenery. This makes the ACW Circular Walk 12C a great option if you are looking for a short, engaging walk with a touch of local heritage.
4.9
(13)
28
hikers
11.2km
02:53
60m
60m
Embark on the Oxford Canal and Newbold on Avon Loop, a moderate hike that takes you through diverse Warwickshire landscapes. You will follow the peaceful Oxford Canal towpath, observing residential boats and historic canal features. The route then leads you across open fields, where you can spot ancient ridge and furrow patterns from medieval farming. A highlight is passing through the unique 250-meter-long Newbold Tunnel. This 6.9-mile (11.2 km) journey involves a gentle 199 feet (61 metres) of elevation gain and typically takes around 2 hours and 53 minutes to complete.
The trail combines footpaths, bridleways, and some road sections as it winds through Newbold on Avon. While generally accessible, be aware that parts of the towpath can become muddy, particularly after wet weather, so appropriate footwear is advisable. You will find convenient canalside pubs in Newbold on Avon, such as The Boat and The Barley Mow, which are ideal for a refreshment break during or after your hike.
This route offers a glimpse into the region's rich history and natural beauty. Beyond the canal's engineering marvels, you will discover the tranquil Newbold Quarry Country Park. This park is a haven for local wildlife, providing a peaceful contrast to the canal's bustling activity. The trail's blend of historical features and natural settings makes it a distinctive experience in the Warwickshire countryside.

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5.0
(1)
12
hikers
11.1km
02:54
80m
80m
Moderate hike. Good fitness required. Mostly accessible paths. Sure-footedness required.
5.0
(2)
13
hikers
9.37km
02:27
70m
70m
Moderate hike. Good fitness required. Easily-accessible paths. Suitable for all skill levels.
5.0
(2)
14
hikers
Moderate hike. Good fitness required. Easily-accessible paths. Suitable for all skill levels.
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The church isn't level inside! It's well worth popping in. The VE Day memorial is very well done and worth a closer look.
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Gorgeous section of walking through a tree-lined avenue in an open field just outside of Newbold on Avon.
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Newbold on Avon is a pretty suburb situated along the banks of the Oxford Canal in Rugby, Warwickshire. Newbold has two great pubs, The Boat and Barley Mow, which are a great place to stop for a refuel mid-walk.
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Easenhall is a small pretty village situated 4 miles north-west of Rugby in Warwickshire. The village has a pub, hotel and many connected walking trails that lead out into the countryside.
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Brinklow Castle is a medieval fortress that dates back to the 12th century. The ruins stand atop a hill, providing panoramic views of the surrounding countryside.
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Brinklow Castle is known locally as the Tump. It's a medieval motte and bailey castle based on a prehistoric long barrow and modified in the 11th century. It's quite large for this period with a 12m high motte and a 121m by 152m bailey. The grass mounds are still clearly visible.
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Grimes Bridge No 26 is a minor waterways place on the Oxford Canal (Northern Section - Main Line) between Stretton Stop (Rose Narrowboats) (6 furlongs to the east) and Wyken Arm Junction (Old Colliery Branch) (5 miles and ¼ furlongs to the west). The nearest place in the direction of Stretton Stop is Johnson's Bridge No 27; 1½ furlongs away. The nearest place in the direction of Wyken Arm Junction is Bridge No 25 (Ansty) (Motorway bridge over canal and railway.); 6¾ furlongs away. There is access (via steps) to the towpath here. Mooring here is tolerable (it's just about possible if really necessary). There is a bridge here which takes a minor road over the canal.
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The parish church of ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, on the west side of the main street, stands in a small churchyard on the slope of a hill, the ground falling from east to west, its eastern boundary being the outer ditch of the castle. It consists of a chancel, nave, north and south aisles, west tower, and north and south porches; the south porch has been converted into a vestry. It was rebuilt about the end of the 15th century and all that remains of the earlier church is the chancel, parts of the north aisle walls and possibly the staircase to the roodloft. The chancel is built of a mixture of limestone and sandstone rubble patched with bricks and tiles and has a modern steep-pitched tiled roof, modern coping and cross finial, and rebuilt buttresses. It is lighted on the east by a modern window of three pointed lights with a hood-mould and head-stops. The south side has a central buttress, and west of it are two restored lancet windows with a narrow doorway between them. The lancet to the west is divided by a transom to form a low side window. The doorway has a restored pointed arch, the splay carried down the jambs. The north side has a central buttress and another butting against the aisle wall, with a restored lancet window between them. The south aisle is built of red sandstone ashlar with a plinth of one splay, stepped down to conform with the slope of the ground. The wall is diminished in thickness by a weathered offset at sill level. It has a low-pitched lead-covered roof with a plain low parapet, with a moulded coping projected on a moulded stringcourse. The east gable is lighted by a partly restored traceried window of three cinquefoil lights under a hollow-moulded four-centred head. The south wall has buttresses at the angles, two intermediately, and a porch towards the western end. It is lighted between the buttresses by three windows similar to the one in the east wall. The porch has been rebuilt in brick and stone with a tiled roof and the entrance blocked to form a vestry. The south door, which has a four-centred arch under a square head, has been mutilated. The west end is similar to the east, but the coping is carried up as a lean-to instead of a gable. The buttress at the angle is diagonal, splayed to a point. The north aisle is built of rubble similar to the chancel and has a lean-to roof covered with lead, a battlemented parapet with trefoil panelled pinnacles at each end and crocketed finials. Originally there were two intermediate pinnacles, of which only the bases remain. The north side has diagonal buttresses at the angles, one intermediate and, towards the west, a porch. It is lighted by two three-light traceried windows with splayed fourcentred heads, the centre light trefoiled, the two outer cinquefoil; by a similar window on the east; and on the west by a trefoiled single light with a square head. The porch is timber-framed with a tiled roof, and the entrance has been fitted with a pair of modern doors. On both sides the timbering has been concealed, externally with roughcast and internally with plaster. The front retains its timbering, the entrance having a heavy moulded frame and four-centred head, carved spandrels and lintel, and a timber-framed gable plastered between the timbers. The door has a moulded four-centred head, square hood-mould, carved spandrels, and trefoil-panelled soffit and reveals which have been badly mutilated. In the centre of the hood-mould there is a shield with three swords (for Clarke). The tower is built of light-coloured sandstone ashlar with a moulded plinth and battlemented parapet on a coved string-course; at each angle there are bases for pinnacles. It rises in four stages, diminished at each stage by weathered offsets on the north and south, and on the east and west at the first and half-way up the third only. At the angles there are diagonal buttresses rising in five stages and splayed off to a sharp edge, except at the third stages on the west side which have gabled trefoiled niches. The west doorway, in a deep wave-moulded splay, is constructed of red sandstone and has a moulded four-centred arch under a square head, with carved spandrels. It is flanked by wall aracading in two tiers of trefoil-headed roll-moulded panels. Above the doorway is a tall pointed traceried window of three cinquefoil lights with a hood-mould, the tracery and mullions being modern, and in the second stage a clock dial. The tower staircase is in the south-west angle, with a loop-light to each stage and a square-headed doorway opening on to the aisle roof. The belfry is lighted on each face by pointed traceried windows of two trefoil lights, and the ringing chamber by similar windows on the north and south. Internally the floor of modern tiles has been laid to a continuous fall from east to west, probably taking the place of a series of steps, as the bases of the arcade pillars and windows are stepped down following the slope. The walls, except the arcades and tower, are plastered, the plaster being finished round all the aisle windows with scalloped edges. The chancel (28 ft. 4 in. by 15 ft. 6 in.) has four steps from the nave and three to the altar in addition to the slope of the floor. The east wall has a dado of modern coloured embossed tiles, and the window a segmental pointed rear-arch. At the east end of the south wall there is a shallow recess with a segmental pointed stop-chamfered head, probably a blocked piscina. The lancet windows have splayed recesses with square heads, and the doorway a segmental pointed rear-arch. The roof is a modern hammer-beam, its trusses supported on carved stone corbels. It is continued under the chancel arch with twin trusses, panelled between with pierced panels and supported on slender stone shafts with carved capitals and moulded bases resting on moulded corbels. The nave (48 ft. 3 in. by 17 ft. 7 in.) has a modern open roof with curved trusses resting on moulded timber corbels. Both arcades consist of five bays of pointed arches, of two splayed orders, supported on lozenge-shaped roll-moulded pillars, the arch splays dying out on the mouldings, which terminate in splayed stops on plain lozenge-shaped pedestals. At the junction of the south arcade with the chancel there is a circular stair up to a square-headed doorway which gave access to a rood, and half-way up there is a pointed opening to the aisle. It is lighted from the east by a small square-headed two-light window. The chancel arch is a modern pointed one, of two splayed orders, dying out on the north wall and on the south resting on a floriated corbel. The tower has a pointed arch of two splays to the tower and three to the nave, the inner order supported on three-quarter-round responds with moulded capitals and bases. The arch is of red sandstone with capitals of a light-coloured stone, and on the tower side in the apex there is a carving of an angel. The south-west angle is corbelled out in three steps for the tower staircase, the upper step being trefoiled, and below it there is a square-headed doorway. The pulpit and reading desk, of stone, are modern. The south aisle (49 ft. by 12 ft. 9 in.) has a lowpitched open roof of five bays with moulded members and carved bosses in the centres of the tie-beams. It probably dates from the early 16th century; the boarding and some rafters are modern. The trusses rest on stone corbels on the south wall, and on the north the outer roll mouldings of the arcade pillars are carried up with capitals in place of corbels. At the east end, the north-east angle is splayed to accommodate the staircase to the rood. The windows have hollowmoulded reveals with four-centred rear-arches, the window to the east having its arch extended eastwards and carried down to form a recess. The east wall has an offset at sill level with a chamfered stone capping, and the window reveals are carried down as a recess. In the east window there are some fragments of early coloured glass consisting of two chalices and parts of a canopy. The north aisle (45 ft. 7 in. by 9 ft. 11 in.) has a lean-to roof of five bays, of which two retain some of their original moulded members, probably early-16thcentury. The trusses are supported on stone corbels on the north wall and on square blocks of stone as capitals to the outer roll moulding of the arcade pillars. Over the door there is a painted coat of arms of George IV. The font, with a lead-lined basin, is built into the west side of the north arcade pillar opposite the door. It is of stone, with an octagonal moulded basin with paterae, and octagonal stem and base which has been rendered in cement. It has been re-dressed but is probably contemporary with the arcade. Near the door there is a small 17th-century oak chest with three hasps and fitted with lifting rings at each end. In the centre and east windows there are a few fragments of early glass, including a peacock and portions of a castle. The tower (15 ft. 10 in. by 13 ft.) has a window with widely splayed reveals, and a rear-arch of two splayed orders; the recess is carried down to include the doorway. In the chancel and aisles there are a number of 18thand 19th-century wall memorials. There are five bells, all of 1705, by Joseph Smith of Edgbaston. The registers begin in 1558.
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There are over 300 hiking routes around Stretton Under Fosse, offering a wide variety of options for different preferences and fitness levels. The area is well-known for its gentle rural paths and canal-side walks.
The gentle terrain around Stretton Under Fosse makes it suitable for hiking year-round. Spring and summer offer pleasant weather for exploring the agricultural landscapes and canal paths, while autumn provides beautiful scenery. Even in winter, many routes remain accessible due to the low elevation changes.
Yes, Stretton Under Fosse is ideal for easy walks, with over 170 routes classified as easy. These trails typically feature low elevation changes and well-maintained paths, perfect for a relaxed outing. An example is the ACW Circular Walk 12C, which is an easy 3.9-mile (6.3 km) route.
Absolutely. Many of the trails around Stretton Under Fosse are circular, allowing you to start and end at the same point. The Oxford Canal and Newbold on Avon Loop is a popular moderate circular route, covering 7 miles (11.2 km) and offering views of the historic canal.
Yes, the region's gentle rural paths and low elevation changes make many trails suitable for families. Look for shorter, easy routes that follow the canal or pass through open fields for an enjoyable family outing. The ACW Circular Walk 12C is a good option for families.
Many of the rural and canal-side paths around Stretton Under Fosse are suitable for dogs, provided they are kept under control, especially near livestock. Always be mindful of local signage and keep your dog on a lead where necessary. The open fields and canal towpaths offer plenty of space for walks with your canine companion.
Hiking trails in this area often lead past interesting historical sites and natural features. You can explore places like the Hawkesbury Canal Junction (Sutton Stop), the historic St John the Baptist Church, or enjoy the tranquil New Close Wood. Many routes also follow the picturesque Oxford Canal, offering views of narrowboats and locks.
Yes, the area is rich in history. You can hike to sites like Brinklow Castle (the Tump), an ancient motte-and-bailey castle, or visit the Wolston War Memorial. The historic Oxford Canal itself, with its locks and junctions, is a significant landmark to explore.
The Oxford Canal is a prominent feature of the landscape around Stretton Under Fosse, and many hiking routes follow its towpaths, offering scenic waterside walks. You can also find natural water features like Pond in Brandon Wood or visit the Newbold Quarry Nature Reserve for walks around lakes and ponds.
Parking is generally available in and around the villages that serve as starting points for many trails. Specific parking information can often be found on individual route descriptions on komoot. For example, the Brinklow Castle loop starts from a car park in Stretton under Fosse.
Yes, the villages surrounding Stretton Under Fosse often have traditional pubs and cafes where you can stop for refreshments. Many hiking routes are designed to pass through or near these villages, providing convenient opportunities for a break and a meal.
The trails around Stretton Under Fosse are highly rated by the komoot community, with an average score of 4.5 stars from over 280 reviews. Hikers frequently praise the tranquil rural scenery, the well-maintained canal paths, and the accessibility of the routes for various fitness levels. The opportunity to connect with nature and explore charming villages is also a common highlight.


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