Sabrina Way
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| Sabrina Way | |
|---|---|
Sabrina Way crossing Nottingham Hill | |
| Length | 203 mi (327 km) |
| Location | Gloucestershire Derbyshire Staffordshire Worcestershire Wiltshire Oxfordshire |
| Designation | Long-distance trail |
| Trailheads | Great Barrington, Gloucestershire Hartington, Derbyshire |
| Use | Hiking Horse riding |
| Highest point | 391 m (1,283 ft) |
| Difficulty | Challenging |
| Season | All year |
The Sabrina Way is a waymarked long-distance footpath and bridleway in England.
The Sabrina Way was developed by Brenda Wickham for the British Horse Society and local partner authorities,[1] and was created in 2000. It is named after Sabrina, river goddess of the Severn.[2]
Distance
It runs for 203 mi or 327 km.
The route
The route is primarily designed and intended for horses and riders and links bridleways between the Pennines and the Cotswolds and The Ridgeway.
It runs north–south between Hartington in the Derbyshire Peak District and Great Barrington.
It passes from Derbyshire where it leaves the Pennine Bridleway (and bridleway networks that run north to Cumbria) through Staffordshire heading south through Weston Park and the Wyre Forest in Worcestershire to enter Gloucestershire, Wiltshire and Oxfordshire.
It does encompass some tarmac road riding but is mainly on bridleways and paths.