Tarset Burn and North Tyne

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Walk directions

Walk downhill from the village hall to a road junction and go right. After 300yds (274m), turn right along a track beside Redmire Cottages. Keep ahead through the yard and across the field behind. Through a gap, continue to a hand gate, then bear left to another gate by Tarset Burn. Continue above the burn, eventually reaching a gated bridge. Cross and go right to a track. Follow it left up to Boughthill Farm.

Through the gated yard, climb away on a track. Where it shortly swings left, keep ahead at a waymarker, dropping steeply to cross a burn. Climb out to cross the meadow above, passing a waymarker to a gateway. Immediately beyond, go right to a hand gate then swing left beside a fence at the edge of open moor. Ignore a stile and continue to the fence corner. Swing half right, heading slightly west of north across open moor towards the corner of a distant wall that shortly comes into view. Drop beside it to a bridge.

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Location
Additional information
  Terrain  - Woodland paths, quiet lanes and trackless moors, a short steep descent and a ford, no stiles
  Landscape  - Valleys with woodland and moorland
  Dog friendliness  - Dogs on leads on farmland
  Parking  - Beside Tarset Village Hall in Lanehead, on Greenhaugh Road
  Toilets en route  - None on route
About the walk
The area around Lanehead is called Tarset. The name means ‘the fold in the dry pine woods’ and is first recorded in the early 13th century. Although there is a Tarset Village Hall, there is in fact no Tarset village – only the burn, a parish name and the scant remains of Tarset Castle, south of...
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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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Tarset Burn and North Tyne

Recommended by
Dog friendly
Location
Nearest postcode:
Additional information
  Terrain - Woodland paths, quiet lanes and trackless moors, a short steep descent and a ford, no stiles
  Landscape - Valleys with woodland and moorland
  Dog friendliness - Dogs on leads on farmland
  Parking - Beside Tarset Village Hall in Lanehead, on Greenhaugh Road
  Toilets en route - None on route
About the walk
The area around Lanehead is called Tarset. The name means ‘the fold in the dry pine woods’ and is first recorded in the early 13th century. Although there is a Tarset Village Hall, there is in fact no Tarset village – only the burn, a parish name and the scant remains of Tarset Castle, south of...
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.