Your Tour of Horton Country Park
Please use the map to guide you around the park3>
This picture tour will take you through a rural landscape
of fields, hedgerows, woods and ponds of great wildlife and
historical value. Each numbered point on the map refers to
one of the pictures below.
Please click on a number shown on the map to view an area.
The local nature reserve area covers approximately 400 acres
- 13. This is Meadow Pond, created in 1986 it has
been a great success. Look out for water fowl such as
moorhen, coot and little grebe as well as heron and the
occasional kingfisher. In summer, swallows, swifts and
dragonflies can be seen feeding on the large number of
insects the ponds support. In recent years swans have
nested in the reeds. »Return to map
- 14. The golf course is also part of the Country
Park and has developed as a popular local facility.
»Return to map
- 15. You are now on the route of the main line of
the Horton Light Railway. Opened in 1913 the line
operated until 1950 supplying the hospitals with coal
and other goods. »Return to map
- 16. The track branching off to the left is a branch
line of the old railway which went to Long Grove
Hospital. »Return to map
- 17. The wood you are now walking through is called
Butcher's Grove. The open areas that you will come
across have been coppiced by the Lower Mole Countryside
Management Project since 1985. Coppicing woodland is a
traditional way of management where trees are cut down
and left to regrow from the base, on a cycle dependent
on the tree species and use for the wood. Coppicing a
woodland initially allows in more light, encouraging
wild flowers such as bluebells and birds like the now
scarce nightingale. There is very good evidence that
Butcher's Grove dates from the Middle Ages. The records
from the Abbey of Chertsey, refer to the Abbot of
Chertsey John De Rutherwyk ordering in 1307 an area of
land to be enclosed and planted at Brettgrave, the old
name for the wood. It is not known why the name
changed, however there is an area of hornbeam trees
within the woods and butchers chopping boards are made
exclusively of hornbeam wood. »Return to map
- 18. On your right the fence and hedge marks the
boundary of the Country Park. On the other side is
Castle Hill in the London Borough of
Kingston-upon-Thames. Castle Hill has been designated
as an Ancient Monument and is thought to be the site of
a medieval moated farmstead known as Brettgrave. The
path on the right leads around Castle Hill and on to
Chessington. »Return to map
- 19. As you can see a great deal of tree planting
has taken place in this area, forming Hendon Grove; it
is still just possible on a clear day to see the North
Downs around Banstead. Hendon Grove is named after one
of the locomotives which used to operate on the Horton
Light Railway and is pictured at point 4 on this tour. »Return to map
20. You are now crossing over the Public Footpath on
which you began your walk. As you can see it heads
North West across the fields to Chessington. Look out
for a bird with bright blue flashes on its wings. The
jay is commonly seen in this part of the park. Look out
too for the green woodpecker, the symbol of the Country
Park, and the little owl; Britain's smallest owl. »Return to map

- 21. On your right is Four Acre Wood which is a
carpet of bluebells, wood anemone and celandine in the
Spring. To your left you will regularly see cattle and
rare breeds of sheep grazing in the fields. A little
way ahead you can see the site of the points where the
branch line to the boiler house joined the main line of
the railway. »Return to map
-
22. You are now entering Pond Wood
which is also an Ancient Woodland. The wood is at its
most beautiful in the Spring when it is a sea of
bluebells. Pond Wood is also one of the largest roosts
for jackdaws in the London area.
»Return to map

- 23. As you walk through this part of the wood
notice how the trees are predominantly old gnarled
hawthorns. This area used to be a field called Peaked
Riding and is shown on the Ordnance Survey Maps of the
Nineteenth Century. In Spring notice that this area is
not the carpet of bluebells seen in Pond Wood proper,
which has required a long and undisturbed history to
produce such a beautiful sight. »Return to map
- 24. On your right you will see a large crater which
was caused when the railway was bombed in June 1941.
»Return to map
- 25. The pond in Pond Wood is on your left.
Restored in 1994 with the help of Kingston Conservation
Volunteers, work having started in the Summer of 1990.
The ponds dam was breached by the air raid on the
railway in June 1941. »Return to map
- 26. Turn right you are now back on the old railway
line. The tall building ahead is the water tower of
West Park Hospital. After a short distance you will
come to Field Pond on your right work has been carried
out in recent years to deepen the pond to prevent it
from drying out during the Summer months when it is used
frequently by visiting schools for pond dips. »Return to map
-
27. Turn left at the cross roads and walk up the
hill; you will soon find yourself nearing the start
of your walk.
»Return to map

28. The view from the top of the hill, nearing the car park.
»Return to map

We hope you enjoyed your virtual tour and that you
will visit the Country Park for real! Remember the
Country Park changes continually with the seasons
and there is always the chance of spotting
interesting birds, animals and plants.
With the exception of two pictures on this tour (4 & 27) all
were taken in October/November 1999.
Thank you for taking the park tour, please
click here to return to the top of the page.