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그레이트 리버미어

그레이트 리버미어 주변 최고의 워킹 & 하이킹 경로

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하이킹

Komoot에 등록된 그레이트 리버미어 내 트레일 및 경로 컬렉션 중에서 하이킹과 워킹을 가장 멋지게 즐길 수 있는 곳을 알려드릴게요. 아래에서 각 경로의 상세 정보를 모두 확인한 후, 그레이트 리버미어 속 자연에서 즐거운 시간을 누려보세요.

마지막 업데이트: 2월 14, 2026

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1. Wordwell에서 출발하는 너도밤나무 숲 – Icknield Way를 따라 펼쳐진 양귀비 밭 순환 코스

7.50km

01:55

30m

30m

초급용 하이킹. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 쉽게 갈 수 있는 길.

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초급용 하이킹. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 쉽게 갈 수 있는 길.

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초급용 하이킹. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 쉽게 갈 수 있는 길.

초급

보통 하이킹. 좋은 체력 필요. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 쉽게 갈 수 있는 길.

보통

초급용 하이킹. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 쉽게 갈 수 있는 길.

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커뮤니티 팁

Nildee

7월 13, 2025, Estate Entrance and Countryside Path

The bridge is broken so only 3 km made it through

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Lovely rolling gravel road through Forest

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Lots of different types of terrain to learn, pay attention to some of the forest turns not all are obvious, few lift your bike over log sections, one built for short people section but fun, watch your head;-). Beware of a couple of very bust main road crossings!!! This time of year give yourself time, lights and toes and fingers need warmth. Shout out to 'Wolf Way' for the route;-)

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The Pumphouse Route is one of several excellent trails that wind through the West Stow Country Park and Lackford Lakes. The route passes by the Pumphouse, a Grade II listed building that once served as a sewage works during the early to mid-20th century.

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OS shows it as a footpath.

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Located near Bury St Edmunds, King's Forest was named to commemorate the Silver Jubilee of King George V and Queen Mary. Along with being home to fallow deer, the chalky soil supports a prolific flower population including Wild Thyme, Bird's Foot Trefoil and numerous butterflies, such as Dingy Skipper and Brown Argus - a joy for any nature lover at any time of the year.

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This wood is ideal if you enjoy peaceful running surrounded by nature and well-defined trails. It's a woodland dominated by mature pines and oaks, but also features recently planted conifers. Around you will also find Dale Pond – if you're a fan of dragonflies, this is your spot. There's a 2.5 miles circuit called the Yellow Walk, which starts and ends at the car park.

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West Stow is more than just an outdoor museum; it's also an archaeological site, as it occupies the location of one of the earliest Anglo-Saxon villages, which was inhabited between 420 and 650 AD. Currently, there is a recreation of this village where you can engage in a variety of fun and interesting activities.

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Great stop off if you are riding with children, play in the park, visit the Anglo Saxon village or stop for some lunch.

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West Stow is a small village that is just down the road from the West Stow Anglo Saxon Village.

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The Iron Bridge is a grade I listed early cast iron bridge crossing a tributary of the River Lark in grounds of Culford Park in the village of Culford near Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk. The bridge is of exceptional interest as one of the earliest bridges with an unmodified cast-iron structure to survive. Built for Charles Cornwallis, 2nd Marquess Cornwallis the owner of Culford Park in 1804, it is a unique example of a cast iron bridge built to the patent of Samuel Wyatt. The rib castings feature oval tubular sections and is the earliest known example with hollow ribs leading to the structure received a grade I listing on 15 May 1996. The woods to the South West of the bridge is known as Iron Bridge Carr. On 10 June 1800 Samuel Wyatt patented a new design for ...constructing bridges, warehouse, and other builds without the use of wood... which was published in the Repertory of Arts and Manufactures: Vol.14 in 1801. The patent describes how to construct a bridge using: ...hollow pieces of cast iron in a longitudinal direction and plates or pipes of the same material, having sockets on them, to receive the ends or shoulders of the said pipes, tubes, or other hollow pieces, placed transversely; and extending from one side of the bridge to the other, so that when the required number of pipes, tubes, or other hollow pieces of cast-iron, and of transverse places, or pieces, are put together they form the arch, and so firmly fix, connect, and unite, all the parts, as not to require the aid of screws, bolts, cramps, or any wrought-iron fastenings whatever; but, for the sake of giving the joins a more equal bearing, it will be proper to run lead or cement into them. The bridge at Culford follows this design with 5 cast iron voussoirs making up one segment arc which is repeated six times forming the 60 ft span connected with socketed joints. Arched plates between the ribs carry the infill up to roadway level with channelled granite abutments on either side. Masonry balustrades line the edge of the bridge 20 ft wide with carved marble urns at the ends. The metal segments for the bridge were cast in 1804 by William Hawks and Son of Gateshead and weighed 80 tons, along with 2 tons of lead at a cost of £1,457. It's estimated that the additional cost of transportation, stonework, and construction gave a total of £10,000 for the installation of the bridge, approximately £1 million in 2019 prices. Samuel Wyatt 's brother James was appointed in the 1790s to make modifications to Culford Hall which drew heavily on Samuel's work at Shugborough Hall so it is likely Samuel's bridge design was introduced at this point. The infill of the bridge between the deck and road surface was examined in 1998 as was found to be made up of; a single layer of yellow bricks, 15cm of chalk, 40cm of hoggin, finished with 5cm of topsoil with slight different composition at the abutments. It is believed that this material dates from the original construction.

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The present day Culford Hall is a listed historical building. It has been altered at different times in its history. The Hall is presently set within 480 acres of a beautiful Grade I listed park, designed by Sir Humphrey Repton. The land in this area of Suffolk used to belong to the Abbey in Bury St Edmunds. Following the dissolution of the monasteries, in the reign on Henry VIII, the land was bought from the Crown by Christopher Coote in 1541. The estate later passed to Sir Nicholas Bacon, England’s first Chancellor of the Exchequer. In 1586 he had the old manor house, which stood on the site, demolished and built a 78-foot square Tudor style hall in red brick. The estate subsequently passed, in 1660, to the Cornwallis family through marriage. The family transformed Culford into an 18th century mansion and in 1792 they employed Repton to draw up one of his famous ‘Red Books’ with a plan to landscape the park. In 1823 Richard Benyon de Beauvoir bought Culford. The Benyon family managed the estate, and renovated the church in the grounds, before selling Culford in 1889 to the 5th Earl Cadogan. The Cadogan family made many alterations to the Hall, including the addition of the north wing, designed by the architect William Young, which doubled the building in size. At that time the Culford estate extended to approximately 10,000 acres. This allowed the family to host many shooting parties, including, in December 1907, one which was attended by King Edward VII. The King’s Loo in Culford Hall was built especially for this visit and remains intact for visitors to see today! On the death of the 6th Earl Cadogan, Culford Hall was put up for sale and subsequently bought by the Methodist Board of Education in 1935 to become the new site for its East Anglian School for Boys, which had previously been located in Bury St Edmunds. In 1972 Culford became one of the UK’s first co-educational boarding and day schools, when the pupils from The East Anglian School for Girls joined the boys. The Cadogan family retain their links with Culford today. The Rt Hon Viscount Chelsea is the school’s Patron.

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A Grade II* Listed Building Parish church. C11, C14 and C15, extensively restored circa 1878 by the Rev. E.R. Benyon. Mainly rubble flint to nave and chancel, with freestone dressings: plaintiled roofs: traces of coursed flints in lower part of south wall of nave. 3 restored windows with reticulated tracery on south side of nave: 2 3-light C14 windows on north side with remains of crown glass, and one C13 lancet window with deep inner splay. C14 windows to chancel: 4-light east window with reticulated tracery. Diagonal buttresses to east end, and a stone string course to north and south walls of chancel, continued as a hood-mould over the tops of the windows and the priest's door. C15 south porch, with renewed timber roof: steep pitch, plaintiles: diagonal buttresses: knapped flint to side walls. Simple C14 south doorway, similar to the priest's door in chancel. The north doorway is the oldest surviving feature of the building: C11, with a plain tympanum, small volutes on the capitals and a heavy roll-moulding to arch. This doorway now gives access to the vestry, added in 1903 to commemorate the reign of Queen Victoria. Large west tower in 4 stages: mainly black knapped flint, with a chequer-work base of flint and freestone and a plain castellated parapet. The east wall is extended to north and south to form 2 angle buttresses: diagonal buttresses at west end, all buttresses faced with freestone and panels of knapped flint. A full height stair turret on the south side. 2-light windows in Decorated style to all 4 faces of the top stage. A similar west window to the 2nd stage has fragments of medieval glass in the top of the lights. 6 bells: the 15 cwt. tenor and the 2nd bell both dated 1631; the 3rd and 4th dated 1629; the 5th 1674, and the treble cast in 1849. The interior fittings and timber roofs all date from the C19 restoration and are in traditional East Anglian style. C14 chancel arch, and an elaborate angle piscina with credence shelf of the same date, crocketted and finialled. Window-sill sedilia. Memorial stained glass windows of circa 1880. 8 traceried and painted panels from the lower part of the rood screen, removed during C19 restoration, are now in the Victoria and Albert Museum

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The manor of West Stow was leased to Sir John Croftes by the Abbey of Bury St Edmunds in 1526. Sir John was a substantial flockmaster, or sheep farmer, who would eventually purchase these lands from the Crown in 1540, after the Dissolution of Bury Abbey. He was most likely responsible for building the gatehouse. Sir John Croftes’ other distinction was that he was Master of the Horse to Mary Tudor, Dowager Queen of France and Duchess of Suffolk, whose main country residence was at nearby Westhorpe Hall. This may well account for Mary Tudor’s coat of arms being present, inlaid into the fabric of the gatehouse; although, in truth, nobody quite knows how it got there. One story is that it might have been taken during the violent demolition of Westhorpe Hall, rescued and placed in situ over the entrance to West Stow. Inside the building, one of its finest features is a set of Elizabethan wall-paintings. These were discovered during nineteenth-century renovations in a small room on the second floor of the gatehouse. These depict, in naive form, a hunting scene and the Four Ages of Man: a young man out hunting, inscribed ‘This do I all the day’; a man embracing a woman – ‘Thus do I while I may’; a middle-aged man looking on – ‘Thus did I when I might’; and a bent old man, leaning on his stick, who says ‘Good Lord, will this world last ever’.

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Located near Bury St Edmunds, King's Forest was named to commemorate the Silver Jubilee of King George V and Queen Mary Along with being home to fallow deer, the chalky soil supports a prolific flower population including Wild Thyme, Bird's Foot Trefoil and numerous butterflies, such as Dingy Skipper and Brown Argus - a joy for any nature lover at anytime of the year.

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Not 100% sure the cut through from Ampton to Gt Livermere is a legit cycle trail. I was chased off by a very grumpy gamekeeper who told me it was a footpath not a bridleway.

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Claire

1월 1, 2022, Beech Forest

Many beech trees along this track - it is worth a visit in November to see the autumn colours

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Where the Angles Way and Icknield Way meet King’s Forest, you have a perfect opportunity to pause and admire the classic Brecks landscapes. North, you have seemingly endless arable fields unrolling before you with crops like wheat sunning themselves in the dry micro-climate of this region. To the south, the enormous King’s Forest lies in carefully planned plantations. Here live fallow deer as well as numerous types of butterfly. This junction of paths provides a wonderful example of how humans have shaped this ancient land through farming and forestry management.

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This reconstruction of an Anglo-Saxon village really allows you to step back in time. The historically-accurate buildings are situated on the site of an early Anglo-Saxon village and are surrounded by 125 acres of unspoilt countryside. There are also indoor displays where you can observe artifacts found in the area. Entry costs £6 for adults, £3 for children (5-16), £4 for concessions, and £16 for families. For more information, visit: https://www.weststow.org/Anglo-Saxon-Village.

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West Stow Country Park boasts 125 acres of unspoilt and wildlife-rich countryside. There are nature trails, heath and woodland walks to explore, as well as two bird hides and a bird feeding area. You can also explore nearby Lackford Lakes, a 106-hectare biological Site of Special Scientific Interest and the Anglo Saxon village. For more information, visit: https://www.weststow.org/Country-Park.

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Thetford Heath National Nature Reserve손수레크네티샬색삼족데프덴브로클리웩스테드충고익워스웨슬리체빙턴체드버그홉턴호링거호키던랙포드리즈비텔네담코니 웨스턴씹는 담배반햄웨스트 스토우플렘턴덴스턴버리 세인트 에드먼즈파켄햄스탠스필드그레이트 바튼잉햄마켓 웨스턴훈돈바드웰브래드필드 세인트 클레어스톡바이클레어팀워스브래드필드 세인트 조지헵워스페이크넘 마그나익스워스호닝턴바닝햄스탠튼암톤워드웰카울링지Bradfield Woods National Nature Reserve포넘 세인트 마틴익스워스 소프사피스톤덴햄컬포드헨그레이브케딩턴포넘 올 세인츠포슬링포드하그레이브그레이트 브래들리리틀 리버미어리틀 브래들리스트라디샬트로스톤러펌과 함께하는 러쉬브룩Fornham St. Genevieve작은 썰로클레어스탠닝필드와 브래드필드 컴버스트유스턴리틀 워팅하버힐위컴브룩버튼 그린윅소호스테드리드게이트위더즈필드그레이트 써로우바나디스턴그레이트 워팅우스덴그레이트 웰네덤리틀 웰네덤

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