Across the River Blyth to Walberswick

Recommended by
Our view
"Taking a breather from the hustle and bustle of Southwold in a quiet village amongst the marshes."
Walk directions

You pass the Bell Inn on your left and come to the village green, where a heritage centre, situated inside an old chapel, features displays on the history of the village. Stay on The Street until it bends right at a junction with a road off to the left. Take this road and then turn immediately left again down the track named Stocks Lane, ignoring the turning off to the right after 100yds (91m). The track forges straight on into a belt of wood and carries on ahead until it comes to a T-junction in front of Corporation Marshes.  

Turn right here along the Suffolk Coast Path and follow the grassy track as it climbs slightly among the bracken to give fine views of the sea, the marshes and the giant golf ball of the nuclear reactor dome at Sizewell B, the UK’s only commercial pressurised water reactor. At another T-junction, turn left to continue walking roughly parallel to the sea, passing a WWII air-raid shelter. The path comes out of woods onto a lengthy stretch of boardwalk crossing the reeds of the Old Town Marshes. At the end, turn left and you’ll come shortly to a well-made gravel path.  

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Location
Additional information
  Terrain  - Footpaths, riverside embankment, quiet road
  Landscape  - Coastal reedbeds, riparian, woods, village, heathland
  Dog friendliness  - Mostly on leads, especially in nesting areas
  Parking  - Car park (pay and display in summer) at far end of B1387
  Toilets en route  - By Walberswick village hall at bend of main road
About the walk
Walberswick may only be a mile and a brief ferry ride away from Southwold but this little community on the west bank of the River Blyth inhabits a completely different world. The pier, the parades of shops, the ice creams and the tourists are replaced by cottages, a village green, arts and crafts...
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About the area
Suffolk is Constable country, where the county’s crumbling, time-ravaged coastline spreads itself under wide skies to convey a wonderful sense of remoteness and solitude. Highly evocative and atmospheric, this is where rivers wind lazily to the sea and notorious 18th-century smugglers hid from the excise men.
Area image

Across the River Blyth to Walberswick

Recommended by
Our view
"Taking a breather from the hustle and bustle of Southwold in a quiet village amongst the marshes."
Dog friendly
Location
Nearest postcode:
Additional information
  Terrain - Footpaths, riverside embankment, quiet road
  Landscape - Coastal reedbeds, riparian, woods, village, heathland
  Dog friendliness - Mostly on leads, especially in nesting areas
  Parking - Car park (pay and display in summer) at far end of B1387
  Toilets en route - By Walberswick village hall at bend of main road
About the walk
Walberswick may only be a mile and a brief ferry ride away from Southwold but this little community on the west bank of the River Blyth inhabits a completely different world. The pier, the parades of shops, the ice creams and the tourists are replaced by cottages, a village green, arts and crafts...
Read more
Been on this walk placeholder

Been on this walk?

Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.

Walking in Safety placeholder

Walking in Safety

Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.

Get an AA guide placeholder

Get an AA guide

Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.

About the area
Area image
Suffolk
Suffolk is Constable country, where the county’s crumbling, time-ravaged coastline spreads itself under wide skies to convey a wonderful sense of remoteness and solitude. Highly evocative and atmospheric, this is where rivers wind lazily to the sea and notorious 18th-century smugglers hid from the excise men.