Countryside Management Service

Chorleywood House Estate

Choose from three contrasting circular walks and discover this magnificent estate for yourself.

Distance:

Park Walk
This walk is 1km (0.6miles) blue

Wood Walk
This walk is 1.2km (0.7 miles) orange

Valley Walk
This walk is 1.5km (0.9 miles) red

Chorleywood House Route

map of the chorleywood house route

Park Walk

Take a step back in time with a gentle stroll around the formal parkland surrounding Chorleywood House. The current Victorian house replaced a much older Georgian mansion and is now private apartments. Please respect the tenants’ right to privacy.

Discover the extensive formal gardens, lawns and fine specimen trees such as holm oak and laburnum and admire the restored Sunken Garden and Wisteria Circle.

Wood Walk

Head for the quiet seclusion of the woods, dominated by oak, cherry, beech and ash trees. In spring time the floor is bright with bluebells, wood anemone and wild daffodils and also supports the nationally rare coralroot bittercress. Along the walk the canopy opens up to reveal panoramic views across the Chess Valley. The route also passes the Dell Nature Reserve, and area of chalk grassland managed by Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust. Look out for cowslips, violets and the bright blue speedwell.

Valley Walk

In late Spring the blossoms of the Chestnut Avenue fall to form an inspiring carpet walkway. Steeper paths lead further down to the picturesque banks of the River Chess, a popular summer picnicking area. This chalk stream is an important habitat supporting many kinds of plants and animals including brown trout, watervoles and kingfishers.

More adventurous walkers could join the Chess Valley Walk, a 19 mile route that heads towards Chesham to the north and Rickmansworth to the south.

How to get to the estate

By road:
Drive via the A404, approximately ˝ mile west from J18 of the M25. Free parking.

By tube:
Chorleywood Station (1 mile walk)

By bus:
Services from Watford, Rickmansworth, Chesham and Amersham.

Rights of Way symbols you might see

Yellow Arrow

Yellow arrows indicate footpaths for pedestrian use only

Blue Arrow

Blue arrows indicate bridleways for horse riders, cyclists and pedestrian use only

Red Arrow

Red arrows indicate Byways Open to All Traffic (BOAT) for horse riders, cyclists and pedestrians and may be legally used by other wheeled vehicles

Black Arrow

Black arrows indicate Roads Used as Public Paths (RUPP) for horse riders, cyclists and pedestrians and may be legally used by other wheeled vehicles

More about Rights of Way

Maps

This map is based on Ordnance Survey material with the permission of Ordnance Survey on behalf of the controller of Her Majesty's Stationery Office © Crown copyright. Unauthorised reproduction infringes Crown copyright and may lead to prosecution or civil proceedings. Hertfordshire County Council 100019606 2004.

The Ordnance Survey mapping included within this web-site is provided by Hertfordshire County Council under licence from the Ordnance Survey in order to fulfill its public function to provide information relating to its activities, services and plans. Persons viewing this mapping should contact Ordnance Survey copyright for advice where they wish to license Ordnance survey mapping for their own use.

See the Ordnance Survey site for more information.

This is is one of a series of walks through the Chilterns Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) supported by the Chilterns Conference.

Please be considerate in the countryside - keep to footpaths, especially through crops, and leave farm gates as you find them.

You can join us or a local community group as a volunteer, carrying out practical activities such as coppicing, hedge laying, improvements to footpaths. More....

The Countryside Management Service (CMS) has been working with communities in Hertfordshire for 30 years, helping them to care for and enjoy the environment.

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