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Ampleforth – Easy walk This is an ideal walk for beginners. Steep at the very start of the walk, its all downhill after then with pleasant walking through cornfields and woodland around the surrounding countryside near the pretty village of Ampleforth. Take a picnic, as towards the end of the walk there's a picnic table! Studfold Ring Getting There From Middlesbrough go up Ormesby Bank and follow the signposts to Great Broughton. Stay on this road which is the B1257 until you reach Helmsley. Follow the road out of Helmsely towards Thirsk. At a signpost which says route missing the Sutton Bank take this route and take the first right turning which will lead you to Ampleforth. Parking is on the roadside in Ampleforth. The Walk

Ampleforth

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Page 1: Ampleforth

Ampleforth – Easy walk

This is an ideal walk for beginners. Steep at the very start of the walk, its all downhill after then with pleasant walking through cornfields and woodland around the surrounding countryside near the pretty village of Ampleforth. Take a picnic, as towards the end of the walk there's a picnic table!

 Studfold Ring

 Getting There From Middlesbrough go up Ormesby Bank and follow the signposts to Great Broughton. Stay on this road which is the B1257 until you reach Helmsley. Follow the road out of Helmsely towards Thirsk. At a signpost which says route missing the Sutton Bank take this route and take the first right turning which will lead you to Ampleforth. Parking is on the roadside in Ampleforth. The Walk 

 Route of the Ampleforth walk

 

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From the road side parking, along the main road in Ampleforth look for a gap between the White Horse Inn and the post office, opposite a post box. 

                                                                           Start of the walk This is the only climbing part of the walk, and although a bit strenuous, don't worry as its all downhill afterwards. Make your way through entrance gates onto a second drive. Turn right to a junction and go over a stile. 

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                                                                      Stile onto field Climb to the top of the bank and you will reach a track, follow it to the left, passing through gates to carry on at the edge of a paddock. Entering the next field bear right to the far corner, and keep going by a fence and a broken wall to your right. When you reach the very top, walk left and then right and continue ahead by the perimeter of a long field. If you've lost your bearings you should have the circle of trees surrounding the Studfold Ring to your left.  

 Studfold Ring

  

 The Studfold Ring is a banked enclosure dating from the Bronze Age. Carry onto the end of the cornfield path and you will reach a stile which leads you onto a road and onto the main road, the High Street. 

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 Stile onto High Street

  

Turn left and follow the High Street for three quarters of a mile, passing the entrance to Studford Farm and passing by a lane that leads back to Ampleforth. About 200 yards further on leave the road to the left dropping onto a forest track.

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 Forest track

 The track leads downhill into the plantations of College Moor. Look for the second fork in this path which leads to the left and take this path. 

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                                                   Take the left fork on the track Follow this path and when it ends on a right bend look for a hidden path to the left which leads into the woods. 

 

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 Path into the woods

 

This path doubles back and leads into the woods. Follow this path until you reach a stile and a picnic table is on your left. A great place for a pitstop and food and refreshments!. 

 Picnic Table

 

                              After your picnic, turn left on the lane and follow this back onto the main road and turn left back into Ampleforth. To your left on the way back are some great views of the Howardian Hills. 

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 Ampleforth Ampleforth is a village and civil parish in the Ryedale district of North Yorkshire, England, about 23 miles (37 km) north of York. The village is situated on the edge of the North York Moors National Park. The parish has a population of 883 according to the 2001 census and includes Ampleforth College.Until immediately after the Second World War Ampleforth mainly consisted of houses built along the main road which serves as the principal thoroughfare. Here there are several buildings dating back to the 19th century including the village's shop and the adjoining Coram Cottage, constructed in 1856.After the Second World War the village began to spread southwards and further east along what now are called Mill Lane and East Lane. At the southern end of the village there is a former council estate constructed in the 1960s which formed the greatest part of the development. Construction of new houses continues today. Along East Lane small farms are gradually being developed into large homes so that the rural and residential split becomes less markedThe Church of England parish church is dedicated to St Hilda, an English abbess who founded Whitby Abbey. The church dates back to Saxon times, with elements from the 13th century. Attached to the church is a primary

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school run jointly by the Church of England and the North Yorkshire County Council Education service.