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Malvern outlooks

Malvern outlooks

Even the highest point on the Malvern Hills, at Worcestershire Beacon, is a mere 425 metres (1,395 feet) above sea level. But the views from near the top of the ridge must be some of the widest anywhere in England. Looking north, there’s the hills of south Shropshire; west, the even hillier land beyond the Welsh border. South, the Forest of Dean, and beyond, on clear days, the glistening of the Bristol Channel. East and south-east there’s the rich agricultural land of the Vale of Evesham, the broad valley formed by the Severn and the (Warwickshire / Worcestershire) Avon. The far side of the Vale is the scarp slope of the Cotswolds, with its outliers, Bredon Hill nearest and most prominent. Completing the circle, the city of Worcester is near enough to make out the spires and towers of churches and the cathedral, but the more distant Birmingham and its conurbation are hidden by the lie of the land.

Most of this set are views looking south along the line of the ridge from points near the creat between Wyche Cutting and Worcestershire Beacon. The opening shot is of the massive hill fort around the crest of Herefordshire Beacon, British Camp.