When there is a significant gap between two rights of way, the table below allows you to add a path between the two rights of way. Although in an earlier version of rowmaps, you were able to choose to add either a route along roads or an as-the-crowfiles route, choosing a route along roads was causing problems, and so regretfully now the only choice is to add a crowfiles route.

This web page is from www.rowmaps.com, a project to obtain rights of way data from local authorities and to show those rights of way on maps. The underlying map on this web page is an Ordnance Survey map provided by Bing Maps. It is subject to these Terms of Use. The Print Rights section of those Terms of Use says that you are not allowed to print this map. The Ordnance Survey map is © Crown copyright and database rights 2024 Ordnance Survey. By default, this web page uses a zoom level of 13 which provides an OS 1:50000 ("Landranger") map. You also get this kind of map at zoom level 14. The notation used by the OS on a 1:50000 map is shown on this PDF page. If you zoom in to a level of 15 or higher, the underlying map is an OS 1:25000 ("Explorer") map whose notation is explained on this PDF page.

An authority's Definitive Map is the authoritative source of their rights of way. The details of the public rights of way network contained in an authority's data are for information only, and are an interpretation of the Definitive Map, not the Definitive Map itself, and should not be relied on for determining the position or alignment of any public right of way. For legal purposes, an authority's data does not replace their Definitive Map. And changes may have been made to the Definitive Map that are not included in their data. The authority's data contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right 2024. Attempting to view this data with more detail than 1:10000 may produce an inaccurate rendering of the route of a public right of way.