Great South West Walks 2014

HEART IMAGEThe Great South West Walks 2014 is a celebration of the South West Coast Path taking place from 20th – 28th September 2014, with 100 popular circular walks focused around the Coast Path in Somerset, Dorset, Devon and Cornwall.  Its aim is to raise vital funds through these sponsored walks which will to be used for improvements to the Coast Path and will help Children’s Hospice South West provide care and support  to children who are living with life-limited conditions and their families in the South West.

Led by the charity, the South West Coast Path Association (SWCPA), there will be guided sponsored walks of various lengths, to suit all types of walkers.  Many will be themed including wildlife, family friendly and historical walks.

Walkers are encouraged to raise sponsorship which will be equally split between SWCPA and CHSW. The sponsorship will enable SWCPA to lever in other funding and in total deliver over £250,000 for much needed improvements spread all along the Path.

At CHSW the sponsorship will enable the charity to continue to provide expert care in a hospice environment to life-limited children and their families from across the South West.

Top 5 Website Tips

Mullion Cove. Photographer Peter Wilson, Co. Londonderry, NI.This website is not only packed full of information, but it also has lots of new features to help you have a great time walking the South West Coast Path.  Here are some of our favourite bits, which you may not spot immediately.

1. Easy ways to find the perfect short walk

There are details of hundreds of short walks on the site, and with such a choice, we’ve developed several ways to help you decide which is the perfect one for you.  If you are looking for a walk in a particular area, the easiest way to find these is to use the Walkfinder tool (on the menu bar). Type in a place name, and your preferences and you will soon be given a choice.  Or want to see a great view – just click on any of the photos at the top of each page, and it will bring up a map of nearby walks. Alternatively look on our Discovery walk pages, where you’ll find walks themed that will help you find more about the amazing geology, heritage and wildlife found around our coast.

If you’re out on the path, look out for one of our new ‘Digital Fingerposts‘ and you’ll get a walk starting from where you are straight onto your smartphone – and it will still work even if you lose phone signal along the walk!

2. Find a great pub or café

For most of us, a good pub or café can really make a walk, so on each walk page you’ll see all the nearby pubs and cafes marked on the map as tankard & teacup symbols. If you click on any of these, it will bring up a link to a page containing details of the pub or café along with customer reviews.

3. Take the short walk description with you

Once you have decided on the walk you want to do, don’t click print on the browser, instead click on the link on the right hand side to Printer Friendly page (with map), as this will bring up a new page with the walk overlaid on an Ordnance Survey map which is much easier to use than the Google map.

4. See an aerial flythrough of the walk

Below the walk map is the Google Earth plugin. Clicking on this (you may have to click OK to install) enables you to view the walk as if you were in a helicopter flying above it. If at anytime you want to change the viewing angle, click your mouse button and drag it across the image. The left button pans, the right rotates and if you’ve a scroll wheel, this zooms in and out.

5. Find bus and train times

In the same way as the pubs and cafes, clicking on the bus stop & train station symbols on the walk maps will bring up a link for timetable information, and for trains the option to book tickets. So that you don’t have to rush or wait for a bus at the end of your walk, if you can its best to get the bus out and walk back.

The South West Coast Path

SWCP logo transparent3Thanks for stopping by and welcome to our new blog! This is just an introductory post so we’ll keep it short and sweet.

We decided to start a blog to let those of you who haven’t seen our web site to enjoy all that the south West Coast Path has to offer.

Over the next few months we plan to be writing and sharing posts about the path, its walks, its attractions and its people.

That’s it for now! If you’d like to be kept updated with my posts “Like” this post or subscribe to my blog.

Bigbury-on-Sea