4.6
(35)
654
riders
121
rides
Touring cycling routes around Ladbroke traverse a landscape primarily defined by gentle, rolling countryside and a network of canals. The area features routes that often follow historic paths and greenways, providing a mix of open fields and waterside cycling. Elevation changes are generally moderate, making the region accessible for various cycling abilities.
Last updated: May 25, 2026
5.0
(7)
17
riders
52.1km
03:16
340m
340m
Moderate bike ride. Good fitness required. Mostly paved surfaces. Suitable for all skill levels.
5.0
(2)
10
riders
33.0km
02:12
220m
220m
Moderate bike ride. Good fitness required. Mostly paved surfaces. Suitable for all skill levels.

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10
riders
38.4km
02:18
260m
260m
Moderate bike ride. Good fitness required. Mostly paved surfaces. Suitable for all skill levels.
22
riders
27.6km
01:49
230m
230m
Moderate bike ride. Good fitness required. Mostly paved surfaces. Suitable for all skill levels.
6
riders
23.9km
01:28
200m
200m
Moderate bike ride. Good fitness required. Mostly paved surfaces. Suitable for all skill levels.
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It’s a really nice place to get to and have a café ride. It’s nice to just ride around the reservoir. 
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Encompassing a stretch of 3 kilometers along the northern bank of the River Leam, this nature reserve features a diverse range of habitats including woodlands, grasslands, marshes, and ponds. The ecological significance of this area lies in its capacity to support various bird species, butterflies, dragonflies, and a vibrant array of wildflowers. Apart from this, the reserve also has amenities such as a skateboard park, an adventure playground, and a dedicated area for children's play. These facilities have been strategically situated at a distance to ensure minimal disruption to the local wildlife.
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Holy Trinity Church has its origins in the 1100s, undergoing modifications over the following years, with notable improvements undertaken during the 1400s. The Millennium route runs alongside this church, which we can follow if we want to enjoy a pleasant run in the area.
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Not a hint but here's some History you might find interesting. 😁 The Cat street art in Leamington Spa is a notable mural created by the street artist Much Rock. The mural is located on the side of a building on Warwick Street, in the town center of Leamington Spa, Warwickshire. Much Rock is a renowned street artist who has created many murals and artworks across the UK and beyond. The Cat mural was created in 2017 and quickly became a popular attraction in Leamington Spa, drawing visitors and locals alike to the area. The Cat mural is a large-scale artwork that depicts a cartoon-style cat with a mischievous expression on its face. The cat is painted in bright, bold colors, and its features are highly stylized and exaggerated. The mural is situated on a brick wall, which provides a textured background for the artwork and helps it to stand out. The mural was commissioned by the Leamington Underground Cinema, a local arts organization that promotes underground and alternative cinema. The Cat mural was intended to be a playful and eye-catching addition to the area, and it has succeeded in that goal. Since its creation, the Cat mural has become a popular photo spot for visitors to Leamington Spa, and it has also helped to raise the profile of street art in the town. The mural has been well-received by locals, and it has been credited with adding to the cultural vibrancy of the area. The Cat mural is just one of many street art works that can be found in Leamington Spa and the surrounding area, and it is a testament to the creativity and talent of Much Rock and other street artists who are pushing the boundaries of art and expression in public spaces.
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You get on here at bottom of the hill going towards Draycote.
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The church of the HOLY TRINITY is on the west side of the SouthamCoventry road, in a small churchyard at the western end of the village. It consists of a chancel, nave, south aisle, west tower, north porch, and a vestry. The oldest part of the building is the south aisle, dating from early in the 13th century; the chancel, nave, and tower were built early in the 14th century, a clearstory was added to the nave in the 15th century and at the same time the nave arcade was rebuilt; the porch and vestry are modern. The church was restored in 1928. It is built of small roughly coursed limestone rubble with occasional squared blocks of red sandstone and red sandstone dressings. The chancel has a steep-pitched tiled roof, a plinth of one splay, and a moulded string-course at the sill level of the windows. On the east there is a large tracery window with a pointed arch of two splays, hood-mould, and five ogee-headed lights; the tracery and mullions are all modern. The south side is divided into three bays by buttresses with gabled heads, the centre bay having a pointed doorway with a hoodmould and head-stops, the arch mouldings being continued down the jambs. Each bay has a window with pointed arches of two splayed orders and three lights, the centre window has uncusped lights, the others cinquefoil. The north side is similar, but has a modern vestry built against it which encloses the door to the chancel; it is built of squared limestone with a steeppitched tiled roof, is lighted by pointed trefoil windows with hood-moulds, and has an entrance with a pointed arch on the west side. The south aisle roof is of steep pitch with modern copings and finials to the gables and at each end wide modern buttresses have been added. In the east wall there is a 14th-century window of three lights, similar to those in the chancel, but of one splay. The south side retains the coved string-course, with one gargoyle of the earlier low-pitched roof below the present eaves gutter; there is a similar cove to the nave, which also had a low-pitched roof, both contemporary with the clearstory. There are three windows; that to the east is similar to the one in the east wall, but of two lights, the others are lancets having hood-moulds with head-stops. The south door is between the lancets and has a semicircular arch of two moulded orders, the inner continued to the ground and the outer supported on attached shafts with foliated capitals; no bases are visible. The west end has a lancet window and above is the line of the earlier low-pitched roof. The north wall of the nave has been strengthened by a modern buttress in two stages at the west end and is partly built over the original one. To the east is a window of three lights with a segmental-pointed arch of two orders, the inner moulded, the outer a splay, the mullions being carried up to the arch without heads; it has a hood-mould with return ends. West of the window there is a buttress which terminates at the level of the original wall-head. Between the buttress and the porch is a modern pointed window with two trefoil lights. The porch is modern, with a tiled roof and a pointed entrance of two moulded orders supported on detached shafts with floriated capitals and moulded bases. The doorway has a richly moulded pointed arch, hood-mould with head-stops, and the mouldings continued down the jambs to splayed stops. West of the porch there is a window similar to the one to the east but with a pointed arch and two hollowsplayed orders. The clearstory has three windows on the north and south, placed towards the centre of the nave, each of two ogee trefoil lights of two hollow splays, with square heads and hood-moulds with returned ends. The tower, which is not divided into stages, has a plinth of one wide splay, diagonal buttresses on the west in four stages, terminating at the string-course of an embattled parapet with the bases of broken pinnacles at the angles, central gargoyles on each face, and crowned by the base of a destroyed octagonal spire. Both the buttresses to the east wall have had later buttresses added to their lower stages. The west face has a pointed tracery window of two splayed orders, the outer a deep one, two pointed trefoil lights, and a hood-mould with head-stops. Immediately above the apex of the window arch is a red sandstone band of sunk quatrefoils, which is carried round the north and east sides but omitted from the south, and a band of red sandstone at the sill level of the belfry windows. The belfry windows on all four faces have pointedsegmental arches, and two trefoil lights with transoms. The ringing-chamber has loop-lights on the north, west, and east, the one on the east now looking into the nave; on the north side there is a clock face. The chancel (47 ft. 10 in. by 21 ft. 7 in.) has plastered walls, modern open king-post roof, and stone paving, with two steps to the altar. On the east wall there are stone brackets, one on each side of the window, one carved, the other a plain splay. The window has a moulded, segmental-pointed rear-arch, and hood-mould with head-stops. The altar table, which dates from early in the 17th century, has four massive turned and carved legs, carved framing, and table top with a gadroon edge; behind it is a modern stone reredos. The south wall has a beak-moulded string-course at sill level, and the doorway a segmental rear-arch; the three windows have chamfered pointed rear-arches and hood-moulds with head-stops, and splayed reveals. Near the east wall there is a double piscina and sedilia under one hood formed by the string-course carried down at each end and finished with head-stops. The piscina has pointed moulded trefoil heads supported on a mullion with moulded capital and base under a pointed arch pierced with a trefoil. The three sedilia seats have pointed cinquefoil heads, pierced spandrels, crocketed gables with floriated finials, trefoil panels and headstops, supported on moulded shafts having floriated capitals and moulded bases. On the north side the string-course is continued and the windows follow those on the south side. To the east there is an Easter sepulchre with a trefoil pointed arch, its mouldings continued down the jambs; crocketed gable, floriated finials, and head-stops. Springing from the head-stops are plain pilasters with crocketed pinnacles and floriated finials. The doorway, now leading to the vestry, has, for no obvious reason, been reversed; it has a moulded pointed arch, the mouldings dying out on plain splayed jambs, and a hood-mould with head-stops. Above the doorway there is a monument with columns supporting an entablature with a semicircular pediment containing a square incised brass to John Bosworth, died 1674. At the top in the centre is the figure of a man kneeling in prayer with the initials J. B., to the left a woman and the name Ellinor, to the right a woman with the name Isabel. Below is an inscription recording his bequest of lands to provide 12 twopenny loaves every Sunday for poor inhabitants, and 10 yearly for a schoolmaster to teach the sons and daughters of the poor. The nave (57 ft. by 22 ft. 7 in.) has a modern tiled floor and a modern hammer-beam roof supported on 15th-century carved head corbels. The walls are plastered, except those below the sill level of the clearstory windows above the arcade. The original arcade was of four bays and in the 15th-century rebuilding the west bay was blocked and the walls reduced in thickness, leaving a springer and part of an arch in position against the west wall. At the eastern end part of the thicker arcade wall is visible below the corbel of the later arcade. The present arcade has three bays of pointed arches of two splayed orders, the inner splay hollow, supported on octagonal pillars with moulded capitals and bases on square pedestals with chamfered corners, at the east end on a corbel with paterae in a hollow moulding resting on a carved head; at the west end on a respond of half a pillar. There are paterae on the outer splay just above the capitals and at the apex of the arches. The clearstory windows on both sides of the nave have chamfered segmental reararches over wide-splayed jambs and sills. On the north the windows and the doorway have segmentalpointed rear-arches. The tower arch is pointed, of two splayed orders, the inner dying out on the wall, the outer continued to the floor on the nave side, and on the tower side both die out on the walls. Above the arch is a loop-light to the ringing-chamber and the band of quatrefoils continued from outside, level with the apex of the arch. There is a wide pointed arch of three moulded orders to the chancel, supported on three half-round shafts with moulded capitals and bases standing on dwarf walls 4 ft. high; on the chancel side the outer order stops on grotesque beasts crouching on the capitals. On the south side of the arch there is a squint with a trefoil head. A carved and traceried oak screen of 15th-century date, with double doors, has been cut and made up with modern work to fit the arch. Its mullions have been replaced with slender turned balusters, probably in the 17th century. The pulpit, placed on the north side of the chancel arch, is a large modern one of stone and coloured marble; and the font, which stands at the west end of the nave, is also modern, with a plain octagonal basin on a coloured marble shaft with a moulded capital and base. The south aisle (58 ft. 2 in. by 14 ft. 8 in.) has a modern open pitched roof, supported on earlier carved head corbels on the south wall and modern moulded corbels on the arcade. The window in the east wall has a semicircular rear-arch of one splay, hood-mould with head-stops, and wide-splayed reveals. The remaining windows have segmental-pointed arches over square jambs. At the east end of the south wall there is a piscina with a pointed trefoil head, the projecting quatrefoil basin and hood-mould have been cut away. In the south wall are two tomb recesses with pointed arches of two orders, the inner a trefoil of one splay supported on short shafts with moulded capitals and bases, the moulded outer order continues to the floor at the ends and the arches mitre in the centre. The tower (9 ft. 4 in. by 9 ft. 4 in.) has a modern tiled floor. In the centre of the north and south walls, about 5 ft. above the floor, there are incised crosses, partly concealed by a matchboarded dado. The west window has a segmental-pointed rear-arch, splayed jambs and sill. The ringing-chamber and belfry floors are supported on continuous projecting splayed strings instead of the more usual corbels or offsets. The plate consists of a silver flagon inscribed: 'Francis and Thermuthis Fauquier of Stoneythorpe 1795', a silver chalice and cover 1587, and a paten 1761. There are two bells by Hugh Watts, 1623 and 1636, and two others by Henry Bagley, 1649 and 1670.
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Napton Lock No 12 is a minor waterways place on the Oxford Canal (Southern Section - Main Line) between Old Engine House Arm Junction (4¾ furlongs and 2 locks to the south) and Napton Junction (Junction of Grand Union and Oxford Canals) (2 miles and 4½ furlongs and 4 locks to the northeast). It is part of Napton Locks. The nearest place in the direction of Old Engine House Arm Junction is Napton Lock No 13; ¾ furlongs away. The nearest place in the direction of Napton Junction is Shut Bridge No 115; a few yards away.
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Shut Bridge No 115 is a minor waterways place on the Oxford Canal (Southern Section - Main Line) between Old Engine House Arm Junction (5 furlongs and 3 locks to the south) and Napton Junction (Junction of Grand Union and Oxford Canals) (2 miles and 4½ furlongs and 4 locks to the northeast). It is part of Napton Locks. The nearest place in the direction of Old Engine House Arm Junction is Napton Lock No 12; a few yards away. The nearest place in the direction of Napton Junction is Napton Lock No 11; 1¼ furlongs away.
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The touring cycling routes around Ladbroke are generally moderate, with 68 out of 131 routes falling into this category. However, there are also 40 easy routes perfect for a relaxed ride and 23 more challenging options for experienced cyclists.
Yes, for experienced riders seeking a challenge, Ladbroke offers 23 difficult touring cycling routes. These routes often feature more varied terrain and elevation changes compared to the generally gentle landscape. While specific challenging routes are not detailed here, komoot's route planner can help you find them.
Ladbroke's landscape, characterized by gentle, rolling countryside and canal paths, makes it ideal for family-friendly cycling. Many of the 40 easy routes are suitable for families. For example, sections of the Start of the Greenway – Draycote Water loop from Codemasters incorporate a greenway, which is often suitable for families.
Yes, many touring cycling routes in Ladbroke are designed as loops, allowing you to start and finish at the same point. Examples include the popular Radford Bottom Lock – Fosse Way to Whitnash loop from Southam CP and the Marston Doles Canal Wharf – Parish Church of St Mary loop from Southam CP.
Touring cycling routes in Ladbroke offer a blend of open fields, historic paths, and waterside cycling along canals and greenways. You'll experience gentle, rolling countryside, providing picturesque views throughout your ride. The Long Itchington – Start of the Bridleway loop from Southam CP is a good example of a route that showcases the local countryside.
While cycling around Ladbroke, you can encounter several natural attractions. These include various lakes such as Bishops Bowl Lakes, Long Itchington Pond, and Stockton Reservoir. The Start of the Greenway – Draycote Water loop from Codemasters specifically passes by Draycote Water.
Yes, the Ladbroke area is rich in history. You can find several historical churches like All Saints' Church, Burton Dassett, St. Giles Church, Chesterton, and St Michael's Church, Bishop's Itchington. The Radford Bottom Lock – Fosse Way to Whitnash loop from Southam CP also incorporates sections along the historic Fosse Way.
The best time for touring cycling in Ladbroke is typically from spring through early autumn (April to October). During these months, the weather is generally milder and drier, making for more pleasant riding conditions along the open fields and canal paths. Always check the local forecast before heading out.
Many touring cycling routes in Ladbroke start from villages or towns that offer public parking facilities. For routes like the Radford Bottom Lock – Fosse Way to Whitnash loop from Southam CP or the Marston Doles Canal Wharf – Parish Church of St Mary loop from Southam CP, starting points like Southam CP (Car Park) indicate convenient parking access. It's advisable to check specific route details for recommended parking spots.
Given the routes often pass through villages and towns, you'll likely find opportunities for refreshments. While specific cafes aren't listed for every route, areas like Long Itchington, featured in the Ducks by the Canal – Long Itchington loop from Codemasters, are known to have local pubs and cafes where cyclists can stop.
The touring cycling routes in Ladbroke are highly rated by the komoot community, with an average score of 4.6 stars from over 30 reviews. Cyclists often praise the region's gentle, rolling countryside, the peaceful canal paths, and the well-maintained greenways that make for enjoyable and accessible rides.
Ladbroke's touring cycling is distinct for its focus on gentle, rolling countryside and an extensive network of canals and greenways. This often provides a more relaxed cycling experience compared to hillier regions. The moderate elevation changes make it accessible for a wide range of abilities, while still offering enough variety to keep rides interesting.


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