Esk Valley Walk

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Esk_Valley_Walk an entity of type: Place

The Esk Valley Walk is a long distance footpath in North Yorkshire, England. The route first follows a loop on the North York Moors to the south of Castleton, then shadows the River Esk on its journey to the North Sea. Waymarking uses the symbol of a leaping salmon, with yellow arrows denoting footpaths and blue arrows bridleways. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Esk Valley Walk
rdf:langString Esk Valley Walk
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rdf:langString Leaping salmon
rdf:langString Westerdale lies on the trail
rdf:langString Regional Route maintained by North York Moors National Park Authority
xsd:integer 35
rdf:langString Northern England, United Kingdom
rdf:langString Westerdale from John Breckon road - geograph.org.uk - 111843.jpg
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rdf:langString The Esk Valley Walk is a long distance footpath in North Yorkshire, England. The route first follows a loop on the North York Moors to the south of Castleton, then shadows the River Esk on its journey to the North Sea. Waymarking uses the symbol of a leaping salmon, with yellow arrows denoting footpaths and blue arrows bridleways. From Castleton the route leads to Danby Dale, Rosedale Head and Blakey Ridge. It then passes through the remains of , a medieval sheep farm, and on to Westerdale and, passing Castleton once more, Eskdale proper. Next it reaches Danby, including the Moors National Park Centre located just outside Danby, and then climbs to Danby Beacon. From here it leads to Leaholm, Glaisdale, Egton Bridge and Grosmont, the terminus of the North Yorkshire Moors Railway. The final section passes through Ruswarp to reach the end of the route at the old port of Whitby.
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