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Captain's Wood is a 13.9 hectares (34 acres) Local Nature Reserve near Chesham in Buckinghamshire. It is owned by Buckinghamshire County Council and the Chiltern Society took over management of the site from the Council in 2014. It is part of the Chilterns Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. [1] [2] [3]
Looking upstream, at Chenies. The River Chess fall is 200 feet (60 m), and its length is 11 miles (18 km). It is fed by groundwater held in the chalk aquifer of the Chiltern Hills and rises from three springs which surface as Vale brook, from Bury Pond, and alongside the Missenden Road near Pednor just to the north of Chesham.
It is located in the Chiltern Hills to the west of the town of Chesham. During the 14th century it was known as Hunderugge , and Hundrige in the 15th/16th century. [ 1 ] The hamlet name derives from either the Anglo Saxon hunda-hrycg meaning 'hounds' ridge', or from Hundan-hrycg meaning 'Hunda's ridge'.
Annual circular route around former RAF Pathfinder airfields in Cambridgeshire, held on the Saturday closest to Midsummers Day. Peak District Boundary Walk: 190 306: Derbyshire, Cheshire, Yorkshire, Staffordshire: Buxton Market Place: Buxton Market Place: A circular walking trail, broadly following the boundary of the Peak District national park.
south side: rivière au Saumon, West Branch Magalloway (United States); west side: rivière au Saumon. The Chesham River originates at the confluence of two mountain streams located on the southern flank of a mountain which is located between Mégantic Mountain (located on the west side) and Sommet Valence (located on the east side).
In the latter exhibit, you’ll be able to walk through a 57-foot underwater tunnel to spot sharks swimming to their heart’s content. So it's a dream for most animal lovers . 6.
Talk about a tale of two cities. “You can get plenty of exercise simply by walking to your job, restaurants and other destinations,” the report reads of New York’s high score.
An early American example of a book that describes an extended walking tour is naturalist John Muir's A Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf (1916), a posthumous published account of a long botanising walk, undertaken in 1867. Due to industrialisation in England, people began to migrate to the cities where living standards were often cramped and ...