I love walking in the countryside with my dog. Mention your walks on your local Public Footpath by using @PublicFootpath and I’ll try and post them all here.
Loving the publicity we're getting in our local media for the Thames Path Relay 😁😁
🙏 Henley Herald cartoonist Steve Allender
https://t.co/EhrMIg2l0v
#thamespath30@OxTweets
Have you heard of the Coffin Trail that travels from Burton to Bury?⚰️
For centuries, villagers carried their dead along this 1.3‑mile route of chalk downland, streams, woodland and hidden vales.
Read more: https://t.co/MH5iBQ0EWR
📸: Anne Purkiss | #NationalWalkingMonth
Lovely day for a walk in the Chilterns National Landscape with Dadima's Walks on the Thames Path, discovering history, wildflowers and those stunning views of the River Thames and the Goring Gap. #thamespath30#walkingforhealth@ChilternsNL
Just a stranger offering water to a dog on the street 🥹❤️
Small acts of kindness like this restore faith in humanity.
Who else believes kindness is never wasted? 👇
Britain’s oldest paths were never designed by planners or engineers. They were shaped slowly, over centuries, by human movement — footsteps repeating the same journeys until they became part of the landscape itself.
Ridgeways, hollow ways, pilgrimage trails, coffin roads — an “internet of feet” connecting generations long before maps or motorways existed.
There’s something quietly powerful about walking these ancient routes today. The land remembers where people have been.
https://t.co/8wv4jTQsIb
Monday motivation from Wharfedale 🌿
Looking over Cray in Wharfedale, where rolling hills and quiet valleys remind us to slow down and breathe.
📸 Wendy McDonnell | #YorkshireDales#MondaMotivation
St Hubert’s and the Idsworth Valley circular walk📍
This 5‑mile walk starts at St Hubert’s Church, known as the ‘little church in the field’, first recorded in 1053, with foundations hinting at an even earlier past.
More info: https://t.co/B9PYa1fGvW🔗
📸 Michael Steven Harris
I came across a creaking split tree today, it was just like looking at the current state of the UK Politics, it’s not a question “if”, but “when” will it split into two halves, and go crashing to the ground..