Byways to Hampstead
While
East Finchley may be densely populated, you are never far from green
spaces. What better way to enjoy peace and quiet and see wild life than
the walk to Hampstead. Depending on time of year, look out for kestrels,
woodpeckers, comma butterflies and cowslips
The walk starts outside the 'two loos' café near the junction
of North Way and Market Place. Enter the gardens on its left and follow
the Mutton Brook past tennis courts and the remaining magnificent willow
trees, then take the track left over brook and road to enter Big Wood.
The right fork gives the shortest way up to Temple Fortune Hill. Emerging
from the wood across the old Finchley boundary, turn left up to North
Square, where the buildings result from a stormy compromise between Edmund
Lutyens and Henrietta Barnett. Notice all the different treatments for
windows in the roof in the buildings forming North Square. Skirt the right
side of both churches then down to the steps of Heath Gate with its vista
of Hampstead Heath Extension. From here you can cross fields originally
belonging to Eton College (if muddy, take detour shown) to gain the mediaeval
track-way which will take you upward past the ponds and over the road
to steps leading around the back of Wyldes Farm, the oldest building in
the area.
The path bends leftward to North End cross. Continue the incline forward
through the trees. The track leads up and round to the right, emerging
at a traffic island. Take Inverforth Close opposite until a sign for the
Hill Garden indicates right. Once inside the garden meander through to
the Pergola opposite (built from Northern Line excavations and paid for
with soap flakes) and follow the top all the way to the spiral steps at
the end. Left at the exit rejoins the road.
Continue past Jack Straw's Castle (if still there) to Whitestone Ponds.
Opposite is Hampstead Grove which leads peacefully to Hampstead and the
Tube, past Fenton House and Holly Hill.
