Mappiman's Real Ale Walks
Walking the UK, ticking off CAMRA Good Beer Guide Pubs and hunting for Geocaches.
Saturday, 25 April 2026
25/04/26 - Mawgan Porth to Watergate Bay
Friday, 24 April 2026
24/04/26 - The Old Albion, Crantock
A Tribute
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| Dogs demanded a play on Crantock Beach before the walking started |
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| Over West Pentire Head to Polly Joke |
Walk Details
Tuesday, 21 April 2026
21/04/26 - The West Midlands Way Summary
The West Midland Way is a 50 year old walking route. Starting at Meriden, rumoured centre of England, it charts a circular route through Warwickshire, Worcestershire, Shropshire and Staffordshire. Hand drawn maps are always a challenge, but it was simple enough to plot, with many of the paths incorporated into established Long Distance Paths. The North Worcestershire Way and Heart of England Way were frequently visited.
Highlights
The route started with well connected by public transport locations.
Stage 4 offered superb walking - the first time I have walked the Lickey Hills, Clent Hills and Waseley Hills on the same route - utilising the North Worcestershire Path.
Plenty of new and interesting discoveries - not least arriving at Rugeley to follow an Adventure Lab Cache detailing the life of the "Prince of Poisoners".
My adaption of the route included some fine drinking towns. Bridgnorth, Lichfield and Tamworth for the three times winner of CAMRA Pub of the Year. Bathams at the Three Horsehoes in Alverley, was possibly the best way I have ever waited for a bus. The bus stop right outside.
Lowlights
I will never understand why the route designers, Ron and Eric, missed out Lichfield. Looked like they did this on purpose, as the route detoured around it. Of course, I had to include it for public transportation.
Seeing one man bring the entire North/South Railway network to a standstill by smoking cigarettes on the bridge just outside Penkridge Station was a lesson in woke policing.
Warwickshire is the most boring county to walk in - so the ending was not particularly fitting. Boring fields gave way to two miles of road walking, which could only be avoided by adding serious miles to an already long route.
Meriden hides its only pub away from the town centre - which meant delayed celebration.
The Stages
Stage 1 - Meriden to Kenilworth
Stage 2 - Kenilworth to Henley-in-Arden
Stage 3 - Henley-in-Arden to Alvechurch
Stage 4 - Alvechurch to Hagley
Stage 5 - Hagley to Kinver
Stage 6 Part 1 - Kinver to Alverley
Stage 6 Part 2 - Alverley to Bridgnorth
Stage 7 - Bridgnorth to Shifnal
Stage 8 - Shifnal to Penkridge
Stage 9 - Penkridge to Rugeley
Stage 10 - Rugeley to Lichfield
Stage 11 - Lichfield to Tamworth
Stage 12 - Kingsbury to Meriden
21/04/26 - West Midlands Way - Stage 12 - Kingsbury to Meriden
I Finished Something!
I've walked this part of the world extensively on the Heart of England Way and the Centenary Way. I have previously pronounced Warwickshire the country's most boring walking county.
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| Two out of three ain't bad |
Nothing today has prompted me to change my mind. Kingsbury Water Park offers occasional glimpses of bodies of water through the woodland. Shustoke Reservoir is hardly observed from the footpaths that circumvent it. There are endless agricultural fields - devoid of livestock and crops (at this time of year). One pub - The Swan at Whitacre Heath - so "chainy" that it wasn't worth stopping at.
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| The only chance to see Shustoke Reservoir |
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| Distant views of Birmingham from a field in Warwickshire |
The only item of interest on the map is Maxstoke Priory and this is a disappointment. The church is locked up and the remains of the priory - a couple of walls in a poor state of repair - are hidden from view on private land.
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| Maxstoke Church |
Ideally, I would have liked to end things here. There are two miles of road walking to get back to Meriden. A bus would be handy but it only runs on a Wednesday - and then at 10am! Google Maps was checked for likely traffic and/or grass verges. It was safe enough to walk but I needed the Deserter Podcast to keep my spirits up.
Into Meriden - and despite the green, a memorial to the centre of England and a monument to British Cycling, there is no pub at hand. The Bull's Head another quarter of a mile on from the bus stop.
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| The Actual Centre of England is at Fenny Drayton |
An underwhelming end to an interesting experience which started so well.














