King Charles has launched a new pathway that runs down the entire coast of England. Natural England, the government body that designed it, claims it is the world’s longest controlled coastal walking route at 2,689 miles.
Its name is also quite a hike – King Charles III England Coast Path – but for the first time, it establishes a continuous track, allowing walkers to tour England’s shoreline in stages. It runs through some of the country’s most attractive and diverse scenery, including salt marshes, sandy beaches, cliffs, dunes, and old coastal towns.
Among the highlights is the iconic chalk downland of the Seven Sisters in East Sussex, which is also part of a newly declared National Nature Reserve, as revealed by Natural England. The King opened the beach route and the new nature reserve at an event organized by the South Downs National Park Authority.
He later walked a portion of the freshly built walkway at Seven Sisters with Natural England Chair Tony Juniper and Environment Secretary Emma Reynolds. According to Juniper, the route “is a testament to how public enjoyment, conservation, heritage, history and community can come together, helping make life better for millions of people.
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