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Hiking trails & Routes
United Kingdom
England
West Midlands Region
Warwickshire
Stratford-On-Avon
Combrook

Field of Wild Grasses – Pittern Hill Trig Point loop from Combrook

Moderate

4

hikers

Field of Wild Grasses – Pittern Hill Trig Point loop from Combrook

02:33

9.50km

110m

Hiking

Moderate hike. Good fitness required. Easily-accessible paths. Suitable for all skill levels. The starting point of the route is accessible with public transport.

Last updated: May 12, 2026

Waypoints

A

Start point

Bus stop

Get Directions

1

846 m

Field of Wild Grasses

Highlight • Natural

2

3.57 km

Lobbington Meadow is an unimproved species-rich hay meadow which faces north east on the banks of the River Dene and exhibits ridge and furrow topography. The meadow overlies Lias clays and shales which have given rise to a calcareous soil. This is reflected in the herb-rich vegetation which is the lady’s bedstraw Galium verum variant of the crested dog’s-tail Cynosurus cristatus-common knapweed Centaurea nigra grassland.

This grassland type was once widespread and common in some parts of Britain,
particularly the Midlands, but due to agricultural improvement it has declined severely during the twentieth century. In several counties in the East Midlands it has almost disappeared and in Warwickshire very few sites are known.

The meadow has an exceptionally herb-rich tight sward and the density of herbs is very striking. Among the wide range of grass species present, characteristically none appear dominant. The most abundant species are crested dog’s-tail, red fescue Festuca rubra, common bent Agrostis capillaris and sweet vernal grass Anthoxanthum odoratum. Yellow oat-grass Trisetum flavescens, quaking grass Briza media and meadow barley Hordeum secalinum are also frequent. Herbs characteristic of this type of grassland and found in abundance in this meadow include common knapweed and lady’s bedstraw and locally abundant, spiny restharrow Ononis spinosa, salad burnet Sanguisorba minor and pepper saxifrage Silaum silaus. Cowslips Primula veris are frequent and dwarf thistle Cirsium acaulon, is occasional. County rarities present m the meadow include dropwort Filipendula vulgaris and green-winged orchid Orchis morio.


4.68 ha Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI)

Tip by

3

6.48 km

Kineton

Highlight • Settlement

4

7.29 km

Pittern Hill Trig Point

Highlight • Summit

From the trig point, 122m above sea level, there are great views over to edge hill and into the cotswolds. A mile walk with 50m of ascent from Kineton.

Tip by

5

9.00 km

Green Farm Airstrip (Disused)

Highlight • Structure

Runway: 850 grass

Just E of Combrook village which is E of the B4455 and S of the B4086. About 1nm WNW of Kineton, and roughly 3nm SE of WELLESBOURNE MOUNTFORD airfield

Tip by

6

9.37 km

St Mary and St Margaret Church, Combrook

Highlight • Religious Site

The site of The Church of St Mary and St Margaret, a Medieval chapel which was largely rebuilt as a parish church in the 19th century. The chancel was rebuilt in 1831 and the nave in 1866. It stands in Combrook.

Church. 1866. By John Gibson, incorporating chancel of 1831 with alterations. MATERIALS: coursed limestone rubble with ironstone dressings; steeply pitched old and renewed tile roof. PLAN: 2-bay chancel and 5-bay nave with lean-to aisles and bellcote. c1300 style. Coped gables. EXTERIOR: chancel has a 3-light traceried east window; north and south sides have straight-headed 2-light windows. Aisles have diagonal buttresses and 2-light windows with head stops to hood moulds in gabled half-dormers. West entrance has elaborate open-work cusped gable on shafts with foliated capitals and large angel corbels; rose window above. Gable has bellcote with spire and weather-vane; angels to angles. INTERIOR: flower-pot shaped font is possibly medieval. STAINED GLASS: east window by Willement c1866; good glass to west window.

Tip by

7

9.44 km

St. Mary & St. Charles Church, Combrook

Highlight • Religious Site

"Combroke Village is also known as Combrook and, less frequently, as Combrooke.
Its history is closely linked with that of the nearby Compton Verney estate, for which it once served as the estate village, providing living accommodation for a number of the servants. The village dates from at least the time of Henry I, circa 1086, when a small medieval church was built in the village. There is, however, no separate reference to it in the Domesday book. By 1279, following a stocktaking by Edward I known as the Hundred Rolls, Combrook was identified as located in the Kineton hundred. It remained part of the Kineton parish until 1858, when it was separated from Kineton and united with the ecclesiastical parish of Compton Verney.


A number of the buildings in the village have a similar style, most easily seen in the church. The original church was modified in Tudor times, with the chancel being rebuilt again in 1831. The present building was erected in 1866, to a design by John Gibson, paid for by the Dowager Lady Margaret Willoughby de Brook of Compton Verney, keeping the existing chancel. John Gibson went on to design the Victorian neo-Elizabethan estate houses and the horse drinking troughs in the village in the same style as that of the church. A number of the other houses in the village are thatched, with clear signs of original thatched roofs visible on several other dwellings. Until the sale of the Compton Verney estate in 1929, Combrook was a "closed" village, entirely owned by the Lord of the Manor, who could determine who lived there, and Combrook today is still considered to be one of the best-preserved estate villages in the country.

The largest house in Combrook once served as the school, and there has been a school on the site since at least 1641. The building which now serves as the village hall was built as the village school in 1855, and seems to have served as a design template for John Gibson's style for the church and estate houses. The village school was closed in 1966."

Source: Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combrook

Tip by

B

9.50 km

End point

Bus stop

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Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

5.63 km

2.30 km

1.04 km

295 m

247 m

Surfaces

5.63 km

1.80 km

1.48 km

302 m

249 m

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Elevation

Elevation

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Highest point (120 m)

Lowest point (60 m)

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Weather

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Friday 10 July

30°C

16°C

0 %

Additional weather tips

Max wind speed: 19.0 km/h

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