Savernake Forest has many named drives and other landscape features. These are named on the Ordnance Survey Explorer map 157
Marlborough & Savernake Forest, but few are named on the ground.
Postern Hill to Amity Oak (About west to east) Postern Hill is at (). At this is the chalk plateau at its highest, and a north-facing scarp slope overlooks the town of Marlborough. On the hilltop is a small Forestry Commission Camp Site – Postern Hill Campsite – together with a public car park and barbecue area. Four tracks head southwards through oak forest, the principal one being
Long Harry (). The track descends gradually, crossing
White Road (). Tree cover is not dense and ancient oaks are plentiful here, including one named
Saddle Oak on account of its near-horizontal boughs.
Church Walk () bridle path is crossed next before reaching
Great Lodge Bottom (). The bridle path connects the
A4 to Cadley hamlet on the
A346, and is the only public right of way in the main part of the forest. Great Lodge Bottom is an east-running dry valley, fairly open with
hawthorn and
blackthorn scrub. After crossing the Grand Avenue the valley runs into
Red Vein Bottom () with its rough pasture and rabbit warrens. The path is joined by a small valley coming down from the
pinetum (pine arboretum) at
Braydon Hook () adjacent to Braydon Hook House. The path from Red Vein Bottom skirts the
Ashdale Firs and passes some huge beeches before arriving at the
Amity Oak (), an old tree which serves as a parish boundary marker. The valley continues east to
Hungerford via Little Frith.
Leigh Hill to Crabtree Cottages (About west to east)
Leigh Hill () is south of Postern Hill and is high. There is a seasonal car park nearby. Three small valleys run northeast from this high point.
Postwives Walk () begins with an ancient avenue of oaks and descends gently to cross
Charcoal Burners Road () (
charcoal is still made here) and so on to the heart of the forest, passing both the
Queen Oak () and the
King Oak (). A second valley, named
Cheval Bottom, () starts in an avenue of mature
copper beeches and passes beside the
Park Pale () which is an ancient bank-and-ditch feature which marked the perimeter of the Royal Park at one time. The third valley starts near the column at
Three Oak Hill Drive () which, despite its name, has fine stands of
beech and also of
Scots pine. The ground descends into
Drury Lane () and passes a young plantation before joining the other two valleys and then, as a fine shallow-sided valley of meadow pasture, passes
Savernake Lodge () on its way to
Crabtree Cottages () and thence to
Little Frith () with its carpets of
bluebells in May, and then finally joining the valley to Hungerford.
Grand Avenue to Strawgrove Copse (About north to south.) The
Grand Avenue () is a straight but narrow tarmaced road connecting the A4 to the Durley Road near Tottenham House. It is lined with beech trees, but few of them are survivors from the original plantings. The A4 was once a
toll road through the forest, taking the Marlborough to Hungerford traffic. The
Toll Road House () still stands today. The Grand Avenue continues southeast to
Eight Walks () where Capability Brown laid out the hub to Savernake's eight radial drives. A little further on there is an unexplained
Monument () on the western side of the road, rumoured to be a marker (or tomb?) to someone who suffered a fatal fall from a horse. At the
Three Oak Hill Drive crossroads, a track north-east points to
Birch Copse (). ''Duke's Vaunt Oak
() is a notable tree approximately 1,000 years old. It was once hollow and in girth. In 1760 it had a door and a lock and was capable of sheltering "twenty boys"
. The tree is badly split now, but survives. Here the ground is damp and parts of Birch Copse
barely see daylight. While some of the tall pines seem senescent, other plantation firs are green and vibrant. Many varieties of fungi can be seen in profusion in October, but dead-wood fungi are common enough throughout the year. At the southeast edge of the forest are good examples of Sweet Chestnut and Yew. At Holt Pound
() an avenue of oaks joins Birch Copse to Bedwyn Common
(). This section of Savernake has its own avenue, London Ride
, which at runs from St Katherine's Church
() to Upper Horsehall Hill Farm
(). The ride is lined with oak in the south, and by limes in the north. Many old oaks and old sweet chestnuts are still standing, and foxgloves populate the forest edges. Forest tracks and bridleways lead southeast, and this is very much assarted countryside. When Stock Common
() is reached there are footpaths to Shawgrove Copse
(), within sight of Great Bedwyn, or south to the rear of Tottenham Park by way of Bloxham Lodge'' (). == See also ==