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Name: | Upper Wardington Hill |
Hill number: | 17356 |
Height: | 179.1m / 588ft |
Parent (Ma): | 2869 Cleeve Hill |
RHB Section: | 39: Central and Eastern England |
County/UA: | West Northamptonshire |
Catchment: | Thames |
Class: | Tump (100-199m) (Tu,1) |
Grid ref: | SP 50339 46330 |
Summit feature: | no feature: arable |
Drop: | 34m |
Col: | 145m SP516451 |
OS map sheet(s): | (1:50k) 151 (1:25k) 206 |
Observations: | flat summit area |
Change log: | show changes for this hill entry |
GPS data: | show GPS entries for this hill |
N.B. Some hill summits are on private property or on land where there is no public right of way. Permission should be sought from the landowner where access to a hill summit is through private land.
Please report via the contact page any logs you see below which describe or encourage acts of trespass. Please quote the hill number and hill name.
Logged Descriptions (logged by 40 users) | By | Date of Ascent |
Up a very wet jurrasic way. The top lane is a lot firmer underfoot.. | cjo | 29/03/2024 |
A very nice stroll from parking in Upper Wardington - a classic Cotswold village. The Battlefields Trail is a nicer route than the direct ROW. | Mark Jackson | 30/08/2023 |
From village along Jurassic Way | Mark Sims | 17/06/2022 |
Wycombe Wanderer | 18/04/2022 | |
Martin R | 25/02/2022 | |
Matt | 26/09/2021 | |
Fairly straightforward. There is a opening in the fence at SP 50266 46230 allowing access to the summit field (peas this year). | DC11main | 27/07/2021 |
Denise | 28/02/2021 | |
RichardM | 28/02/2021 | |
From Upper Wardington. Summit is in a field of brassicas but it is just about possible to tiptoe through them. I was grateful, however, that the farmer did not appear to discuss that with me. | clivevilla | 03/11/2020 |
geoffreycurnock | 08/06/2020 | |
From Upper Warrington. Footpath to west end of summit field, then tractor tracks over summit to east side. Return on footpaths. | PGCE | 29/05/2020 |
davefh | 22/03/2020 | |
As per JohnW. Up and back via the Jurassic Way footpath. The direct footpath would have required a trek over a freshly drilled field. | johnkenyon | 08/03/2020 |
Ascended by the footpath from Upper Wardington, but it meant crossing recently drilled arable land. The high point was on similar soil. Descended by the bridleway - the Jurassic Way. This is a pleasanter route through sheep cropped grass. Several hedges in the area have been removed and a copse planted. | JohnW | 08/09/2019 |
From the village, RoW through middle of a beet field, then short distance across another beet field, this time no RoW. | jonglew | 19/11/2018 |
From Upper Wardington- good paths, marked, stiles. A fence/hedge shown on 1/25K OS maps no longer exists and to get to the HP I walked from the NW where I could follow farm vehicle tracks and not trample any of the growing crop. The fp running just below the HP and ridge on the SW side had very good views. Sunny and becoming hot. | pwheeler | 25/06/2018 |
Footpath from village | Colin Crawford | 08/01/2018 |
My 10th Northants tump of the day and my 500th for the year, on a car tour exploration of Northants from Nottingham with my girlfriend driving. We visited Naseby Hill, Honey Hill, Ashby Grange Hill, Borough, Newnham, Everdon, Waydale, Woodford and Thenford before parking up in the village. I took the footpath heading EnE to reach the edge of the field and then up to the vague summit. I spent about 5 minutes circling around, before descending to footpath on muddy track beside field edge heading Nw then took the Battlefield trail back into the village. Without being spectacular, Northants has good walking trails and pleasant rolling countryside! | Dazingdale | 30/12/2017 |
Wardington to Middleton Cheney. | Smudge | 16/12/2017 |
From village on FP, along track and then to HP in field | PeterD | 05/11/2017 |
Had a walk whilst at Fairport Convention's 50th Anniversary Cropedy Festival. Ended up on this mounded field in Oxfordshire. | summitter | 12/08/2017 |
From sleepy village took left hand track (Jurassic Way, but indistinct) to trees on skyline, over stile then SE along field edge. This time summit field had been cropped. Just about to set off into middle of field when enormous combine harvester (New Holland C9.90) came over the horizon. Cutter at front must have been 10-12m wide. Took pictures and waited till it had passed. | Aye Jimmy | 11/08/2017 |
Short circular route up from Cropredy village during Fairport Convention's 50th anniversary festival. | Archie | 10/08/2017 |
KathW | 10/08/2017 | |
Walked up from village to flat harvested field. | Dugswell2 | 06/08/2017 |
KC | 07/07/2017 | |
Walked from Thenfield Hill via bridleway and then dropped down into pretty village of Wardington where there was little sign of life. Bus back to Banbury station | trimarc2 | 27/04/2017 |
A chance to read up on the complicated War of The Roses (between the Houses of York & Lancaster) as one of the 19 battles - Edgecote happened on this hill in 1469. Seems that two opposing groups of reinforcements happened upon each other here. The resullt of the battle being that Edward IV temporarily lost his crown as the Earl of Warwick(The Kingmaker) won. It was apparently Edward's fault for upsetting Warwick by marrying a commoner - Elizabeth Woodville. BUT Edward soon had the throne back under a deal. He was one of five different rulers in only 25 years, 3 of who were killed or executed by their rivals. Soon to follow Edward's natural death was Richard III of Leicester car park fame. And it all seemed so quiet and uneventful up on this rolling hill today. For full historical immersion could join one of the reenactment groups -clip of YouTube of rubber bunged arrows being fired and some rather timid close combat 'fighting' -to half heated applause from the watching crowd. | Chris Pearson | 23/03/2017 |
From Thorpe Road. Bridleway then path. Flat top. 
According to friendly local the hill is called Fox Hill. | chrisbien | 09/10/2016 |
As Adrian: very nice village: good path E through crops. | GordonAdshead | 19/07/2016 |
GaryJones | 04/03/2016 | |
Another beautiful Northants (or is it Oxfordshire) village. FP initially well marked but petered out in fields. Heavy, sticky soil. Met landowner at top of field. Pleasant chap. Pointed out that one side of the hedge was Oxfordshire, the other Northants. | Campbell Singer | 18/02/2016 |
ngthack | 30/08/2015 | |
andrew brown | 04/06/2015 | |
As for Adrian. | arranc | 15/04/2015 |
Last of the day, and my final Northants P30, frosty evening in near darkness. Pasture leading to arable field. | RHW | 13/12/2014 |
stevent0809 | 29/11/2014 | |
From Upper Wardington, Upper Wardington Hill and Thenford Hill. | rhalstead | 13/10/2013 |
In field up from nice village. | Adrian | 15/10/2011 |