Routes EnglandWadebridge
BodminTrail-bishops woods-Polmorla-Wadebridge.

Wadebridge, England

BodminTrail-bishops woods-Polmorla-Wadebridge.

Length7.2 mi
Elev. Gain675.7 ft
Est. Steps17000

Forest

River

Scenic views

Wild flowers

Quiet place

Wild life

Bugs

Steep slope

No/weak signal

Created by Anonymous User
Introduction
BodminTrail-bishops woods-Polmorla-Wadebridge. is a 7.2 mile (17,000-step) route located near Wadebridge, England. This route has an elevation gain of about 675.7 ft and is rated as medium. Find the best walking trails near you in Pacer App.
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Camel Trail

Tourist Attraction
The Camel Trail is a permissive cycleway in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, that provides a recreational route for walkers, cyclists and horse riders. The trail is flat (and suitable for disabled access); running from Padstow to Wenford Bridge via Wadebridge and Bodmin, it is 17.3 miles (27.8 km) long and used by an estimated 400,000 users each year generating an income of approximately £3 million a year.

North Cornwall

Place
North Cornwall (Cornish: An Tiredh Uhel) is an area of Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It is also the name of a former local government district, which was administered from Bodmin and Wadebridge 50.516°N 4.835°W / 50.516; -4.835. Other towns in the area are Launceston, Bude, Padstow, and Camelford.

Egloshayle

Place
Egloshayle (pronounced "eglos-hale"Cornish: Eglosheyl – eglos meaning church and heyl meaning estuary) is a civil parish and village in north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The village is beside the River Camel, southeast of Wadebridge. The civil parish stretches southeast from the village and includes Washaway and Sladesbridge.

Burlawn

Place
Burlawn (Cornish: Boslowen, meaning happy dwelling) is a hamlet in the parish of St Breock, Cornwall, England, UK.

Burlorne Tregoose

Place
Burlorne Tregoose (Cornish: Boslowen Tregoos, meaning woodland farm of the happy dwelling) is a hamlet in the parish of St Breock, Cornwall, England, UK.

Wadebridge railway station

Place
Wadebridge railway station was on the Bodmin and Wadebridge Railway, in Cornwall, England, UK. It opened in 1834 to transport goods between the market town of Wadebridge, the limit of navigation on the River Camel, and inland farming and mining areas. The railway was built to take stone from local quarries such as the De Lank Quarries on Bodmin Moor towards the coast, as well as sand dredged from the River Camel and landed at the quays in Wadebridge inland to be used to improve the heavy local soil.

Polmorla

Place
Polmorla is a hamlet just southwest of Wadebridge, Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, map reference SW983715. The Polmorla brook is a tributary of the River Camel, and rises on St Breock Downs.

Polbrock

Place
Polbrock (Cornish: Polbrogh, meaning badger's pool) is a small hamlet in north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It is situated two miles southeast of Wadebridge at grid reference SX 014 695 and near Burlorne Pillow.Polbrock is situated in the steep-sided and heavily wooded valley of the River Camel and is the site of a bridge carrying a minor road over the river.

Wadebridge

Place
Wadebridge (; Cornish: Ponswad) is a town and civil parish in north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The town straddles the River Camel 5 miles (8.0 km) upstream from Padstow. The permanent population was 6,222 in the census of 2001, increasing to 7,900 in the 2011 census. There are two electoral wards in the town (East and West).

River Allen, Cornwall

Place
The River Allen (Cornish: Dowr Lehen, meaning slate river) in north Cornwall is one of two rivers of the same name in Cornwall which share this name. In this case the name is the result of a mistake made in 1888 by Ordnance Survey, replacing the name Layne with Allen which is the old name for the lower reaches of the Camel.
Route Details

Length

7.2 mi

Elev. Gain

675.7 ft

Est. Steps

17000
Created by
Anonymous User
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