Hawkley to Steep
"Explore the beech-clad hills and vales that so inspired Hampshire's great poet."
Walk directions
With your back to Hawkley church, walk left beside the green to the road junction. With The Hawkley Inn away to your left, cross over to join Cheesecombe Farm Lane. Shortly, bear right along a concrete path, signed ‘Hangers Way’, and soon after bear left onto a path. Descend to cross a stile and keep straight on at the fork of paths, hugging the left edge of the field with Cheesecombe Farm to the left.
Cross a stile and bridge over Oakshott stream and then another stile and keep left along the field edge beside woodland. Steeply ascend to cross a stile, and follow the fenced path uphill and left. Drop down to a track and turn right, to reach a junction, then right again for 55yds (50m) to take the waymarked track straight ahead.
Climb the long and steep chalky track up through Down Hanger (this can get very wet and muddy), with views east along the South Downs unfolding. At the top of Wheatham Hill, turn left, with a sign for Ashford Hangers National Nature Reserve ahead. Pass a barrier and follow the gravel track.
Turn left up the second set of steps to enjoy Cobbett’s View. Return to the main track and continue downhill for 0.5 miles (800m). Just before a gate and a lane, climb the stile right and descend through an avenue of trees and across a field to a stile and lane. Turn right.
After 400yds (366m), take the footpath left, to the left of a gate. Descend to a metal kissing gate and bear gently right across the field to another kissing gate by a telegraph pole. Turn left over a stile and follow the field edge via another stile to Steep Marsh Farm. Turn right across the ends of the large barns and join a wooded track. Keep left at a junction of paths. Shortly after, cross the drive to Taylors Copse Farm and back into woodland. Cross a stream. Just before a curving drive, climb the short steep path left within the trees to a stile. Follow the signed path across the field ahead to a stile, and continue onto a track by stables, pass the stables on your left and reach a lane.
Turn right, passing three houses, then, at a sharp left bend, bear off right into woodland. Walk above a small ravine and past a pair of timbered cottages to a footbridge. Continue ahead and pass The Harrow Inn. Turn right at the junction and walk uphill into Steep to All Saints church.
Follow the Hangers Way opposite, across a playing field and down through Northfield Wood to a kissing gate. Walk along the left-hand field edge to a kissing gate and road. Turn right and then, as it swings right, keep ahead up the footpath (the waterfall is to your left). At a junction, turn left and walk through light woodland. Emerge onto a drive just by the gates to The Waterhouse, and turn right leading up to a lane beside Ashford Chace.
Turn right and then almost immediately left along a footpath towards Shoulder of Mutton Hill. Enter the Ashford Hangers National Nature Reserve and immediately take the middle of three paths ahead to climb steeply up the grassy scarp slope to the Edward Thomas memorial stone. At the top, go through a barrier and keep straight ahead to reach a track. Turn right beside the Ashford Hangers NNR sign, then after 200yds (183m) bear left up a path into the woodland. On reaching a crosstrack head straight across through a kissing gate.
Follow the Hangers Way as it descends through three kissing gates, through the edge of beech woods and steeply down across meadowland, through another kissing gate to a path between fields, eventually joining the drive to Lower Oakshott Farmhouse and a road.
Turn right then left through the gap and follow the defined Hangers Way path through the Oakshott Valley, crossing stiles, plank bridges and delightful meadows to reach the junction of paths before Cheesecombe Farm. Turn left to the stile. Retrace your steps back to Hawkley and your car.
Additional information
Terrain
- Field and woodland paths, rutted, wet and muddy tracks and short stretches of road, 11 stiles
Landscape
- Rolling, beech-clad hills, a hidden, flower-filled valley and undulating farmland
Dog friendliness
- Dogs to be kept under control at all times
Parking
- By village green and church in Hawkley
Toilets en route
- Opposite the Harrow Inn in Steep
About the walk
William Cobbett wrote ‘beautiful beyond description’ in his Rural Rides, after passing through Hawkley in 1822, on his way from East Meon to Thursley. Cobbett was enchanted by the rolling, beech-clad hills that characterise this relatively unexplored part of Hampshire. Abiding love Known locally... as ‘hangers’, from the Anglo-Saxon hangra, meaning ‘sloping wood’, these fine beech woods cling to the steep chalk escarpment that links Selborne to Steep. Many have charming names such as Happersnapper Hanger and Strawberry Hanger. Edward Thomas lived at Steep from 1906 to his death in 1917, and his first home here was Berryfield. His abiding love for the beech hangers, mysterious combes and the sheer beauty of the landscape inspired him to write some of his finest poems, including ‘Up in the Wind’, ‘The New House’ and ‘Wind and Mist’. You, too, will find the views breathtaking as you dip and climb through the hangers to the summit of Shoulder of Mutton Hill, Thomas’s favoured spot above his beloved Steep. The walk begins from Hawkley, tucked away beneath Hawkley Hanger. You descend into the lush meadows of the Oakshott Valley, before a steep ascent on an old droving track to the top of Shoulder of Mutton Hill. Here, in a tranquil glade on its higher slopes, you will find a sarsen stone dedicated to Edward Thomas. With views across Steep and of ‘sixty miles of South Downs at one glance’, as Thomas described it, it is no wonder that he loved this area. The return walk joins the Hangers Way, a 21-mile (33.8km) long-distance trail traversing East Hampshire from Queen Elizabeth Country Park to Alton.
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Been on this walk?
Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.
Walking in Safety
Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.
Get an AA guide
Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.
About the area
Hampshire’s varied landscape of hills and heaths, downlands and forests, valleys and coast are without rival in southern England. Hike across the chalk downland of the north Hampshire ‘highlands’, meander along peaceful paths through unspoilt river valleys of the Test, Itchen, Avon and Meon, or explore the lonely salt marshes and the beautiful medieval forest and heathland of the New Forest.
Nearby places to stay
View all (8)
Inn
The White Hart, South Harting
★★★★
"Charming village inn with a good reputation...."
- Rooms 7
- Free TV
- Wifi
- Open parking
Inn
The Thomas Lord
★★★★
"Rural retreat for enjoying good food and stylish cabin accommodation...."
- Rooms 5
Caravan & Camping
Two Hoots Glamping, Caravan Park & Campsite
★★★★
"Back to nature holiday deep in rural Hampshire...."
Nearby places to stay
The White Hart, South Harting
The White Hart in South Harting is a 16th-century inn with an abundance of character. Within the South Downs National Park & well located for anyone walking the South Downs Way. Located...
★★★★ Rating
The Thomas Lord
The Thomas Lord is named after the founder of Lord's Cricket Ground who is buried in the nearby churchyard. It’s a charming country pub with delightful gardens in the lovely village of ...
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Two Hoots Glamping, Caravan Park & Campsite
Two Hoots Glamping, Caravan Park & Campsite is a small, very peaceful adults-only campsite offering spacious, grassy pitches for caravans and tents in a rural hilltop location close to ...
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Hamilton Arms
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Frensham Pond Country House Hotel & Spa
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The Woolpack Inn
An attractive country inn, tucked away in Hampshire's Candover Valley, offers a traditional atmosphere and bags of character. The flint and brick building dates back to 1880 and many or...
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Teal Cottage
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Wallops Wood Cottages
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