A stroll through Judy Woods

Recommended by
Our view
"Surrounded by towns these are some of the finest beech woods in West Yorkshire"
Walk directions

From the upper entrance to the woods on Station Road, where there is a notice board and kissing gate, follow a path into the trees signed to Woodside. Where it subsequently swings left, turn off right, walking to a stile at the edge of the trees. Head away across open ground, following an old incline that rises towards a high fence surrounding the perimeter of Appleton Academy. Go left, passing through a gate and continuing out to a lane.

Turn right up the hill, walking as far as the entrance to the school. There, turn left onto an unadopted street, Carr House Gate. Follow it past houses to its very end by a breaker’s yard. Keep ahead to pick up a path that passes behind more houses. Swinging beneath the foot of communication masts it continues between open fields. Meeting a track, go right to Royds Hall.

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Location
Additional information
  Terrain  - Good tracks and woodland paths, several stiles
  Landscape  - Arable land and beech woods
  Dog friendliness  - Can be off lead in woods
  Parking  - On Station Road (off the A641 at Wyke) near information panel and kissing gate leading into Judy Woods
  Toilets en route  - None on route
About the walk
Set within the deep fold of Royd Hall Beck, Judy Woods is a fragment of a once extensive forest that stretched to the Midlands. Despite it now being flanked by the conurbations of Bradford and Halifax, it survives as one of the finest seminatural woodlands in the county and is a haven for all...
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About the area
Everybody knows that Yorkshire has some special landscapes. The Dales and the Moors first spring to mind, but what about West Yorkshire? That’s Leeds and Bradford isn’t it? Back-to-back houses and blackened mills… Certainly if you had stood on any of the hills surrounding Hebden Bridge a hundred years ago, and gazed down into the valley, all you would have seen was the pall of smoke issuing from the chimneys of 33 textile mills.
Area image

A stroll through Judy Woods

Recommended by
Our view
"Surrounded by towns these are some of the finest beech woods in West Yorkshire"
Dog friendly
Location
Nearest postcode:
Additional information
  Terrain - Good tracks and woodland paths, several stiles
  Landscape - Arable land and beech woods
  Dog friendliness - Can be off lead in woods
  Parking - On Station Road (off the A641 at Wyke) near information panel and kissing gate leading into Judy Woods
  Toilets en route - None on route
About the walk
Set within the deep fold of Royd Hall Beck, Judy Woods is a fragment of a once extensive forest that stretched to the Midlands. Despite it now being flanked by the conurbations of Bradford and Halifax, it survives as one of the finest seminatural woodlands in the county and is a haven for all...
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
West Yorkshire
Everybody knows that Yorkshire has some special landscapes. The Dales and the Moors first spring to mind, but what about West Yorkshire? That’s Leeds and Bradford isn’t it? Back-to-back houses and blackened mills… Certainly if you had stood on any of the hills surrounding Hebden Bridge a hundred years ago, and gazed down into the valley, all you would have seen was the pall of smoke issuing from the chimneys of 33 textile mills.