- Overall Rating: 4
- Location: Shamley Green, Surrey.
- OS Explorer Map 145, 'Guildford & Farnham, Godalming & Farnborough'.
- Starting OS Grid Reference: TQ048435
- Starting GPS Co-ordinates: N51 18' 10" W000 50' 20"
- Finishing OS Grid Reference: TQ059453
- Finishing GPS Co-ordinates: N51 19' 70" W000 48' 60"
- To see: Red Lion Inn in Shamley Green, Winterfold Heath, Albury Park stately home, the course of a Roman road, although there's nothing at all to see above ground.
- ALWAYS follow the Greenlane Code!
PLEASE NOTE: this lane is very tricky indeed, with a fair chance of damaging your vehicle. If you choose to drive it, take care.
For the sake of convenience this page deals with Ride Lane and Madgehole Lane as one and the same.
Madgehole Land plies its easterly course from the delightful village of Shamley Green, beginning where the the tarmac ends near some very expensive-looking Surrey 'mansions'. MTV Cribs it most certainly is. Initially fairly innocuous, the lane quickly enters a cutting and with the high earthen banks on each side, it becomes pretty narrow in places. It is most certainly not made any easier with the dramatically undulating surface, potholes, encroaching undergrowth and ruts. Even the trail-biker in the videos below has quite a time of it! The worst of it can be found whilst driving through what seems to be a pine plantation, up a very steep incline towards the end of the lane.
The 'cliff' at the end of Madgehole Lane: worse than it looks. |
If you make it to the end of Madgehole Lane, the hardest part is to come. Madgehole Lane merges with Ride Lane at TQ060435 via a really dramatically steep slope from one to the other (see picture, right) combined wit ha relatively tight turn through 90 degrees. If conditions are very wet, and you get this slope even slightly wrong or enter a skid, you will hit the earthen bank on the far side of Ride Lane and ruin your day. Take great care here. Incidentally, if you turn south instead of north here, the lane turns into a RUPP where it meets Winterfold Heath and is such a dead end for motorised traffic.
Ride Lane strikes out northwards, but is even harder work than Madgehole Lane, and considerably so. It is extremely tight in places, as the undulating surface makes your vehicle assume some really quite dramatic attitudes. We found ourselves lurching violently from side to side even as we drove at a maximum of walking pace! At times there can be quite literally millimetres to spare, as the large trees that encroach down the earthen banks either side of the lane make all this harder still, since with your vehicle at an angle and with no option to avoid due to the ruts contact is quite likely.
The northern end of Ride Lane, in Farley Green. |
A Roman road crosses Ride Lane from south-east to north-wet, although not a trace of it can be seen these days. Interestingly, there is an area of woodland called Helmet Copse just to the east of the lane at this point, and I can't help wondering if it has taken it's name from some archaeological discovery. But for a much easier day out we can thoroughly recommend stopping for a meal at the (slightly pricey, but worthwhile) Red Lion Inn in Shamley Green. The food is awesome.
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