Trent Valley Way

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Trent Valley Way
The Trent Valley Way with Clapper gates near North Clifton
Length187 km (116 mi)
LocationNottinghamshire, Lincolnshire
TrailheadsTrent Lock, Derbyshire
Alkborough, Lincolnshire
UseHiking
Highest point74 metres (243 ft)
SeasonAll year Round
SightsThe valley of the River Trent

The Trent Valley Way is a waymarked long-distance footpath in England following the River Trent and its valley in the counties of Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire.

Originally created in 1998, to mark the centenary of the Nottinghamshire County Council, it was waymarked between the two southern starting points at Thrumpton and Attenborough, through to West Stockwith near Gainsborough at the northern limit of the county, a distance of some 84 miles.[1][2]

This Nottinghamshire route used both riverside paths and footpaths in the wider valley to link Nottingham, with Newark-on-Trent, Gainsborough and various villages via points of interest. It appeared on Ordnance Survey maps, and a book showing the route was also produced.[3][4]

The waymark consisted of a white disc with a blue arrow containing three wavy white lines.[5]

Littleborough to Alkborough

See also

References

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