Walk around Fingle Bridge, Dartmoor National Park – England

Lovely walk to discover the Dartmoor National Park. This walk starts from Fingle Bridge National Trust and has great view on Castle Drogo.

Fingle Bridge walk Information:

  • Distance: 9.72km
  • Duration: 3h
  • Ascent: 227m
  • Level: Easy
  • Car park: Fingle Bridge, Drewsteignton, Exeter EX6 6PW
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For our last day in the south of England we wanted to discover Dartmoor National Park. This park, in the Devon county, contains 280 million years old rocks. The fauna and flora are also well represented because of the acidity of the soil and low intensity agriculture. But what made this park famous was Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s novel Hound of the Baskervilles. All the scenes of this novel were inspired by the landscapes of this park.

Our AirBnB host recommended us a circular hike of around 10 km in the north of the park. After leaving the motorway we droved on the very small roads of Devon. That morning the country roads were frozen and I was so scared to meet a car. I do not know why but even after 3 years in England I am still horrified at the idea of ​​taking the small roads.

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Finally we arrived at Fingle Bridge where we parked the car for the day. There is a free car park that quickly gets full and even in winter. At the end of the car park there is a nice pub to drink a beer or eat something. This hike is not very hard once the first hill climbed. Then the trail overlooks the valley for a little while offering beautiful views of the Dartmoor National Park. The hike passes near Drogo Castle that you can visit at the same time if you have time. Then the path descends into the valley and makes a detour through a park containing deer before returning to the car following the river.

Here are the steps to realise this hike:

  • From the car park take the path that goes up the hill (in front of the car park before the pub) towards Castle Drogo. Follow this path for a very long time until you come down to a barrier and an asphalt road at the foot of Castle Drogo;
  • At this road turn left and continue straight until you see a wooden bridge crossing the river. Cross the bridge then the stone-wall and take right on the path;
  • Continue on this path for a while before turning left onto the path that climbs through the forest. (If you arrive to a road and a portal turn around you have gone too far, take the first path on your right that goes up). This trail climbs nicely into the forest and makes a circle. Follow it until you reach the top of the hill, where you will have a nice view on Drogo Castle. Continue on this path and go down through the forest until you find yourself in front of the stone-wall and the bridge;
  • Cross the bridge and turn right on the trail following the river. Continue until you reach Fingle Bridge pub and the parking.

Do you know this hike?


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8 thoughts on “Walk around Fingle Bridge, Dartmoor National Park – England

  1. Beautiful photos of lovely views–thanks.

    I understand the fear of the tiny roads. I used to live in the UK for a few years, up north, and found some of them just something I wanted to avoid, but often they are the only roads to the place we wanted to go–

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      1. Oh, no, I think not. I think it’s important to be so safety-conscious, have headlamps on, maybe toot if approaching a blind hill, use sensible speed, that sort of thing. It just seems to make everything safer and easier. Best wishes with it all!

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  2. Ah, this is an excellent hike. Thank you for a look at countryside I’ve only seem briefly, from the road. In a RARE slip of English (yours is usually impeccable), you were thinking in French and wrote “Dog of the Baskervilles,” instead of “Hound.” I point this out only because it is such a charming demonstration of how thoroughly you occupy both languages, which I endlessly admire. That leads me to ask if there’s a corresponding French word that conveys something of what Doyle meant by saying “hound” instead of “dog.” Thanks very much for the like, and happy travels.

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    1. Thank you for this correction. It is always nice to have someone to point out my English mistakes. I think “hound” could be translated as “chien de chasse”, which is a type of dog.

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