BBC Countryfile Magazine

One hell of a holloway

Connecting Symondsbur­y with North Chideock, Shute’s Lane and Hell Lane together form one of Britain’s finest sunken trails, says

- Chris Gee

Shute’s Lane and Hell Lane, Dorset

There’s something magical, almost otherworld­ly about sunken lanes, those ancient ways worn deep into the earth by the centuries’ passage of boot, hoof and cartwheel.

Shute’s Lane and Hell Lane in West Dorset must rank as one of the very best examples, where you can discover a lost world 10 metres below the surroundin­g landscape.

This subterrane­an gem is lined with ancient ferns and the bright orange berries of lords-and-ladies. The trees close overhead to create an archway, offering cool respite from late-summer heat and a perch for hunting buzzards and sparrowhaw­ks.

This old way allows both man and beast to pass unnoticed through the countrysid­e. It wouldn’t be a surprise to see a hobbit being chased by trolls, such is the Tolkienesq­ue feel to the place where 200 years of graffiti have been scratched into the bare sandstone walls.

SUNKEN WAYS

Shute’s Lane starts in a fairly ordinary way on the edge of Symondsbur­y before developing quickly into the king of all holloways. Reaching a crossroads of four equally enticing ways, continue straight ahead into Hell Lane. On reaching the edge of North Chideock, opt for a footpath on the left to complete a loop back to Quarry Cross via Quarry

Hill and the intriguing­ly named Rock Hopper.

Break free of your subterrane­an adventures with an energetic climb on a permissive path up on to conical, 417-foot-high Colmer’s Hill. Your reward is 360° views of the rolling West Dorset and East Devon landscape, so evocativel­y captured by local landscape artist Hilary Buckley. Topped with Caledonian pines, this much-photograph­ed little gem of a hill was once named Sigismund’s Berg after a local Viking chief, and the coastal views range from Portland Bill to Lyme Bay.

BETWEEN THE HILLS

Nestled just below Colmer’s Hill and Sloes Hill on the opposite side of the valley is Symondsbur­y, a charming estate village of honeycolou­red cottages, an attractive church and historic thatched tithe barn.

If the weather is warm, seek out Symondsbur­y Kitchen, set in the old quadrangle milking shed, and enjoy a refreshing­ly cold glass of locally produced cider. If it’s one of those cooler September days, head into the cosy 16th-century Ilchester Arms to nurse a pint by the huge roaring fireplace.

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 ??  ?? Chris Gee is the author of Walking the
Yorkshire Coast:
A Companion Guide.
Chris Gee is the author of Walking the Yorkshire Coast: A Companion Guide.
 ??  ?? “This is how a holloway is made. Each time a cartwheel, hoof or boot goes by, it erodes the earth floor of the holloway a shade deeper, then the rains come and carry the dirt surface away downhill particle by particle, year by year...” Roger Deakin, Wildwood
“This is how a holloway is made. Each time a cartwheel, hoof or boot goes by, it erodes the earth floor of the holloway a shade deeper, then the rains come and carry the dirt surface away downhill particle by particle, year by year...” Roger Deakin, Wildwood

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