The chase is an important local amenity for recreation, with 58% of the National Landscape area publicly accessible, and several visitor attractions lie within it. While only around 10,000 people live within the National Landscape area itself, 135,000 people live within a 30 minute walk of the area, and 3.2 million people live within a one hour drive of the area. It received an estimated 2.3 million visitors in 2010-11.
Visitor sites and landmarks There are a number of visitor centres, museums and
waymarked paths, including the
Heart of England Way and the
Staffordshire Way. There are also accessible trails to enable people to experience the health benefits of the Chase, such as The Route to Health. Additionally, there are many unmarked public paths. On the north-eastern edge of the Chase can be found
Shugborough Hall, ancestral home of the
Earls of Lichfield. At its southern edge are the remains of
Castle Ring, an
Iron Age hill fort, which at is the highest point on the Chase. Several
glacial erratic boulders are also found on the Chase, remnants of
glaciation. One is mounted on a plinth. The Chase has several
war memorials, including
German and
Commonwealth war cemeteries. A memorial to the victims of the
Katyn massacre was unveiled by Stefan Staniszewski, whose father Hillary, Zygmunt Staniszewski, died in the massacre. Preserved below the memorial are phials of soil from both
Warsaw and the
Katyn forest. Freda, the Harlequin
Great Dane mascot of the
New Zealand Rifle Brigade (Earl of Liverpool's Own) is also buried on the chase marked with a memorial marble headstone.
Mountain biking The Chase is popular with cross-country mountain bike users. The purpose-built XC 'Follow the Dog' trail is an technically challenging route, opened in 2005, starting and finishing at the Birches Valley Visitors/Cycle Centre. It is open to all; however, it is not recommended for beginners. A new section of XC trail was opened in April 2010. The 'Monkey Trail' () is a more technical trail that splits from 'Follow the Dog' at about the halfway point, then rejoins slightly further on. There are several features mountain bikers can discover when riding on the chase, such as Kitbag Hill, Rabbit Hill, Quagmire Bridge, Roots Hall and Brocton Shorts. Increasing popularity of the MTB trails led Network Rail to install a cycle bridge in 2013 at Moors Gorse to replace the previous pedestrian level crossing where multiple near misses indicated a high risk to cyclists.
Entertainment Since 2006, the forest has been used as an open-air music venue as part of the Forestry England nationwide Forest Live, with acts such as
The Zutons,
The Feeling,
Status Quo and
Jools Holland playing in a forest clearing. Also contained within the chase is
Hednesford Hills Raceway a historic venue that frequently hosts
Stock Car Racing and
Banger Racing. ==History and archaeology==