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        Guided Walks
 Six 
        Walks in Loughton's Forest
 
        Short Epping Forest walks in and around Loughton from the book by Chris 
        and Caroline Pond
        With historical notes
 Published by the Loughton and District Historical Society 2002  Copies 
          of the illustrated book may be had from the LDHS at Forest Villa, Staples Rd, Loughton, Essex, IG10 1HP, price £3, 
          or through any bookshop.
 Copyright 2002, C & C Pond    Introduction
  Both 
          the history of Loughton and its present are inextricably linked to its 
          Forest. 1300 acres of Epping Forest are situated in Loughton, which is 
          more than twice the whole area of Burnham Beeches, and more than a third 
          of the area of the whole parish. Nikolaus Pevsner wrote of Loughton "trees 
          hold their own in this otherwise suburban town". That is a gross 
          understatement: there are, perhaps, ten trees for every Loughtonian. Yet 
          it is surprising how little Loughton folk know and use the Forest, excepting 
          always dog-owners, horse-riders, and toddler-walkers. It is always there, 
          on the western and northern edge of the town, no more than twenty minutes' 
          walk from the furthest corner of Loughton. But on many of these walks, 
          we have quite often seen nobody at all more than fifty yards from the 
          Forest edge. In local history, it was the opportunity the Forest gave for grazing 
          animals and supplying fuel that gave Loughton the kernel of its economy 
          for perhaps a thousand years, and gave it and the other forest villages 
          something of an edge over purely agricultural places. It was the defence 
          of those rights by one Loughton man, Thomas Willingale, and the support 
          given him by public-spirited men such as the Buxtons, that led to a stay 
          of execution for Epping Forest when commons all over the country were 
          being enclosed for private profit. And the Corporation of London, who 
          subsequently made Loughton the headquarters of the Forest administration, 
          finally achieved its preservation. For 124 years, they have exercised 
          their benign guardianship of this wonderful asset, and at no expense to 
          the district.  The Forest has never been enclosed and cultivated, but it has been managed 
          by man throughout its written history. It is not, and never has been in 
          historic times, an entirely natural landscape, a wildwood, a British jungle, 
          as some commentators have alleged. Since Norman times, it has been a wood 
          pasture; and in the early centuries, a royal forest, where other activity 
          was subordinated to the preservation of game for the royal enjoyment. 
         A wood-pasture is essentially the maintenance of an area for the twin 
          purposes of providing timber and grazing, and implies a mixture of grassland 
          and treed areas. The Forest in Loughton was formerly very much more open 
          grass than it is now. As we take the walks in this book, there will be 
          times when we say "the view from this point was formerly open and 
          extensive - now it is closed by tree growth". That is the result 
          of the great decline of grazing over the last 100 years, and of the cessation 
          of pollarding - the cutting back of trees to head height on a cycle every 
          few years. As a result of this, the forest canopy has become much more 
          dense, cutting off the light below the trees that enabled the growth of 
          many species, particularly of wild flowers, that the Victorians saw as 
          common, but which are now rare or extinct in our Forest.  Much though we may regret these losses, what an asset Loughtonians have 
          on their doorsteps! The bustle and business of the modern High Road is 
          left behind when you enter the woodland. The air is purer and more exhilarating. 
          The thousands rushing for the train, queuing in the supermarket, hastening 
          to the M25, are far away. Depending on the wind and where in the Forest 
          you are, the sound of traffic may be in the background. However, you are 
          less than 15 miles from Charing Cross, but you might as well be in the 
          Highlands. Nobody directs you which path you can take, or where you must 
          enter the Forest. You can do so in the heat of summer, when the asphalt 
          on the roads melts, in the snow, in heavy rain, or when a gale whips in 
          a thousand acres of trees a noise louder than an aircraft taking off. 
          In fact, the Forest is often at its most attractive in extreme conditions, 
          and it changes remarkably when night falls. Owls are numerous and vocal, 
          even on the Forest edge, and all sorts of rustlings and strange noises 
          reach your ears; from the haunting call of the vixen, to the strange, 
          staccato, bark of the muntjac.  These are short walks, mostly of about an hour's duration, in that part 
          of Epping Forest situated in the parish of Loughton. They are designed 
          for non-specialist strollers rather than for purposeful and experienced 
          ramblers, to whom we suspect they would seem rather short and tame. The 
          Forest, with its mostly clay soils, can get rather wet. In winter, and 
          after heavy rain in summer, sound, well-fitting footwear is called for. 
          A walking stick is useful for beating down the odd bramble, or to assist 
          anyone a bit unsteady, but not essential. The times we give are those 
          that might be expected for a fairly gentle family stroll, taking time 
          to admire a view, and the occasional rest on a handy log, and the distances 
          include diversions to walk round a pond or to avoid a muddy patch or fallen 
          tree.
 These are walks that anyone, a group, or a family, can fit into a Sunday 
          afternoon, or the odd hour at any time of year. They are ideal for Loughtonians 
          who have visitors from afar who want to see the Forest - but remember 
          to tell them to bring stout shoes. We hope they will also be of value 
          to those from farther afield - who may drive out to the numerous pleasant 
          pubs on the forest edge on a summer evening, or stay in our hotel or guest 
          houses, or who visit the thirty restaurants in the High Road.  The Forest is different season by season - the fresh green leaves unfurling 
          in the Spring, the shepherds' crooks of the bracken fronds, the catkins 
          and blossom; the welcome shade of high summer, with sun-baked ruts like 
          iron grooves in the path, and the dried up shingle beds of the streams, 
          along which you can often walk. In autumn, of course, the colours are 
          magnificent. They do not approach the vivid tints of the New England fall, 
          but their chrome yellows and browns still give subtle beauty. Later, the 
          forest floor is carpeted with leaves, acorns, and beech-mast, and the 
          winter winds howl through the trees. Once in a while, snow covers all, 
          and transforms the whole scene into a strange and beautiful white sculpture, 
          when families from the town go up to the forest for sledging or snowball 
          fights.  Whatever the season or the weather, get out in the Forest. If you live 
          in Loughton, you can do so at a moment's notice. If you come from further 
          afield, then a car or train journey may be called for. Whichever way you 
          come, you will not be disappointed.  Note - car parking is possible in many places provided by the Conservators. 
          Many people, however, find it more secure to leave cars other than in 
          car parks, on street at the forest edge, and that is what for the most 
          part we recommend. Please park considerately, and if you are not from 
          Loughton, note where you have left your car. It isn't much use as with 
          one couple we heard of, merely to remember you parked under a large tree! 
         Walk 1  Loughton Camp  Start point: Staples Road Pond. Distance: 3.4 miles. Time: 1hour 10 minutes 
          approx. Terrain: hilly, wet in winter. The land rises from about 140ft 
          at the beginning to 300ft at Loughton Camp. Refreshments: two pubs (the 
          Royal Oak and Victoria, Forest Rd) about 100yards into Loughton from the 
          start /finish point. Car parking: on street in Shaftesbury by the dam 
          (avoid school collection/delivery times).  If you get lost anywhere on the first three walks, remember all the streams 
          drain down to Staples Road Pond.  From the centre of the dam over Staples Road Pond, take the steps on 
          your left down to the dipping platform, and then walk along the red path 
          behind the wooden post and rail fence.  Staples Road Pond, also called the Reservoir, was dug about 1880 as a 
          flood precaution. It was full by 1882, when some builders working on constructing 
          Glendower and Forest Villa rescued a woman who had fallen into the pond. 
          The Loughton Brook has always been prone to flood the centre of Loughton, 
          because of the probability, about every 5 years, of abnormally heavy rain 
          on the forest ridge causing the lower reaches of the Brook, after it leaves 
          the Forest, to overflow. The Reservoir was never, as has sometimes been 
          suggested, a source of drinking water.  In the 1960-1990 period, the pond became badly silted up so as almost 
          to disappear, and the estate of houses called Shaftesbury was built lower 
          down across the course of the brook. In 1982, serious floods in the Staples 
          Rd/ Shaftesbury area ensued. In 1995, the pond was deepened, and the present 
          dam built, designed to withstand the worst surge of water calculated to 
          be expected in a 75-year period. The banks around the dam are flower-rich 
          - when it had been completed, the grassland was sown with the seed of 
          typical wild plants from the area.  Follow the brook/pond inlet on its western side, crossing it by a wooden 
          railed bridge. Cross a second bridge, this time without rails, and leave 
          the path, climbing the valley side on the west, until you come to the 
          Green Ride, a wide path for walkers and riders, turning right on to it. 
         The Green Ride was cut through the Forest in preparation for its official 
          dedication by Queen Victoria in 1882. She was driven along it in an open 
          carriage to High Beech. It is a well-known walk in its own right, but 
          in these walks we follow only short stretches of it. This part of the 
          Green Ride was an open trackway before the Ride proper was constructed. 
          It was known as the Ridings, and may have been a dividing line in the 
          woodland.  Follow the ride down the slope to where it crosses a tributary of the 
          Loughton Brook by a culvert. Turn sharp left once over the stream onto 
          a path going westwards [note; this section can be boggy. You can avoid 
          it by going through the trees to its north.]  After about 50 yards, the path divides. Take the right fork, going uphill. 
          This path dives below beech and hornbeam, with prominent roots across 
          the path (take care!) and in wet weather becomes a runnel off the hillside. 
          As you climb the hill, notice how large and stately beeches take over, 
          in a more open landscape. Towards the top of the hill, notice the many-stemmed 
          beeches, with grotesque gnarled shapes. This is the result first of coppicing, 
          which was the cutting off of the tree at ground level, leaving it to regenerate 
          in as many as half a dozen stems round the old stump. After this, the 
          individual stems - which had become in time trunks in their own right, 
          were subjected in this part of Loughton to lopping, whereby the trees 
          were "topped" at shoulder height, allowing many branches to 
          spring from the cut, which were later lopped for firewood.  The last lopping was in 1879, and thereafter, the trees grew into strange 
          and deformed shapes. Lopping was practised over much of Loughton, except 
          in Monk Wood and Loughton Piece, but coppicing was common only several 
          hundred years ago, and in this area of Loughton Camp. The coppiced, then 
          pollarded, beeches have been living for perhaps as much as 700 years, 
          making them the oldest living things in the area. After the cessation 
          of lopping, the canopy of the forest also became much denser, preventing 
          much of the growth of flowers and other plants on the floor of the wood. 
         After a few silver birches, you will see the ramparts of Loughton Camp 
          up ahead. They take the form of a ditch and bank, in roughly circular 
          form. Go up onto the mound, and bear left, proceeding clockwise around 
          the bank, taking note of landmarks such as notice boards - it is easy 
          to become disoriented on the camp, especially when there is no sun. Note 
          the contorted, many-trunked beeches, in which children love to play hide 
          and seek. Squirrel, rabbit and woodpecker are often found on the camp. 
          In the snow, you will often see tracks of fox, fallow, and muntjac. It 
          had the last active badger sett in the Forest, disused by 1961.  Loughton Camp is a scheduled ancient monument, but has never been thoroughly 
          excavated or investigated. It is a roughly circular defensive hill-fort, 
          dating to the Iron Age. The banks have become eroded over the centuries, 
          and may well have been topped by a defensive fence or palisade. The area 
          encircled is about 11acres. In the Forest also is a similar, but larger 
          encampment at Ambresbury, about half a mile north of the Wake Arms roundabout; 
          there is no truth in the commonly told story that the two camps saw Boadicea's 
          last stand against the Romans. The camps have to be envisaged in a landscape 
          much more thinly wooded than at present, where sighting of an enemy would 
          be easy. Nowadays they would make poor defensive positions.  The views from Loughton Camp were once superb, extending to the south 
          over London. But these gradually got hemmed in by tree growth, and are 
          now non-existent. (see map p. XXX) The camp was the setting for the supposed 
          murder in R Austin Freeman's detective story The Jacob Street Mystery 
          (1942). The participants come down by train from Fenchurch Street to Loughton 
          Station, and take exactly the way described in this walk to the Camp. 
         The Camp was not recognised as an ancient monument before about 1880. 
          D'Oyley, the Loughton surveyor, who drew up the maps for the Epping Forest 
          Commission, marks only the area to its north, as Dick Turpin's Cave; which 
          appellation later got applied to a pub in High Beech. Turpin was indeed 
          active in the Forest in highway robbery and burglary. Old houses in Loughton 
          had their upper storeys closed off at night by a flap and prop called 
          the Turpin Trap, but most of the stories told about him are apocryphal. 
         Follow the bank round (at one point it seems to peter out into a bog, 
          but in fact carries on the other side) until you get to the point at which 
          you entered. Then descend into the ditch, or fosse, below the bank, and 
          carry on until you come to a path on the left after about 100 yards. The 
          path is on the steepest part of the ramparts, which can be better appreciated 
          here than from the mound. The path starts where there is a clump of five 
          beeches, formed from an old coppice stool, on your left. Descend by the 
          path, down the hillside, until you come to a plank bridge, which crosses 
          the officially unnamed tributary of the Loughton Brook sometimes called 
          the Debden Slade Brook. Cross this bridge onto the south side of the brook, 
          and follow this bank, with its mossy sides, through pollard beeches and 
          hornbeam. Several uprooted trees at this point have fallen towards the 
          stream: note their small rootballs. You then come on your right to another 
          bridge: cross it to the north side (the ground on the north side gets 
          boggy, usually because of mountain bike use) and go through a thicket 
          of holly, until in about 50 yards you come to the open clearing, Debden 
          Slade. The vegetation here is mostly bracken, bramble and oak seedlings 
          and saplings, no longer kept at bay by the commoners' cattle, for which 
          the Slade was a favourite grazing place. A fine crab apple is situated 
          on the right hand side of the Slade, halfway along.  The Slade was formerly much bigger than at present, and was the place 
          to which the poor children entertained at the Shaftesbury retreat (see 
          the LDHS publication, From Mean Streets to Epping Forest) played games. 
          Continue following the stream on its north bank, until you come back to 
          the culvert on the Green Ride. Cross the culvert, and follow the stream 
          on its south side until it rejoins the main Loughton Brook. Cross the 
          brook by the earthen bridge, and carry straight on up the hill.  This conical hill is Staples Hill and is mainly hornbeam, beech and holly. 
          Staple is the Old English stapol, meaning marker-post, and this may have 
          some relevance to marking or pointing the way to Loughton Camp, on the 
          adjacent hill. At the top, by some fallen trees, you will see the outline 
          of James Cubitt's Staples Road School ahead and to the left. The views 
          from Staples Hill are not as good as they once were, because of tree growth, 
          but in winter, you can still see across to Shooters Hill in South London. 
         It was on Staples Hill that the inhabitants of Loughton used to gather 
          at midnight on 11 November (or 1 November until 1752) in each year ceremonially 
          to inaugurate the lopping season. With much carousing, the first blow 
          was struck, and the first bough severed, and some of the loppers believed 
          that if the custom was not observed, then the lopping rights would be 
          voided. The last lopping was on 11 November 1879, after a night of drinking 
          at, and a torchlit procession from, the Crown Inn. Lopping continued latterly 
          until 23 April in the following year.  Bear diagonally right across the grassy area and pass a large standing 
          stump 8ft high to your left. The path descends with more views to emerge 
          opposite Forest Villa and the Retreat House (Melbourn Cottage) in Staples 
          Rd, adjacent to the dam [for information on the houses and school in Staples 
          Rd, see Walk round Loughton]. In winter, the air around Staples Road is 
          often still laden with wood smoke, as many of the households seem still 
          to like to burn logs.  Nowadays, however, the old Loughton custom of wooding - that is, going 
          into the Forest to collect driftwood - is almost forgotten, though still 
          permitted within certain limits. What of course was not allowed was the 
          assisting of living wood to become driftwood, which was usually accomplished 
          by a strong line with a weight attached, which would be looped round a 
          frail-looking branch and pulled down.  Staples Hill holds a large population of grey squirrels. They are of 
          course found everywhere in the Forest - the last reds died out about 1960. 
          Attempts were made by the Forest authorities to exterminate the greys, 
          but this was given up as hopeless in about 1965. The Staples Hill squirrels 
          not only feed on woodland products, especially beechmast and hornbeam 
          seeds, but also cross the road to raid dustbins, gardens, and even kitchens. 
          In this way, they extend their food supply and active season, and thus 
          their numbers, and can often be seen re-crossing the road with a crust 
          of bread or biscuit in their jaws. The Staples Hill squirrels are also 
          very vocal. Fred Speakman, the High Beech naturalist, wrote of squirrels 
          emitting tiny sounds, inaudible within a few feet, but the population 
          on Staples Hill, possibly because of its density, can often be heard churring 
          and chirruping at full volume. 
 
        
   Walk 2 Three Ponds Start point: Staples Road Pond. Distance: 2.3 miles. Time, 50 min. approx. 
          Terrain: mostly level or with gentle rises, ground more firm than on many 
          Forest walks. Refreshments: as walk 1.
 From the middle of the Staples Road dam (walk 1) follow the path along 
          the bank left. For details of the Reservoir, or Staples Road pond, see 
          walk 1. Walk between two metal posts, and go straight ahead between the 
          trees, until you come out very shortly on to a wide, unsurfaced, path. 
         Turn right on to this path, and continue gently uphill, between beeches 
          and holly, until you come to the wide, gravelled, Green Ride. Turn left 
          on to the Ride, walking between stands of beech and oak, many of which 
          post-date the lopping era, and are therefore spear trees. In about 10 
          minutes from the start, you reach the Earls Path car park, either side 
          of the Loughton - High Beech road. Take care in crossing the road: there 
          is no speed limit at this point, and cars tend to speed down the hill. 
         This area, to the north of Earl's Path, was one of those cleared and 
          parcelled out into ¼ acre building plots in the 1860s. Fortunately, 
          no actual building took place, and with the passing of the Epping Forest 
          Act of 1878, and the subsequent arbitration by Sir Arthur Hobhouse, all 
          these plots were returned to the Forest.  Earls Path Pond is on the south side of the road. Like all the ponds 
          in the Forest, it is man-made, but whereas Staples Road Pond was dug for 
          flood control, that at Earls Path was excavated for gravel extraction, 
          and was formed about 1890. Each parish had to maintain its own roads, 
          and good sources of road metal in the form of gravel were very much sought 
          after. The parish sometimes gave work to unemployed labourers in digging 
          out and carting the gravel, and Earls Path, where the pit was adjacent 
          to a road, must have been convenient for this purpose.  The pits, when flooded, became pleasant ponds, and Earls Path, with its 
          white water lilies, spatterdocks, irises, rushes and water mint, is an 
          especially pleasant roadside lake, very popular with fishermen. Presumably 
          at some time the pond was deliberately stocked, as it is not fed by any 
          brook or stream. Earls Path Pond is also rich in amphibians, and the area 
          between here and Staples Road is one of the places in the Forest where 
          lizards are seen. Along Earls Path, between here and the Robin Hood pub, 
          are numerous other gravel diggings and holes, on both sides of the road, 
          which fill up with water in times of heavy rain, forming a strange, semi-aquatic 
          landscape.  Follow the gravelled ride along the east side of the pond, and after 
          about 220 yards, bear left, when the water of Strawberry Hill Pond comes 
          in sight.  Strawberry Hill lies to the south of Earls Path and the east of the Epping 
          New Road, which was built in 1830 alongside the western boundary of Loughton, 
          one of the first by-passes in the country. The pond, along with ponds 
          further to the north, resulted from gravel digging for roads.  Strawberry Hill Pond is completely different from those at Earls Path 
          and Staples Road. Its banks are bare, showing at all times of year the 
          reddish gravel and shingly soil. Old Loughton folk call it "the Gravels" 
          for this reason. The roots of trees stick out from the banks, often in 
          crazy contortions. This undermining of trees, leaving the roots exposed, 
          was common in gravel extraction, when it was forbidden actually to uproot 
          or destroy any tree in the operations. A number of the trees, destabilised 
          by the banks, lean at strange angles, or have become dwarfed.  Strawberry Hill Pond is very much a place for children, who love to run 
          and hide among the banks, feed the ducks, and climb on the trees, some 
          of which are particularly well adapted for that purpose, provided parents 
          exercise due caution. There is an island, on which the wildfowl can take 
          refuge, and much bracken and gorse, the latter often in flower even in 
          winter (the old country saying goes, when gorse's out of flower, kissing's 
          out of fashion).  Trees round the pond include beech and oak (with one strange clump of 
          trees on the north-west side seeming to be three oaks and two beeches 
          all out of the same stump, with a holly thrown in for good measure) and 
          also, on the west side, sweet chestnut, which bear their small nuts cocooned 
          in many and long - spined seed cases in autumn. A single old crab on the 
          west side is laden with fruit in the autumn. The open area to the west 
          of the pond is one of the parts of the forest where flowers are common; 
          purple heather, foxglove, and coltsfoot, for instance. Rabbits inhabit 
          the heath, and keep the grass well-cropped.  Walk all round the pond until you can see the surfaced ride ahead. Cross 
          it by a many-trunked beech, and walk straight ahead, with two recently 
          repollarded beeches on the right of the path, for about 200 yards, when 
          a plain unfolds ahead. This area, the Stubbles, was also enclosed for 
          eventual building. On the right hand side beyond a hedge is Fairhead's 
          Nursery, formerly Paul's, from which the public cannot be excluded, but 
          which is not generally traversed.  The plain, home to numerous rabbits, has a number of seedling and sapling 
          oaks growing in the grass, and at its centre, a fine clump of six beeches 
          and an oak. Walk along the plain till you get to the Nursery Road car 
          park. Turn left into the road, and carry on downhill till a small plain 
          opens up on the right. Nursery Road was one of the streets laid out by 
          Maitland, Lord of the Manor, in 1865, when he was seeking to enclose and 
          develop Loughton's forest.  One of the best panoramas of the town is visible from the seat on this 
          clearing. On the right is the grey tower and flagpole of St John's Church, 
          which replaced Loughton's mediaeval church in 1844, with some fine cedars 
          in front; and rising in the centre is Queens Road, with the houses of 
          Pump Hill at its summit. To the left are the Staples Road schools.  Walk along the path by the seat. As you near the belt of trees, the backs 
          of the houses in Staples Road, ended by the green tower of Forest Villa, 
          come into sight. Many of the houses in Staples Road, two storeys from 
          the front, are three or four at the back, because of their hillside sites. 
          Enter the wood and carry on obliquely left, with the gardens of Forest 
          View Road on your right. The path emerges at the junction of that road 
          and Smarts Lane, with the two pubs, the Victoria Tavern and the Royal 
          Oak. On the opposite corner was Ney's Retreat, or the Cyclists' Rest cafe, 
          now a private house. Turn left into Smarts Lane, with additional views 
          between the houses, and walk along it between two necks of the Forest. 
          That on the left was formerly a clearing where swings and amusements were 
          offered. Cross Earls Path into Shaftesbury (formerly Staples Road; renamed 
          1996) and return to your starting point.  
 
        
 Walk 3. The Loughton Brook and Blackweir Hill Pond Start point: Staples Road Pond. Distance: 3.5 miles, 1½ hours approx. 
          The walk can be shortened to the round hour by omitting the Blackweir 
          Hill Pond. Terrain: level, then with distinct and gentle rises, ground; 
          wet near brook after rain, otherwise quite dry, especially on Blackweir 
          Hill. Refreshments: as walk 1, plus the Foresters' Arms, at Baldwin's 
          Hill, and the Gardeners' Arms at York Hill Green.
 As in walk 1, from the centre of the dam over Staples Road Pond, take 
          the steps on your left down to the dipping platform, and then walk along 
          the red path behind the wooden post and rail fence. Cross the railed and 
          plank footbridges, but keep to the western bank of the Loughton Brook 
          - do not climb the bank to the Green Ride as in walk 1.  The Loughton Brook takes the water falling on a very wide sector of the 
          Forest stretching approximately from the Loughton parish boundary on the 
          west as far north as the Wake Arms and as far east as the A121. West of 
          this watershed, the streams drain into the Lea, but the Brook is a tributary 
          of the Roding, which it joins nowadays at the end of Roding Road, pursuing 
          a sinuous course between the Drive and Forest Road, then behind Brooklyn 
          Avenue and through the grounds of the Roding Valley High School. It is 
          a noted geomorphologic feature, a river in "old age" that has 
          carved out a deep valley in the gravels and clays of the hill caps. Easily 
          noted is the undercutting of one side of the banks, and deposition on 
          the other, with many sinuous bends. The bed of the brook is gravel.  Cross the side stream that leads in from Debden Slade, bearing right 
          back to the main brook, and then turn left, alongside the brook. The path 
          can get muddy in the winter, but you can walk equally well a few yards 
          higher up the valley side. The brookside path is a favourite haunt of 
          snakes. Should you see one, do not be afraid. Most are grass snakes, which 
          are quite harmless, and the occasional adder will be shy and will not 
          harm you unless attacked.  Follow the path on the west side, passing a bridge over the stream, at 
          the top of the clearing, beyond which you can see the white-painted Loughton 
          Lodge.  The whole area of the brook was cleared in 1997, but there has been considerable 
          regrowth of shrubs and saplings since. As you carry on northward, there 
          are some good oaks pollarded at that time. The valley becomes a bit barer 
          and more open, and you cross another side stream coming in from the west 
          (no bridge but only a long pace or short jump). The trees are now predominantly 
          beech. Pick your way over the roots of a nice 2-stemmed beech, up the 
          grassed bank of the dam over Baldwins Hill Pond.  Baldwins Hill Pond was dug at the same time as that at Staples Road. 
          It lies higher, and the dam is crossed by a broad ride called the Clay 
          Road. This was another of the roads laid out, but in this case not metalled, 
          by J W Maitland when he, as Lord of the Manor, tried in 1864 to enclose 
          all of Loughton's forest. Had it been developed, the heart would have 
          been torn out of the woodland. The Pond was cleared, and the outlet rebuilt, 
          in 2000. It is a pleasant small lake, with a clearing beyond.  On to Lost Pond (you can return to the start at this point by crossing 
          the dam and recommencing the walk at *)  Turn left along the Clay Path (or Clay Road as it is sometimes called). 
          The western part of this road is much more overgrown than the eastern, 
          with a pleasing mixture of sedge, dog rose, gorse, bramble, and bracken. 
          The trees are oak, beech and hornbeam, with many saplings. No doubt the 
          conservators will eventually clear the area. Note the channel made by 
          an occasional stream through the gravel, as water forms runnels off the 
          hillside.  Just before you reach the clearing (Peartree Plain) at the top, where 
          the Green Ride crosses the Clay Path, you will see a path on your right, 
          entering the trees in a direction of about 4 o'clock. The path is well 
          marked at first, but especially in autumn, becomes obscured by leaves. 
          Keep along the path, bearing generally left (if you bear right you will 
          come back to the Clay Path). After a few minutes, you will see the Lost 
          Pond in its slight dip.  The Lost Pond, or Blackweir Hill Pond, is often reckoned the most picturesque 
          of all Forest ponds. It is entirely girt about by trees, mostly beeches, 
          with some silver birch. On summer days, the light is superb, dappled by 
          the leaves, and in winter, the stark beauty of the trunks, thrown into 
          relief by rime, stands out against the half-frozen water.  Make a circuit anti-clockwise of the pond, noting an 11-stemmed beech, 
          which must have sprung from an ancient stool in the last 150 or so years. 
          It is at this point you will leave the pond when you have made a circuit 
          of it. On the east side of the pond stood until recently the climbing 
          tree - a hornbeam into whose straight trunk somebody had screwed iron 
          rungs, which children could climb. This tree fell in the 1990s, and has 
          not been replaced.  Another practice, frowned on by the Conservators, of course, is carving 
          on trees. It is especially prevalent here, where large, smooth-trunked 
          beeches abound. None of the hundreds of inscriptions still visible are 
          very old - the trees seem to bleed them out after about 30 years. One 
          wonders, however, whether the Barbara who loves me of 1965 still does, 
          and whether JJA and RR from 1970 are still together!  When you have completed the walk round the pond, set off downhill and 
          generally right from the 11-trunked beech. At the foot of the dip is a 
          small stream, which you can cross by a beech that is strangely broken 
          off about 4ft from the ground. In a minute or so, you come out to the 
          top of Baldwin's Hill Pond. Follow its western side till you get back 
          to the Clay Path.  * Cross the dam, and carry on along the eastern side of the pond. The path 
          leads into a clearing, and a long and quite steep hillside, at the top 
          of which the Foresters Arms pub can be seen. This hillside was thinned 
          in 2001, and once again, the pond is visible from the road as it was in 
          the nineteenth century. The trees that remain, oak and hornbeam, have 
          grown since the cessation of lopping in 1879, and are quite sizeable. 
          The banks of grass at Woodbury Hill and Baldwins Hill still maintain more 
          flower species than much of the forest, including heather, scabious, wood-anemone 
          and cow-wheat.
 You can either return along the west bank of the brook, or by a mixture 
          of path and forest edge higher up. The brookside walk has already been 
          described, but the variation is as follows.  Keep to the mid-point of the hill until a paling fence comes into view. 
          This is the northern boundary of land belonging to Dryad's Hall, which 
          was enclosed by Robin Allen for his house, then called Woodberry, in the 
          mid-nineteenth century.  Robin Allen was secretary of Trinity House in London, and one of Loughton's 
          first commuters, as he declared in his memorandum to the Epping Forest 
          Commissioners in July 1876. The enclosure he made, which is wooded in 
          an indistinguishable way from the surrounding Forest, was allowed to remain 
          by the 1880 Arbitration.  Follow this fence on its north-eastern face about 20 yards from it (it 
          gets wet nearer the fence) until you come out onto a track leading to 
          Dryad's Hall itself, the front of which you pass on your right. The Hall 
          was after the death of Allen, the home first of Percy Alden, the journalist 
          and Labour MP for Tottenham, and then, renamed in the 1920s, of Oswald 
          Silberrad, who had invented the means of detonating TNT. Follow the track 
          right until you come to a triangle and the street, Woodbury Hill. At a 
          house just to the left is a blue plaque to Sarah Flower and William Bridges 
          Adams, respectively hymnodist and poet, and railway engineer, inventor, 
          and pamphleteer. For further details of this area, and of Staples Rd, 
          see Walk Round Loughton.  However, you need to turn right. Take the path down the side of Woodbury 
          Knoll, a house built by G L Bruce in 1903. This is said to incorporate 
          its predecessor buildings, Lincoln's Cottages, within the fabric. The 
          path leads up to Woodbury Hollow, or the Hole, where a pair of 17-18th 
          century cottages remain, plus an old house refronted by the Zimmermann 
          family, whose initials remain in the gable end. An engraving of what is 
          thought to be this house before refronting is on p. XXXXX. Rejoin Woodbury 
          Hill by turning right, and carry on past Loughton Lodge into the Forest. 
          From the large chestnut tree (seat) outside Loughton Lodge is an excellent 
          open view across to the terrain covered by walk 2 and to High Beech - 
          even in summer you can see the spire of its church. Beyond the two rustic 
          posts across the track, at the top of Forest Way, 100 yards further on, 
          take the path down the hill through the wood, rather than turning left 
          down the road. This takes you down the north side of Staples Hill and 
          out to what remains of Harding's Plain, outside Staples Road school. In 
          safer times, till about 1970, this grassed area was used by the schoolchildren 
          as their playground. Turn right just inside the forest edge on to the 
          path that skirts Staples Road, or walk along the road itself, back to 
          the starting point (300 yards).  
 
        
 Walk 4. Debden Green, the Deer Sanctuary, and Loughton Parks  Start point: Debden Green. Distance: 3.1 miles. Time: 1hour 10 min. Terrain 
          - hilly, the beginning of the walk muddy in winter or after rain. The 
          land rises from 185ft at the beginning to about 340ft at the summit, half-way. 
          Refreshments; none (there is a café, the Nosebag, in the old stables 
          of Debden House, open during the camping season, April-Oct; but this is 
          for campsite users). In August and September, this is a good walk for 
          blackberrying. Bus: 20, 167, 204, H1 to corner Pyrles Lane/Chester Road, 
          and walk (1/2 mile). Car parking: on street by Debden House, in Ripley 
          View, or on small triangle of land at the start of the walk - do not obstruct 
          entries. Do not park in Debden Lane itself.  If you get lost on this walk, all the streams drain down to the campsite. 
         This walk starts from the signposted public footpath in Debden Lane, 
          adjacent to the three cottages on the left hand side. This was an old 
          green lane, now encroached on by sapling growth, shown on the Chapman 
          and Andre map of 1777. The three houses, originally Alpha, Beta, and Gamma, 
          were built about 100 years ago by W R Clarke of Debden Hall (which was 
          on the site of Ripley View and is now demolished). Follow the path uphill, 
          with the paling fence on your right. It can become very muddy after rain, 
          but there are numerous tracks off to the left, which skirt the worst areas. 
          On your left are the grounds of Debden House, which is owned by Newham 
          Borough Council and is used as an educational centre and campsite - in 
          the summer you will see the tents and vans of the campers.  There is a good deal of vegetation along the path by no means common 
          throughout the forest; for example, field maple, elm, hawthorn, and further 
          up, wild service. There are also many blackberries - in the autumn this 
          whole walk is well provided with them - and many suckers of English Elm. 
          Dutch Elm disease affected this corner of Essex badly from the 1960s, 
          and many tall elms had to be felled. The stools sucker freely, but when 
          the young growth gets to a certain size, it too succumbs.  If the main path is very muddy, it is worth cutting diagonally right 
          across the field beyond the campsite, where there is often a mowed swathe, 
          and entering the wood at the top, turning right along the path just inside 
          the woodland to rejoin the main path higher up where it is drier.  After about 10 minutes, you are in Birch Wood, a later addition to the 
          Forest, once zoned by Loughton Council for housing. The high wire fence 
          of the Epping Forest Deer Sanctuary comes in sight on the right. The Sanctuary, 
          108 acres in extent, was purchased by the Conservators and instituted 
          in 1960. It is not part of the legal Forest. The deer can use leaps to 
          get into the Forest proper. (??Richard - is this still so?)  Some fine oaks and beeches dot the wood and surrounding land from here. 
          Birch Wood was an area of coppice, though coppicing must have ceased a 
          long time ago. Do not try to cross the patch of bramble or scrub you see 
          at first - this will just frighten any deer that happen to be nearby. 
          Wait until you get to a point where the fence is only a couple of yards 
          from the path. It is often possible to see lone deer, or groups, especially 
          with binoculars, in the deer park in front of you, with the green bulk 
          of Gaunt's and Ruddock's (or Redoaks) Woods (Theydon Bois) in the distance. 
          There are also distant views across Essex towards Ongar. As you near the 
          fence, you cross the parish boundary (unmarked) between Theydon Bois and 
          Loughton. Follow the path parallel to the fence (it goes through several 
          dead and dying beeches at this point) onwards to the back entrance of 
          the deer sanctuary, where the (very strict) regulations concerning it 
          are posted. This is another good point to observe the deer. The building 
          up ahead is Birch Hall Farm; Birch Hall (Theydon Bois) itself is beyond. 
          Birch Hall and Wood are curious misnomers, since there are few birches 
          in this wood where beech is most noticeable. In old records, the spelling 
          is "Burch", and this may indicate a derivation from the old 
          buch, which became in modern English beech.  A stile in the fence on your left leads to a path diagonally set across 
          a meadow, part of the Forest buffer-land. In the far corner, though obscured 
          by bushes, are another stile and a rather rickety bridge over the stream. 
          Ignore the bridge on the right-hand side of the field: this just leads 
          into the adjacent meadow. Cross the bridge, re-enter the Forest, and follow 
          the stream on its far (west) bank in a left hand (with the flow) direction. 
          This is a very fine valley, with many beeches. The stream enters a culvert, 
          and the Debden House campsite is again visible ahead.  Debden House owned the fields hereabouts, which William Waller described 
          accurately as "park-like"; they were indeed called "Loughton 
          Parks". Many rabbits graze on the slopes here, and venture onto the 
          Forest as well. Hares are not unknown. There are good, and unusual, views 
          of the Forest, which surrounds on all sides the fields of the Parks.  Turn right onto the path just inside the Forest. At the first turn in 
          the boundary, you come to a cleared area, where there are some convenient 
          logs for resting. Fallen trees are valuable to the Forest ecology as a 
          habitat for insects and other invertebrates, and are also home to many 
          fungi. These are especially noticeable in the autumn, and include bracket 
          fungus, and (usually earlier) oyster mushroom. On the forest floor are 
          to be found many others, including shaggy inkcap, and fly agaric. There 
          also seem to be more than the usual number of birds hereabouts, including 
          tits, nuthatches, robins, and wrens.  Take the lower of the two paths (the one nearer the campsite), which 
          enters an area with a group of seven pollard beeches, and numerous fallen 
          trees. Ahead is one of the largest beeches in this part of the Forest, 
          a huge specimen with a massive canopy, and a many stemmed trunk six or 
          seven paces round the base. It was no doubt a coppice stool that sent 
          up several trunks that over the centuries knitted together. Keep well 
          to the left of this tree, the path going through an area of bracken and 
          birch. Keeping left, follow the path along the ridge - dotted with large 
          beeches - and pass on your immediate left a curious straight line of five 
          beeches and an oak. It was in this area that deep ditches were cut as 
          tank traps in 1940; they were later filled in. This is a good area in 
          which to see the forest deer.  You will see the surfaced line of the Green Ride ahead of you; turn left 
          onto it, until you cross the Broadstrood stream by a bridge. Just beyond 
          the bridge, turn left on to another ride. This descends with a couple 
          of turns, including one over a wide railed bridge over another stream. 
          Hedgerow shrubs, including elder, sloe, and many blackberries flank the 
          ride.  After a few minutes, you come to the forest gate. From the path that 
          goes off to the right just before it, you can see the back of Hartshill 
          (now Forest Rise), a grand house built by Edmond Egan for John Gregson. 
         Go through the gate. On your left are the buildings of a former farm, 
          and then the white painted Debden Mount, once in the possession of the 
          Upton and Warwick families, a handsome house of mid-19th century appearance, 
          and on the right, Elm Cottage, once the home of the van der Gucht family, 
          probably of 17th century origin, a "lobby-entrance" house. After 
          some newer houses comes early-19th century Debden House itself, home of 
          the Standidge and Pryor families: it was bought by the East Ham County 
          Borough Council in 1949, and is kept by their successors in first-class 
          order, with pleasant gardens. Day-camping facilities are available for 
          a nominal charge, whereby you can roam through the grounds, have a picnic 
          or barbecue, and see this walk from the "inside" of the park.  It is also worth walking along the north-east side of the green to look 
          at Algars, formerly The Beeches, another of Loughton's weatherboarded 
          houses, again of 17th century origin. On the other side of the main lane, 
          further south, are the forlorn entrance gates, some 200 years old, of 
          the former Debden Hall. The wooded land hereabouts, though in the Green 
          Belt, is the former garden of Debden Hall-as late as 1955 it was not wooded, 
          and is not part of the Forest - it is in the hands of a land company. 
          In this old garden, on the Grosvenor Rise side, is a strange mound, marked 
          as an antiquity, but which has not been excavated. Here also is Home Mead, 
          which is being preserved as a nature reserve by Epping Forest Council. 
         Further along Debden Lane towards Theydon Bois, the last house in Loughton, 
          is the superb mock-Tudor country house, Ripley Grange (no admittance, 
          and not visible from the road). It was built in the 1920s by Charles Clarke, 
          owner of the Caribonum Company, has 40 acres of garden, and was on sale 
          in 1999 for £4million.  
 
        
 Walk 5. Fairmead and Connaught Water Start point: Entrance to the Warren, Warren Hill. Distance: 3.8 miles. 
          Time: 1hour 20 min. Terrain - Level. Parts of the walk are muddy in winter 
          or after rain, but alternatives are available. Refreshments; none (there 
          is usually an ice-cream van at the Connaught Water car park in summer, 
          but the café there has been closed.) Buses - routes 20, 397, and 
          549 stop (ask for Spring Grove) by the Horse Pond at the bottom of Warren 
          Hill, the ¼ mile walk. Car parking: on street in Warren Hill or 
          Nursery Road - do not obstruct entries, and do not park at the right angled 
          bend between the two roads.
 If you ask any visitor to Epping Forest where Connaught Water is, he 
          or she will reply, "Chingford". But in fact, this, the biggest 
          Forest lake, is not in Chingford at all, but is equally shared between 
          Waltham Abbey and Loughton parishes. The usual approach to it is from 
          Chingford, hence the confusion, but this walk takes in a portion of Loughton's 
          southern boundary that is seldom approached from the town itself.  At the 90-degree bend that forms the junction between Nursery Road and 
          Warren Hill is a gated road that leads to the Warren, home of the Forest 
          administration (no admittance). Take the surfaced ride that strikes off 
          between this gated road and Nursery Road - that is, to the north of the 
          keepers' cottages.  The path leads between hedgebanks of oak (including at least one exotic 
          Turkey oak) and bramble. After a short distance, it divides. Take the 
          left fork (the right leads to Strawberry Hill Pond; walk 2) and carry 
          on along the surfaced ride. There is a small clearing on the right, with 
          good oaks and silver birch. On your left, you will see the fence of the 
          Warren grounds, and in a field just beyond the fence, a stone obelisk 
          that a former tenant erected to his favourite horse. The traffic of the 
          A104 (ex A11) Epping New Road will be seen beyond.  The path emerges at a gate into the Fairmead car park. Keep on the south 
          side of the car park, and cross the A104. Take great care, as traffic 
          commonly reaches 70 mph on this straight stretch of road. Note that from 
          about this point, all the streams drain via Connaught Water into the River 
          Ching, and thence into the Lea, whereas before it, they drain into the 
          Loughton Brook and then the Roding.  On the other side of the A104, turn sharp left along an unsurfaced ride 
          almost parallel with the road. However, this ride is frequently very wet, 
          and an alternative route is to carry straight on from where you crossed, 
          until you reach the old Fairmead Bottom Road, now a dead end, onto which 
          you turn left. The ride keeps just to the Loughton side of the (unmarked) 
          boundary with Waltham Holy Cross parish. This road predates the Epping 
          new Road, and was formerly a through route from Buckhurst Hill.  Fairmead Bottom, or Loughton Fairmead, was a plain created for hunting 
          purposes. The deer would be driven out of cover of the trees on to the 
          plain, where a grandstand was erected in the xxxx century for the nobles 
          to watch the chase. The timber frame of the standing remains, incorporated 
          in the Warren house.  Path and road will lead you to Palmer's Bridge, about 30 yards from what 
          was the junction with the Epping New Road. The Fairmead Bottom Road was 
          closed to traffic in about 1972, and its surface is now very poor indeed, 
          but it can still be entered by motor vehicles from its junction near the 
          motorcycle meet tea hut at High Beech.  Where the ride joins the road, walk along the road, and take the second 
          path (called the Red Path) on the right, keeping the stream on your right. 
          (The first path, with the stream on the left, leads to Grimston's Oak). 
          For much of its length, the Red Path is the boundary between the two parishes. 
          But note that on the Loughton side, very few of the trees have ever been 
          lopped, despite lopping rights having subsisted till 1879. This area was 
          simply too far from the settlement of Loughton to make lopping viable. 
          Oak predominates in this area, and is especially noticeable in the late 
          autumn, when the oaks generally retain a mantle of yellow leaves after 
          the other trees have shed theirs.  After a few minutes, Connaught Water comes in sight on your right. You 
          may also hear the buzz of model aeroplanes, which are flown on Chingford 
          plain about 200 yards south west. The water is a fine lake, created in 
          188X, with four islands, three of which are in Loughton, as the parish 
          boundary with Waltham bisects the lake For decades it was one of the prime 
          centres for boating in the Forest, an attraction in its own right. In 
          the 1880s, a paddle steamer plied on the lake (a small illustration is 
          on p. XXX), but mostly, rowing boats and canoes held their own, until 
          the hirer ceased business in the early 1990s.  Nowadays, the birds reign supreme, and are noted for their variety and 
          interest. Moorhen, coots, mallard, great crested grebe, Canada geese, 
          pochard and wigeon are among the waterfowl seen, plus, of course, the 
          mallard. Connaught water is a favourite place for children to feed the 
          waterfowl, and in winter, the residents are joined by numerous gulls, 
          whose swoopings and altercations cause much merriment.  Walk round the lake anti-clockwise. The first seat and island you come 
          to are in Loughton, the second, in Waltham; and then on, the western bank 
          is in the latter parish. The edges of the lake have been stabilised of 
          late, and a firm walk the whole way is assured whatever the rainfall, 
          the streamlets that used to cause boggy areas having been carried under 
          the path in pipes. The edges are reasonably clear, allowing appreciation 
          of the fine trees, mostly oak, and the views.  The lake is well stocked with fish, and frequented by anglers. In the 
          spring, during spawning, if you are lucky, you may see the fish leaping 
          from the surface.  On the southern edge, you come to a brick culvert, which carries the 
          River Ching away to the south, and at that point re-enter Loughton. The 
          culvert replaces a rustic bridge erected when the lake was dug: it is 
          less picturesque, but more efficient. The large car park then comes in 
          sight - carry on round the eastern side of the lake, past the site of 
          the old boathouse and tea hut, back to where you joined it. Turn right 
          onto the Red Path, back to the car park, and then walk left along Rangers 
          Road to its junction with the Epping New Road. (You can also go on to 
          Chingford by turning right, a fine walk across Chingford Plain to Queen 
          Elizabeth's Lodge, the Royal Forest Hotel, and Chingford Station, whence 
          you can catch (Mon-Sat) a no. 397 bus back to Loughton.)  At the top of Rangers Road, cross the Epping New Road (again, being very 
          careful), and enter the Forest by a stile about 25 yards north of the 
          junction. (The stile was missing in late 2001) The path divides, and you 
          should bear right. This area was cleared in 2001: it was formerly occupied 
          by a dense stand of sweet chestnut, and regeneration of this species can 
          be expected.  To your right, you will see a clump of pines. Make for this clump by 
          a side path. Pines are not, of course, native to the Forest, and these 
          were planted when the owners of Warren Hill House enclosed the grounds. 
          Just beyond the pines opens up one of Loughton's least known but most 
          impressive views. Over the treetops on your left is the Roding Valley, 
          the buildings "down below" obscured by trees. The vista is entirely 
          rural, and extends from Chigwell to Hainault Forest. 100 yards further 
          on, visible through a low fence (private, do not cross) is Warren Hill 
          House, a superb Victorian Gothic mansion, occupied in Edwardian times 
          by Sir Daniel Mackinnon, and later by the Lusty family, who were the makers 
          of Lloyd-loom woven furniture. It is now divided up into flats, and parts 
          of the former grounds are Epping Forest buffer land.  Retrace your steps to the pines, and turn right. This is a heath, with 
          clumps of heater and many rabbits, which keep the sward short. Ahead is 
          a fine oak, unlopped, with an extensive canopy and a bole about 14ft in 
          circumference. Join the ride, turning left by the oak, and descend the 
          hill. You will see ahead of you the postbox at the top of Warren Hill, 
          where the walk started.  
 
        
       Walk 6. Great Monk Wood  Start point: Goldings Hill Pond. Distance: 3.2 miles. Time, about 1hour 
          20 minutes. Terrain: The walk keeps generally to the 300ft contour, but 
          because the area is intersected by valleys, there are several quite steep 
          descents and climbs. There is one stream to be crossed, which requires 
          average agility. Bus - 250 and H1 stop at the beginning of the walk and 
          also at the Broadstrood Lodge end of it. Car parking - on street in Baldwins 
          Hill. Refreshments: the Foresters' Arms, in Baldwins Hill.  We have left this furthest corner of Loughton's Forest to the last. James 
          Brimble, author of the standard book on the Forest in the 1950s and 60s, 
          would argue the best should always be left to last. Monk Wood is certainly 
          rather different from the woodland to its south. Firstly, there are fewer 
          pollard trees - it is not true there are none - and secondly, the land 
          is high, and divided by the valleys of streams like the ribs of an umbrella. 
          The woodland is more open than to the south, and the paths are rather 
          less definite. This is a walk on which it easier to get lost than the 
          preceding six. But there is no fear of actually losing your way. Each 
          of the valleys, if you follow it downstream, leads to the one place, the 
          head of Baldwins Hill Pond, and so you can always find your way back to 
          the starting place.  Monk Wood, it is commonly alleged, remained immune from the Loughton 
          practice of lopping because it was under the direct control of the abbot 
          and monks of Waltham, hence its name. This, however, we find rather doubtful. 
          The abbey of Waltham was dissolved in 1536, and the rights passed to lay 
          lords of the manor, in the same way as the whole of the three manors of 
          Debden, Alderton and Loughton, which make up the present parish. It is 
          quite likely the real reason why lopping was not reckoned to be valid 
          in Monk Wood was simply its distance from the main settlement. After all, 
          the lopwood had to be dragged laboriously by sledge off the Forest, and 
          pulling a sledge up and down the valley sides, with or without horse power, 
          for over two miles was not a task to be relished, or indeed, needed, when 
          there was plenty of similar wood much nearer Loughton. And hornbeam, which 
          burnt slowly and gave out a lot of heat, is not prevalent here as it was 
          nearer Loughton.  Whatever the explanation, Monk Wood is certainly a superb piece of forest 
          scenery.  Get off the bus at Goldings Hill Pond, or park the car just along Baldwins 
          Hill from its junction with Goldings Hill. Walk along to the most southerly 
          point of the pond. Goldings Hill Ponds, which were quite often regarded 
          just as "Loughton Ponds", had their origin in watering horses 
          and cooling wagon brakes, though there was probably gravel extraction 
          there too. A ford through the upper pond allowed wagons to be driven through 
          the water, so as to expand and cool the brake blocks before the long descent 
          down Goldings Hill. A similar horse pond exists still at the foot of Buckhurst 
          Hill, opposite Spring Grove.  The configuration of the ponds was changed in 2001, during de-silting 
          and restoration operations, and as always after such work, they looked 
          bare and derelict. Nature soon restores its own, and within a year, they 
          will again be pretty and placid. Eutrophy - that is, the natural refilling 
          of ponds by silt and driftwood, and their recolonisation with plants -- 
          is a natural phenomenon, and every so often, re-digging has to be undertaken 
          to keep them open.  Follow the southern boundary of the south pond, and take the first path 
          leading left from it, just by a very tall oak. The path descends through 
          beeches, until you reach after about 350 yards the first stream. The stream 
          is crossed by some logs round which the water flows, and the path rises 
          through hornbeam and beech to come out onto the wide, surfaced Green Ride 
          opposite a 9-trunked beech, regrowth round an ancient coppice stool. Turn 
          left on to the Ride and follow it past a clearing where some recent pollards 
          stand, some dead, until you come to a bridge. 20 yards beyond this first 
          bridge is a path off to the right, just by a silver birch trunk that at 
          some time has been cleanly snapped off about 12ft from the ground. If 
          you continue along the Green Ride till you come to a pair of culverts, 
          you have gone too far!  The path, which is unsurfaced, descends to two log bridges or culverts 
          over two more of the Monk Wood steams, and then begins to climb, through 
          beech, oak and birch, until you reach a very pleasant glade, with moss, 
          bracken and coarse grasses. On your left, you will see an oak, which looks 
          as if it had been recently pollarded, with regrowth perhaps a tenth as 
          wide as the trunk about 10ft from the ground. In all probability, this 
          resulted from wind damage, but the tree does give an idea of what most 
          of Loughton's forest looked like 125 years ago. The old loppers would 
          leave one bough on a beech to continue growth. If this is not done, the 
          tree may die.  Enter the trees as the path goes through some rather boggy stretches 
          (which are easily circumnavigated) and you come after a short distance 
          to another oak and beech glade. At the end of this, the path crosses a 
          large fallen beech, and you can see on your left another of the Monk Wood 
          streams, this one being the Wake Valley stream, two arms of which descend 
          from the area of the Epping New Road near Wake Valley Pond, on Loughton's 
          north-western extremity. At this point the track becomes less marked, 
          but keep right, and if there is a seeming choice of paths, choose the 
          right hand one. You will now have been walking for about 50 minutes.  Keeping right, you descend to the valley of another stream. The path 
          goes down to where it looks as if there should be a bridge - but in fact 
          there is none. The stream, which is about 4ft wide, can however be crossed 
          at several points where the banks open out. Resume the broad path the 
          other side, which leads out to the Green Ride.  Here you have a choice. You can turn left, which brings you out in about 
          5 minutes to the Broadstrood car park in Goldings Hill. Here was once 
          a pleasant keeper's lodge, built for J W Maitland when he was Lord of 
          the Manor, for his keeper, Luffman, before the Corporation were appointed 
          conservators. It was a half-timbered construction, unfortunately demolished 
          in 1965.  Cross the main road, which can be very busy, into the car park, and turn 
          immediately right, parallel to the A121, along an unsurfaced horse ride 
          waymarked with white posts. In a few minutes, this leads down to the new 
          keepers' cottages by the side of Gregson's Ride. Gregson was the owner 
          and builder of Hartshill (walk 4), and it is said (we have never seen 
          any evidence) that the ride was made to allow delivery of materials to 
          the Hartshill site when the house was under construction.  Cross the road again, and walk back to the starting point, now in view. 
          As you do so, you will pass on your right the 13th milestone, erected 
          in the late 18th-century by the Epping and Ongar Turnpike Trust. This 
          is a listed structure, without doubt the smallest in Epping Forest, and 
          was maintained by the Loughton Town Council in 1998-99 along with the 
          other two milestones in Loughton, one halfway down Church Hill, the other 
          opposite Spring Grove.  If on rejoining the Green Ride you turn right, you can carry on to the 
          point at which you left it, and having crossed the two culverts under 
          the ride about 75 yards further on from where you originally turned right, 
          strike out left by a path rising between the trees. This path follows 
          the stream to Baldwins Hill Pond, and you can then cross the dam in front 
          of it, and ascend the bank on its east side until you reach Baldwins Hill 
          at the Foresters' Arms.   
        The Theydon Bois 
          & District Rural Preservation Society have a number of escorted 
          walks in the forest around Theydon Bois in the Summer. These are free 
          and all are welcome.DETAILS
 Waking 
          in Essex - John Harris's excellent web site of Essex Walks.
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