Around Lindisfarne

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Walk directions

Head back from the car park towards the shore. Just beyond the bend, a signed footpath lead through a gate on the right onto a nature reserve. Go ahead where it splits, making for a lime kiln, half buried in the dunes. Keep on across an open area, crossing more sand hills to find a ruined building. Through a fence gap behind, continue forward to the beach.    

Swing right along the strand, which soon gives way to a bare, wave-cut platform, where the rock can be slippery. Rounding Snipe Point there is the surprise of a secluded cove, but again, take care crossing boulders below the low cliffs at the far side. If the tide is in, you will need to abandon the shore for a path above. Beyond Castlehead Rocks, the going improves behind another expanse of beach, divided at low water by the exposed reef of Keel Head. If you have not already done so, leave the foreshore at the far side and continue to a navigation marker on Emmanuel Head.    

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Location
Additional information
  Terrain  - Shore and dunes, clambering on rocky shore (avoidable), 1 stile
  Landscape  - Dunes and expansive inter-tidal sands
  Dog friendliness  - Dogs should remain on leads through village
  Parking  - Large pay-and-display car park at entrance to village
  Toilets en route  - Signed within village
About the walk
St Aidan travelled to Lindisfarne from Iona in AD 635 at the invitation of King Oswald, to bring Christianity to a heathen land. He founded a monastery on the island, which was little more than a simple wooden chapel ringed by a few crude huts, from which he and his followers took their ministry...
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About the area
If it’s history you’re after, there’s heaps of it in Northumberland. On Hadrian’s Wall you can imagine scarlet-cloaked Roman legionaries keeping watch for painted Pictish warriors while cursing the English weather and dreaming of home.
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Around Lindisfarne

Recommended by
Location
Nearest postcode:
Additional information
  Terrain - Shore and dunes, clambering on rocky shore (avoidable), 1 stile
  Landscape - Dunes and expansive inter-tidal sands
  Dog friendliness - Dogs should remain on leads through village
  Parking - Large pay-and-display car park at entrance to village
  Toilets en route - Signed within village
About the walk
St Aidan travelled to Lindisfarne from Iona in AD 635 at the invitation of King Oswald, to bring Christianity to a heathen land. He founded a monastery on the island, which was little more than a simple wooden chapel ringed by a few crude huts, from which he and his followers took their ministry...
Read more
Been on this walk placeholder

Been on this walk?

Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.

Walking in Safety placeholder

Walking in Safety

Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.

Get an AA guide placeholder

Get an AA guide

Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.

About the area
Area image
Northumberland
If it’s history you’re after, there’s heaps of it in Northumberland. On Hadrian’s Wall you can imagine scarlet-cloaked Roman legionaries keeping watch for painted Pictish warriors while cursing the English weather and dreaming of home.