Windsor Great Park: Queen Anne's Ride, Gravel Hill and Spring Hill

Cumberland Lodge


Start & Finish: Long Walk Gate Car Park, Crown Cottages, Kings Road, Windsor, SL4 2BQ
Distance: 10.3 km (6.4 miles)
Elevation change: +/- 89m
GPX File: get via Buy Me a Coffee
Other routes touched (walk): Three Castles Path
Other routes touched (cycle): NCN 4, Round Berkshire Cycle Route
Pubs / Cafes on route: None
Map: OS Explorer Map (160) Windsor, Weybridge & Bracknell
Links: Windsor, Windsor Great Park, Office of The High Sheriff, Cumberland Lodge


For the latest in our series of short walks around Windsor Great Park we returned the the Long Walk Gate Cark Park. This walk covers the full length of Queen Anne’s Ride, the buildings around Gravel Hill and back via the Deer Park.

From the car park, follow Queen Anne’s Ride in a south-westerly direction all the way to the Queen Elizabeth statue. Along the way you’ll pass a donut shaped sculpture commemorating the 1000 years of the Office of The High Sheriff and the replanting of the trees along the ride in 1992/1993. The equestrian statue at the top of Queen Anne’s Ride was sculpted by Philip Jackson to mark the Golden Jubilee in 2002.

At the top of the Ride take the path to the left now heading west to Gravel Hill. Continue past The Royal School and Cumberland Lodge to the Cow Pond. Turn left onto Rhododendron Drive and follow it north to Bishop’s Gate. Take a left following the path along the Deer Park fence to the north of Bishopsgate Road and find the pedestrian entrance to the Deer Park.

Here you can either take the road to the Copper Horse Statue, and return via the Long Walk or, as we did, cut through the Deer Park. Having been to the Copper Horse Statue many times, the Deer Park walk was more interesting. Keep to the left side of the wooded Gore Plantation and cut through Withy Bed. Eventually you’ll re-join the Long Walk where you’ll follow it north toward the castle. After the Double Gate leave the Long Walk and take the path on the left to return to the car park.