Stretching 2,689 miles, the world's longest coastal path opens in England

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Justin RowlattClimate Editor

Kevin Curch / BBC A wide, aerial shot of a part of King Charles III England Coast Path in Hampshire shows four people walking on a path by sea shoreline on a sunny day. The stretch of land between the sea and the path looks muddy and is covered in green moss and low grass. On the other side of the path, there is brown grassland with a few trees with a green field in the background. In the middle of the photo, there is a stone building and a round tower. Kevin Curch / BBC

You can now walk all the way around the coast of England - this section of the path runs through Hampshire

A new footpath stretching around the entire coast of England is being officially inaugurated later.

At 2,689 miles long, it is the longest managed coastal walking route in the world, according to Natural England, the government body which created it.

Its name is quite a trek too - King Charles III England Coast Path - but for the first time it creates a continuous trail, allowing walkers to explore England's shoreline step by step.

Along the way, it passes through some of the country's most beautiful and varied landscapes, from salt marshes and sandy beaches to cliffs, dunes and historic coastal towns.

Among the highlights is the iconic chalk downland of the Seven Sisters in East Sussex, which also forms part of a newly designated National Nature Reserve being announced by Natural England.

Much of the new coastal route already existed, but more than 1,000 miles of new paths have been created, and many other sections upgraded. Paths have been resurfaced, stiles removed, boardwalks built and bridges installed.

BBC / Kevin Church Two men in orange high-vis outfits and protective headsets are working on the path. They are standing with one of them holding a pile and the other one drilling the pile into the ground. In the foreground, a wooden walkway is seen and there are the men's tools on it. BBC / Kevin Church

A new boardwalk over salt flats near Portsmouth has been built for the path

The project was initiated during Gordon Brown's government, and it has taken 18 years and seven prime ministers to get to this stage.

About 80% of the route is now open and most of the rest of the path is due to be completed by the end of the year.

"It is brilliant - the best thing I'll do in my working life," says Neil Constable, who led the project for Natural England.

For him, the length of the path isn't really the point. What makes it so special, he says, is that you can walk to the coast anywhere in England, turn left or right, and walk beside the sea for as long as you like.

BBC / Kevin Church A man with silver hair and a stripey scarf weaing a khaki jacket is standing with a smile on a wooden boardwalk. Trees in the background have no leaves and the piece of land next to the walkway has some green grass but is mostly mud. BBC / Kevin Church

'The best thing I'll do in my working life": Neil Constable led the project for Natural England

Natural England says that in many places, new rights of access have opened land that was previously off-limits to the public - including beaches, dunes and cliff-tops between the path and the sea.

It says accessibility for those with reduced mobility has been improved so that more people can enjoy sections of the trail.

Gaps in the existing network of footpaths have been filled with a focus on bringing the route closer to the water and connecting stretches of coastline that had never been joined by a single walking trail.

But in a few places, walkers must briefly leave the trail. In north-west England, for example, a ferry across the Mersey is needed to follow the route.

One stretch in south Devon is particularly challenging. At the River Erme, there is no bridge or ferry, and the land further upstream is privately owned and inaccessible. Walkers must therefore roll up their trousers and wade across the river within an hour either side of low tide.

"It's all part of the experience," says Constable.

BBC /Kevin Church A wooden sign shows letters - King Charles III England Coast Path with some trees without leaves in the background against a blue sky with some clouds.   BBC /Kevin Church

The new path is 2,689 miles long

The path has been designed with the heavier rains and rising seas that climate change is expected to bring in mind.

For the first time in English law there is provision for the route to be moved inland – "rolled back", Natural England calls it - if the coastline erodes or shifts.

This allows the trail to adapt to the changing shoreline and aims to ensure that the coastal walk remains continuous and practical for generations to come.

"The path was closed and a diversion was put in place," explains Lorna Sherriff, who heads up the team that manages the South West Coast Path – the longest and hilliest section of the new trail.

BBC /Kevin Church Lorna Sherriff from South West Coast Path Association stands with the reporter, Justin Rowlatt, by a National Trust yellow sign saying danger - unstable cliffs, stay well back from cliff edge. Both look west and the sky and the sea in the background are grey. The path is closed with a wooden gate just behind where they are standing. A cliff edge is seen a few meters after the wooden gate.  BBC /Kevin Church

Lorna Sherriff, who heads up the team that manages the South West Coast Path, explains that a section was re-opened after a cliff fall using a 'roll-back' clause

The diversion added an extra mile and a half and - worse still - took walkers along roads. Sherriff says her team quickly arranged a 15-metre rollback with the landowner, and within weeks the path was open again.

"Without this rollback provision in place that would have taken us months," she says.

The Ramblers charity has been campaigning for greater access to England's coastline since the end of World War II. Jack Cornish, director of England for the Ramblers, describes the new path as "transformational".

"It creates a band of access land from the trail to the high water mark, so that means you can leave the trail to go and roam the beaches," Cornish says. "You can picnic - and on an island nation you can really enjoy our coast for the first time."

BBC/Kevin Church Four people are walking on a path with brown grassland, trees and a pond on one side. On the other side, it's a muddy beach with green moss. There is a wooden bench on the path, too.  BBC/Kevin Church

The Ramblers charity has been campaigning for a coast path for over 80 years

The route also raises the possibility of a continuous coastal walk around the entire island of Britain.

The new English coast path links with the Wales Coast Path - an 870-mile route encircling the Welsh coastline. It was completed in 2012 and was the first path in the world to follow an entire national coastline.

Taken together, a continuous coastal walk around Britain would therefore total some 9,000 miles. At an average of 15 miles a day, it would take almost two years to complete, assuming no rest days.

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