4.5
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12,006
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264
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バートスモートンをウォーキングで探索して、楽しく自然を満喫しましょう。komootでは、みなさんがアドベンチャーを最大限お楽しみいただけるよう、バートスモートンでので人気の簡単なハイキングとウォーキングルートのリストを作成しました。これらのルートはショートハイキング、子供連れや家族みんなでのアクティビティにも最適で、誰もが楽しめるルートとなっています。
最終更新日: 2月 16, 2026
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4.6
(9)
41
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4.65km
01:24
150m
150m
初級者向けハイキング. あらゆるフィットネスレベルに適しています。 進みやすいルートです。あらゆるスキルレベルに適しています。
4.3
(4)
14
ハイカー
5.10km
01:32
160m
160m
初級者向けハイキング. あらゆるフィットネスレベルに適しています。 進みやすいルートです。あらゆるスキルレベルに適しています。
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5.0
(1)
21
ハイカー
5.70km
01:46
210m
210m
初級者向けハイキング. あらゆるフィットネスレベルに適しています。 進みやすいルートです。あらゆるスキルレベルに適しています。
3.0
(1)
10
ハイカー
2.55km
00:50
120m
120m
初級者向けハイキング. あらゆるフィットネスレベルに適しています。 進みやすいルートです。あらゆるスキルレベルに適しています。
4
ハイカー
6.03km
01:42
120m
120m
初級者向けハイキング. あらゆるフィットネスレベルに適しています。 進みやすいルートです。あらゆるスキルレベルに適しています。
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12月 10, 2025, Midsummer Hill Iron Age Hillfort
One of the finest hills in the Malverns with it's Iron Age Hillfort (yes another one on the Malverns!), and superb views west across Eastnor Park. It used to be heavily wooded on the Eastern Side, but Ash Die-back disease has caused a huge number of large mature Ash trees to be felled in recent times. This is still a hill to be savoured and you will not see too many people here either.
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10月 8, 2025, Gullet Quarry
This is quite a spectacular place but quite rightly the Conservators and local authorities have securely fenced it off as there have been a large number of drownings here over the years. People have jumped off the low cliffs inot the freezing cold water and have also collided with old machinery and vehicles that are hidden under the water.
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10月 8, 2025, Somers Obelisk
A logical location and viewpoint for a commemorative obelisk, it is visible for miles around.
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9月 7, 2025, Chase End Hill Summit
The most southerly Malvern, with fine views south to May Hill.
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8月 26, 2025, Ragged Stone Hill
The southern end of the Malverns are steeper and more wooded, though Ash Dieback has done for many trees. Great views to the west over Eastnor towards the Black Mountains on the Welsh border.
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8月 12, 2025, Somers Obelisk
Good picnic spot - I'm sure there used to be benches but bring a mat. Unless you like sitting in sheep poo!
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8月 12, 2025, Clutter's Cave
From Myseries of Mercia - a book and facebook page.... A mysterious cave on the Malvern hills and an enormous lump of stone in a nearby village...what connects them? This is Clutters Cave, an apparently man-made grotto within a volcanic basalt outcrop. Very little is known about it, not least who on earth "Clutter" was, but it's been mentioned in connection with various points in history going back to the medieval age. Folklore claims that Owain Glyndwr, the legendary Welsh hero, hid in Clutters Cave after his abortive attempt to invade England and retreat from North Worcestershire. He was never seen again so it's as good a story as any. I've also been told that a hermit once lived in the cave, dispensing blessings and wisdom to those who climbed up the hills to see him. Alfred Watkins, author of The Old Straight Track and father of the ley line concept, reckoned he had found a "door" to the cave a few yards away in a nearby gulley which was used as a "sacrificial stone" by "druids". He even got his assistant McKaig to lie on it as a "victim" to prove his point. Unfortunately for Watkins, we know that at least part of his theory was wide of the mark as his cave door is of a completely different type of rock. So what about the big rock? This lies at the centre of the village of Colwall and folklore gives us a reason for its presence. Another name for Clutters Cave is "Giant's Cave" and the story goes that this giant lived on the Malvern Hills with his human wife. One day he saw a man flirting with his good lady down in the valley where Colwall now lies. Erupting with rage as he watched the two of them giggling, he dug his hands into the rock and scooped out an enormous lump which he hurled at the pair down below, crushing them both. It was said that they lay under the rock for centuries until someone dragged it away to clear the obstruction, whereupon the giant put it back into place the next night! Strangely, there is a record of a payment made to a local man to drag the current stone into position to replace "the stone that once stood there". Some say that Clutters Cave is actually a Victorian folly, but nobody has any idea when it appeared. I find this unlikely as although Alfred Watkins did misidentify a few sites he surely would have been aware of something being just a few decades old. I've also seen a reference to it in a novel from 1883 and in the journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute from 1881, neither of which dismiss it as a folly.
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8月 8, 2025, View of Midsummer Hill
This wonderfully named hill towards the southern end of the Malverns is quieter and more wooded than the northern end of the ridge - though sadly Ash die-back has taken it's toll. When the weather is still and cool in the autumn or winter this can be a great place for low lying mist filling up the valleys below.
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2月 28, 2025, Bench With View of Hollybed Common Mill Pond
Benches and small car park loads of geese and access to Hollybed Common
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12月 4, 2024, Midsummer Hill Iron Age Hillfort
Midsummer Hill rises in the southern part of the Malvern Hills and is a very worthy objective. Site of a former hillfort, along with neighbouring Hollybush Hill, it provides extensive views, with the impressive Eastnor Castle visible in the Herefordshire countryside. A hike to the top could be combined with Herefordshire Beacon to the north, or a longer outing traversing the entire Malvern ridge.
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6月 29, 2024, Swinyard Hill
Swinyard Hill is a hill in the Malvern Range, a line of hills that runs approximately 13 kilometres (8 mi) north-south along the Herefordshire-Worcestershire border. Swinyard Hill lies north of Midsummer Hill and south of Hangmans Hill. It has an elevation of 272 metres (892 ft). Source: Wikipedia
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6月 29, 2024, Midsummer Hill Iron Age Hillfort
Midsummer Hill is situated in the range of Malvern Hills that runs approximately 13 kilometres (8 mi) north-south along the Herefordshire-Worcestershire border. It lies to the south of Herefordshire Beacon with views to Eastnor Castle. It has an elevation of 284 metres (932 ft). To the north is Swinyard Hill. It is the site of an Iron Age hill fort which spans Midsummer Hill and Hollybush Hill. The hillfort is protected as a Scheduled Ancient Monument and is owned by Natural England. It can be accessed via a footpath which leads south from the car park at British Camp on the A449 or a footpath which heads north from the car park in Hollybush on the A438. The hillfort is very unusual in that the ramparts enclose two hills and the intervening valley. Bowden speculates that the spring within the valley "enhance[s] the position of the hillfort as a site of symbolic value". Source: Wikipedia
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11月 11, 2023, Chase End Hill Summit
Marks the southern end of the Malverns - fine view south to May Hill in Gloucestershire.
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11月 11, 2023, Midsummer Hill Iron Age Hillfort
Fine views to Eastnor Castle and the rolling hills of Herefordshire - and all the way to Wales.
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11月 5, 2023, Somers Obelisk
Beautiful place to stop and have a cuppa or some food! Views to Eastnor Castle are amazing.
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9月 19, 2023, Gullet Quarry
Gullet Quarry in Malvern is a stunning natural oasis nestled amidst the picturesque Malvern Hills. With its crystal-clear turquoise waters and towering cliffs, it offers a unique and refreshing swimming experience.
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7月 23, 2022, Gullet Quarry
The main face shows a cross-section through most of the Preambrian rock that makes up the core of the Hills. The face itself exhibits many rock types including diorite, granite, gneiss, schist, pegmatite and dolerite. The evidence of the complex history of earth movement which formed the Hills can be seen by multiple joints, fractures, faults and shears, which make identifying changes in rock types difficult. Within these features mineral deposits such as haematite, calcite and epidote can be found. The nature of the contact between the Malverns Complex and the overlying Silurian rocks has been a matter of debate for many years, although the balance of opinion now favours an unconformable relationship. A fault which cuts the Silurian sequence and extends into the Malverns Complex below is probably of Upper Carboniferous age, associated with the uplift of the hills.'
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