Uppingham 5 Mile Walk

Breakfast, lunch and dinner in Uppingham’s Market Place, punctuated by a five-mile country walk

Description

Written by The Great Food Club , this lovely circular walk has the option to eat at three recommended Uppingham venues in the Market Place…

Uppingham is as pretty as a picture, especially its Market Place. Overlooking the handsome square are no less than three food-and-drink businesses; Buzzing Don Paddy’s is perfect for breakfast or brunch. Classic English pub The Vaults serves locally brewed real ales. And the elegant Falcon Hotel is ideal for an evening meal of afternoon tea.

Eating at all three venues in one day – achieving the ‘Uppingham Market Place Hat-Trick’ as The Great Food Club like to call it – is a delicious experience (remember, you don’t have to eat a massive portion at each stop, you could do the ‘hat-trick’ by merely snacking at all three).

Still, we could all do with a little assistance when it comes to calorie control. To help you burn a few kilojoules, we’ve devised a five-mile circular country walk (there’s a map and step-by-step route below) to put you in the right place for this Uppingham Market Place feast! Therefore, we recommend the following order of events:

1) Brunch at Don Paddies
2) Walk the five-mile circuit (see below)
3) Snack/lunch and a pint at The Vaults
4) Stroll around Uppingham & coffee
5) Evening meal at The Falcon

However, you could chop that order up in any way you see fit because all three venues serve breakfast, lunch and dinner. Whichever schedule you choose, you’re guaranteed a delicious experience, enhanced by some gentle exercise amid beautiful Rutland scenery.

The Market Square Trio – all dog friendly

1) Don Paddy’s (our suggestion: brunch)

8 Market Place, Uppingham, LE15 9QH
Don Paddy’s is a friendly, bustling and perennially popular café, bar and restaurant. It offers good food and drink from a varied menu. It’s a great spot for a pre-walk brunch (served daily 9-11.30am), or maybe coffee and cake. It’s also good for lunch and evening meals.

2) The Vaults (our suggestion: lunch)

4 Market Place, Uppingham, LE15 9QH
The Vaults is the quintessential traditional English pub. Serving real ales, lagers, wines and more, this place is ideal for a good, honest, well-earned meal and refreshment after your walk. Where possible, The Vaults uses locally sourced ingredients, and it offers weekly changing specials alongside breakfast, lunch and dinner menus.

3) The Falcon (our suggestion: dinner)

7 High St East, Uppingham, Rutland, LE15 9PY
The Falcon Hotel is a quietly elegant 16th-century coaching inn and restaurant. As well as the main menu (which can also be taken in the brasserie lounge), there is a lighter bar menu and a special lunch menu.

The walk route

The map below shows the walk route, starting and ending at Uppingham’s Market Place. It’s a simple route and follows well-trodden paths, but it’s a good idea to take a map with you (or download/print this image). Please note the walk contains several wooden stiles you need to climb over…

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1
Cross the road from Market Place and walk down Uppingham’s High Street West. Enter Stockerston Road, with Red India on your right. Soon the pavement ends but keep going.

Step 2
Around 100 yards after the pavement ends, you come to a stile on your right. Hop over it and strike out across the field, following the sign for the Rutland Round. The footpath sign may be hidden by foliage depending on the time of year. When you reach the far corner of the field you come to another stile.

Step 3
Go over the stile and then negotiate a third and, after another 100 yards, a fourth. Soon you’re walking between two fences along a narrow path. Go over two more stiles in quick succession.

Step 4
After about 200 yards, you reach another stile. Climb over and come out into another field with a good view across Rutland. Crossing the next field, you reach another stile offering an even better view.

Step 5
After the stile, turn left and follow the hedgerow. You soon reach the end of the field, where there’s another stile next to farm buildings. You quickly reach yet another stile – the entrance to Beaumont Chase Farm. Hop over and you’re now back on Stockerston Road.

Step 6
Turn right on Stockerston Road (be careful of traffic). After about 100 yards, you see a gate on your right. Go through it and follow the footpath downhill, which takes you across the field, thereby missing off a chunk of Stockerston Road. You soon come to another gate where you re-join the road.

Step 7
After a few yards, you walk past the sign for Leicestershire and come to a bridge where there is a narrowing in the road. Take care here – wait till no traffic is coming either way. When it’s safe, cross the bridge and you soon come to Lodge Farm. At the farm turn right onto Horninghold Road. Carry on along Horninghold Road for about 150 yards and then turn right on the track towards Allexton.

Step 8
Soon you to come to a cattle grid and around 200 yards beyond the grid, look for a “public bridleway” sign on your right. Follow it and enter Wardley Wood.

Step 9
Cross the wooden bridge over the stream, then walk straight on towards the yellow marker. At the marker, head straight on into the woods.

Step 10
Walk through the woods, following the markers. Soon you come to a small shack and a clearing. Simply follow the markers and before long you exit the wood, finding yourself on a narrow path between two fields.

Step 11

Next, you come out into a grassy field where the path isn’t 100% clear. However, go straight on. Follow your nose and you’ll soon come to another trusty yellow marker and a metal gate.

Step 12
Go through the gate and you soon find yourself walking upwards through an undulating field. There is the site of an ancient motte-and-bailey castle on your right.

Step 13
Cross the small bridge and stile and walk diagonally across the field uphill towards the treeline and the road.

Step 14
On the other side of the field, you come to a gate to the road. Turn right, cross over onto the pavement and walk towards Uppingham. Before long, you’re back in the town where feasting can commence.