How you can help
Can you help us to build a national network of rail walks? Our plan will proceed in several phases. In this first phase you can help in four ways:
1) Sign up and contribute to Slow Ways
Please sign up to Slow Ways using this link. This will identify you as a railwalks user. (If you are already registered with Slow Ways, please go to your profile, scroll down to Affiliations and enter 'Railwalks' in the first box.)
Slow Ways is building a network of walks between settlements. Some of those settlements are already centred on railway stations. People have already created and uploaded walks between those stations (see this map), but many of them need to be 'verified' and then 'surveyed'. You can read how you can contribute to that process on Slow Ways' 'How To' page.
In the next phase, Slow Ways will add the other railway stations to their system and we will be able to create new walks between them. In the meantime, please create new walks following these criteria (which are slightly different from Slow Ways' criteria). Try to avoid duplicating walks that already exist on Slow Ways' site. Then please upload the new walks to railwalks.co.uk using the form on this page. (You will need a Google account to do this.)
This will ask you four things:
Whether you are doing this on behalf of an organisation
To upload a gpx file* This should be named: startstation-endstation-yourname.gpx.
A short summary description and:
A longer description (unless you have entered a URL on an organisation's website)
You should also take photographs of the route - but keep them somewhere safe for now. You will be able to upload them in the next phase.
3) Work from Home
We also need help in other ways, which don't involve walking, but might involve using a computer. Please email mail@railwalks.co.uk if you have some spare time and would like to offer some help.
4) Spread the Word
Please spread the word on social media and encourage more people to join our mailing list. You will find us on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* What is a gpx file? See this explanation from Ordnance Survey. You can record and download gpx files using a mapping app such as: OS Maps, OutdoorActive, Komoot or AllTrails. This video shows how to record a route using OS Maps. You can then download your route as a gpx file (in the premium version of OS Maps, or in the free version of Outdooractive using a computer.)
If you have any queries, please email mail@railwalks.co.uk Thank you for your help!