Non transports of delight
A short, very rural walk passing a surprisingly large variety of transport routes, some predictable such as rivers and roads and others less so such as Navigations and a ghost railway which never managed to carry a train.
Route Details
LENGTH – 3 miles
TIME – 2 hours
START – West Park Nature Reserve, Princes Close, Batchelor Way, Uckfield, TN22 2BT (NGR 463 211).
PARKING – Street parking in Princes Close, Ellis Way and Batchelor Way.
TOILETS – No public toilets available.
REFRESHMENTS – Pubs at Shortbridge and Uckfield (1 mile off route). Restaurants and cafes at Uckfield (1 mile off route).
CAUTION – This walk includes a couple of crossings of the A22.
OTHER INFO – Optional walk around lake wood.
This walk contains stiles.
Icon key
Caution
Cafe
Car park
Gradient
Picnic area
Pub
Shop
Start point
Toilet
Step by Step Guides
A
Starting off at Lakewood (1), walk 110m down Rocks Road and over the A22. On the right, you will be able to see a stile where you should turn onto the path. In 90m, turn left onto another path.
B
Keep on the path and you will find Flint tools (2). There will then be some steps and a bridge, followed by another bridge and some steps and finally a gate. Continue on the path for 200m where you will turn left onto a track, leading you onto Fairhazel Gardens.
C
In 220m, there will be a stile, followed by a gate. Walking another 100m, you will see Roman Roads (3). Towards the end of the track there is a bridge. When you reach the end of the track, in front you, across Golf Club Lane, there will be another track marked by a waymark.
D
Follow the track for 100m and turn left towards Shortbridge Road and then cross to the track ahead marked by a waymark. Continue for 400m and then turn left onto another track. In 120m there will be a waymark and follow the track for 520m, where you will then come to a bridge.
E
In 60m, you will be on Golf Club Lane in the centre of Shortbridge. Turn left and follow the road for 300m. Turn left again onto Buckham Hill but almost immediately, turn onto the path marked by a waymark. Follow the path for 120m where you will find Navigation (4).
F
In 100m, there will be the first of a series of bridges next to Shortbridge Stream. In 200m, crossing two more bridges you will come to a few of them, as well as a stile. Then, in 400m and crossing two more bridges, you need to turn left at the waymark onto the track.
G
In 250m, open the gate and continue for another 300m. Keep to the track on the right and you will see Roman Road (5). In 110m, keep to the track ahead and there will be two stiles. In 80, you will be on Buckham Lane.
H
Cross the lane to the track ahead marked by a waymark, step over the stile and the other stile in 200m. There is another stile in 150m. In 100m, turn left onto the path and follow for 300m. Step over the stile, turn right and you will see Half a Bridge (6). In 40m, turn right again, where there will be another stile.
I
Continue on the path for 400m where you’ll cross over and bridge, closely followed by a stile. In 160m there is another stile followed by a final stile at the end of the path. You will now be on the A22. Turn left and cross the road with caution, continuing up towards Copwood Roundabout.
J
Cross Bell Farm Road to the right and walk 40m up from the roundabout where there is a track. Follow the track for 450m and then veer right around the woodland. Continue until you come to a path and follow it ahead towards Rocks Road. Cross Rocks Road and you will find yourself back at Lakewood (1).
Points of Interest
1
The Mesolithic period 10,000 to 5,000 BC saw the Sussex climate warming after the last Ice Age and small groups of hunter-gatherers moving around the area. The settlement pattern saw an extended family or clan living in each main river catchment, with a main base just below the Downs. Their transport route in the dense Wealden woodland was along the river valleys and summer hunting camps spread along the tributaries. The “Ouse Group” had one such shelter under the rock outcrops alongside the stream in Butcher’s Wood, where they camped and waited for game to come down to the stream to drink. Sone of their tiny, beautifully knapped flint tools can occasionally be picked up on the site.
2
Approaching the property called Fairhazel, the east to west footpath is crossed by a north to south Roman road, the London to Barcombe Mills route. This was built early in the second century to link the grain fields of the South Downs and the ironworks of the Weald to Londinium. The southern end of the road, for long unknown, was at a Roman town and port on the Ouse at Barcombe Mills, which has only recently been discovered. Slag 15 inches (0.4 metres) thick from the ironworks was recycled as the top surface of the 15 feet (4.5 metres) wide road where it rusted into a solid layer over time.
3
A navigation is a form of cheap canal where an existing river is improved by cutting off meanders and installing weirs and locks to manage water flow, to produce a viable transport route. An engineer of national repute, William Jessop, was asked by local landowners to survey the river in 1787, with a view to providing a navigable route as far as Slaugham. Three years later the Upper Ouse Navigation Act was passed and work began. Progress was painfully slow and costs quickly exceeded initial estimates. In 1812, when work finally ground to a halt, the river was navigable for 22 miles and 19 locks to Balcombe, a construction rate of 1 mile and 1 lock per year. Trade consisted of the carriage of lime, chalk and manure for soil improvements, timber and coal. There were only 21 barges working on the system which was never a huge success. A branch navigation (now a small ditch) was constructed to Shortbridge with a wharf to serve Uckfield and the Horse and Barge pub (now the private house adjacent to the public footpath)..
4
Slightly south-west of the footpath junction, the small ditch forming the “Uckfield branch” joined the main Ouse Navigation. In keeping with the rest of the undertaking, management became lax, essential structures were not maintained properly and tolls were not collected effectively. The arrival of the faster railways in Sussex from 1840 onwards marked the end of the whole Navigation and it shut in 1868, since when it has deteriorated to the state seen today.
5
Just above the junction was Sharpsbridge Paper Mill. In a bid to exploit the transport route of the Ouse Navigation and the timber resources of the Weald, paper mills grew up alongside the River Ouse. In 1813, James Pimm constructed a mill and wharf on a 7 acre site at Sharpsbridge, powered by a steam engine. 8 cottage were provided for the workforce. It was not a huge success and was offered for sale in 1853 without any takers and was demolished shortly afterwards.
6
Half a bridge. In 1864 a new railway was to be built from the main Brighton to London line, down the Ouse valley, to provide a new, fast route to Eastbourne and Hastings. Works had already started when the money ran out in 1866. An immediate halt was made to the works, leaving isolated lengths of embankments and cuttings and half-finished structures, such as this bridge, along the route which has the abutments and an embankment on the west side but nothing on the east and no arch. Work was never restarted leaving a ghost railway which never actually carried a train.
Disclaimer
Whilst we have taken reasonable endeavours to ensure the information is up to date and correct, you will be using the information strictly at your own risk. If you come across any inaccuracies whilst you are on your walk, please contact Wealden District Council’s Community and Regeneration team.
The self-guided walk descriptions are provided to help you navigate your way, however we recommend that you plan your route prior to walking the route and that you carry an Ordnance Survey map of the area being walked and follow your position on the map as you proceed.
Please note, we cannot be responsible for the conditions of the footpaths and land and you are responsible for your own safety.