Routes

Planner

Features

Updates

App

Login or Signup

Get the App

Login or Signup

Login or Signup

Routes
Places to see
Natural Monuments
United Kingdom
England
South West England

Huish

Top 20 Natural Monuments around Huish

Natural monuments around Huish encompass a rich tapestry of ancient sites and historical landscapes. This area is characterized by significant prehistoric structures, including large stone circles, burial chambers, and artificial mounds. These monuments offer insights into early human history and are set within diverse natural surroundings. The region provides opportunities to explore these historical features within a varied landscape.

Best natural monuments around Huish

  • The most popular natural monuments is Avebury Stone Circle, a man-made monument that is a Neolithic henge monument containing three stone circles. It is large enough to encircle part of the village and is free to visit.
  • Another must-see spot is Silbury Hill, a man-made monument. This is the largest artificial mound in Europe, similar in height and volume to the Egyptian pyramids, though its purpose remains unknown.
  • Visitors also love West Kennet Long Barrow, a historical site. This Neolithic burial chamber is older than Stonehenge, and visitors can go inside its chambers.
  • Huish is known for ancient stone circles, burial chambers, and artificial mounds. The area offers a variety of historical and natural monuments to see and explore.
  • The natural monuments around Huish are appreciated by the komoot community. These highlights have received more than 240 upvotes and feature over 200 photos from visitors.

Last updated: May 3, 2026

Avebury Stone Circle

Highlight • Monument

Avebury is an extraordinary place in the North Wiltshire & Wessex Downs AONB. One of many Neolithic sites in the area, this stone circle is large enough to encircle part of the village.

Many of the stones have names and myths attached to them and there were 100 when it was first built between 4,000 and 5,000 years ago. In the vicinity lies West Kennet Long Barrow, Silbury Hill (a prehistoric fort) and numerous other standing stones and long barrows. Stonehenge lies to the south near Amesbury; a more famous but smaller circle in diameter.

You can visit Avebury's stone circle for free and there are plenty of footpaths passing through which will take you to the other nearby remnants of prehistory.

Tip by

See hikes here

Send to Phone

Save

Silbury Hill

Highlight • Monument

Silbury Hill is the largest artificial mound in Europe. It is similar in height and volume to the Egyptian pyramids. Whilst the hill is a bit of a mystery to historians, experts believe it was completed in around 2400 BC. There are no burials within the hill and its purpose and significance remain unknown. The site is managed by English Heritage.

Tip by

Save

Sign up now to discover places like this

Get recommendations on the best single tracks, peaks, & plenty of other exciting outdoor places.

Sign up for free

West Kennet Long Barrow

Highlight • Historical Site

This is a Neolithic burial chamber that is older than Stonehenge. You can go inside a number of the chambers to view them. It is dark, though - so pack a torch to see the surrounding rocks.

Tip by

Save

Devil's Den Dolmen

Highlight • Historical Site

Named after the Devil, who is said to drink water from the rocky hollows of the massive capstone, the Devil's Den is a dolmen burial chamber and part of a neolithic passage grave on Fyfield Hill, just outside the pretty Wiltshire town of Marlborough. The former entrance now comprises two standing stones, a capstone and two fallen stones. This section was reconstructed in 1921, when the burial chamber was recorded as being around 70 metres (230 ft) long, with the capstone weighing some 17 tons.

Tip by

Save

Walkers Hill

Highlight • Natural Monument

Walkers Hill is a fantastic place from which to admire the Vale of Pewsey and surrounding downland. On a clear day, the vistas are exceptional, but the hill itself has plenty of interesting historical features.

Adam's Grave is the most notable – a Neolithic long barrow. There are cross dykes (prehistoric earthworks), tumuli and ditches littered about the hillside too, typical of Wiltshire's ancient land. Just to the northwest lies the Alton Barnes white horse, cut in 1812.

Tip by

Save

Sign up for free to discover even more natural monuments around Huish.

Sign up for free

Already have an account?

Start today with a free account

Your next adventure awaits.

Login or Signup

Popular around Huish

Road Cycling Routes around Huish

Running Trails around Huish

MTB Trails around Huish

Hiking around Huish

Cycling around Huish

Gravel biking around Huish

Tips from the Community

MCW73
November 27, 2025, Devil's Den Dolmen

Devil's Den stone monument is a Neolithic dolmen (burial chamber) located in Wiltshire, near Marlborough, not Sturminster Newton. The structure features a massive 17-ton capstone resting on two upright sarsen stones. Local folklore claims that if water is poured into the hollows on the capstone, the Devil himself will come during the night to drink it. It was largely reconstructed in 1921 after the chamber collapsed.

0

0

hiking poles might help up hill

0

0

MCW73
March 7, 2025, Silbury Hill

Sidbury Hill, or Sidbury Camp, is the site of an Iron Age bivallate hillfort on the eastern edge of Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire, England. The site is sub-triangular in shape, approximately 17 acres in area, and is constructed on the site of a Neolithic settlement. The hill offers excellent defensive slopes on all sides, which have been supplemented by the double ditch and rampart earthworks. The settlement and hillfort were partially excavated in the 19th century and the 1950s; there were finds of pottery and other artefacts. A Neolithic settlement site was discovered during the excavation in the 1950s, being of a section of the south-east rampart of the hillfort. A number of flint flakes and tools were recovered. The site is a scheduled national monument. Trees planted in the 1960s were removed from 2002 and the area was allowed to revert to the natural chalk downland. Access to the site is difficult as it is on, or near, Ministry of Defence land, and there are many tank tracks and occasional artillery firing in the area. There are also numerous ditches, barrows, trackways, field systems, and tumuli in the area. Due to erosion issues climbing on the barrow is now forbidden. Such a shame, but understandable.

0

0

A well preserved bell barrow, the mound of which measures 22m in diameter and stands up to 2.8m high. The mound is surrounded by a berm up to 5m in diameter and a ditch 0.7m deep and up to 6.2m wide. One of these two bell barrows produced a sherd of Bronze Age pottery and a fragment of a polished greenstone axe, both found by Owen Meyrick. A bell barrow, the mound of which measures 24m in diameter and stands 2.7m high. The berm and ditch which surround this barrow have been levelled by cultivation on three sides but survive as buried features on the fourth. From measurements on the western side it can be seen that the berm is c.3m wide and that the ditch is c.5m wide.

0

0

Who wouldn't want to walk into a neolithic burial chamber? anybody? no? didn't think so!!! It was amazing!!! The monument includes six prominent Bronze Age round barrows which form part of a larger round barrow cemetery north-east of West Kennett Farm and west of the Ridgeway track on Overton Hill. This is the site of a round barrow which, despite being ploughed level, will contain archaeological information; the old ground surface beneath the mound and the surrounding quarry ditch, from which material was quarried during construction of the monument, will survive as buried features. The area of the mound has a diameter of 33m; the surrounding ditch is c.2m wide. A bowl barrow, the mound of which measures 41.5m in diameter and stands up to 1.2m high. The mound is surrounded by a ditch which has become infilled over the years but which survives as a buried feature c.3m wide. This barrow has been partially excavated on two occasions, in 1857 by Thurnham and again in 1882 by W & H Cunnington. The primary cremation burial was not located but two secondary cremations were recovered. One was located north- west of the centre of the mound and was accompanied by a flint scraper and a serrated flint flake; the other was situated east of the centre and contained pottery sherds of two vessels, a beaker and an urn, as well as a piece of antler and several bone pins. A bowl barrow, the mound of which measures 42m in diameter and stands up to 0.7m high. The barrow has been partially excavated on two occasions, in 1857 by Thurnham and in 1882 by Ponting. These revealed that the barrow mound contained a crouched skeleton in a grave partly lined and roofed with sarsens. This was covered by a sarsen cairn, itself ringed by a double circle of sarsen stones c.1m outside the edge of the cairn. There was no evidence of a ditch around this barrow. Other finds included a later crouched skeleton covered with sarsen stones, the skeleton of a child, three large urns full of burnt bones and the perforated head of a bone pin. A well preserved bell barrow, the mound of which measures 26m in diameter and stands up to 3m high. The mound is surrounded by a gently sloping berm or platform c.3m wide and a ditch 0.5m deep and up to 6.4m wide.

0

0

MCW73
February 21, 2025, Walkers Hill

Adam’s Grave on Walker's Hill in Alton, the most dramatically located Neolithic long barrow in Wiltshire and the site of battles in 592 and 715. The area surrounding Walker's Hill is pitted and speckled with barrows and ditches of many sizes and shapes.

0

0

MCW73
February 7, 2025, Devil's Den Dolmen

In a field on Fyfield Down, 1 mile east of Marlborough, Wiltshire, stands the prehistoric burial chamber known as The Devil’s Den or Clatford Bottom Stone, a Neolithic monument from 5,000 years ago that is also known as a Dolmen (stone table). Get up here on a clear day, nice and early, and you'll witness the most amazing sunrise.

0

0

Mystical place.

Translated by Google

0

1

Frequently Asked Questions

What are some of the most significant natural monuments to visit around Huish?

The area around Huish is rich in ancient sites. Key natural monuments include the Avebury Stone Circle, a vast Neolithic henge monument, Silbury Hill, Europe's largest artificial mound, and West Kennet Long Barrow, an impressive Neolithic burial chamber you can enter. Another notable site is Devil's Den Dolmen, a reconstructed burial chamber with a massive capstone.

What kind of historical sites can I explore among the natural monuments near Huish?

The natural monuments around Huish are predominantly ancient historical sites. You can explore significant Neolithic structures such as the Avebury Stone Circle, which dates back 4,000 to 5,000 years, and the older West Kennet Long Barrow, a burial chamber built around 3650 BC. Silbury Hill, a large artificial mound, also offers a glimpse into prehistoric engineering, though its purpose remains a mystery.

Are there family-friendly natural monuments to visit near Huish?

Yes, several natural monuments around Huish are suitable for families. Avebury Stone Circle is particularly family-friendly, as it's free to visit and large enough to explore with children, allowing them to get up close and even touch the ancient stones. The open spaces around these monuments provide room for exploration.

What are the best viewpoints to experience the natural beauty around Huish?

For exceptional views, consider visiting Walkers Hill. From here, you can admire the Vale of Pewsey and the surrounding downland, offering expansive vistas on a clear day. Silbury Hill also provides a unique perspective of the landscape due to its prominent height.

What outdoor activities can I do near the natural monuments around Huish?

The area offers various outdoor activities. You can find numerous routes for running, gravel biking, and hiking. For running, explore options like the 'Pewsey White Horse & Kennet & Avon Canal loop' or the 'Giant's Grave Hillfort' route, detailed in the Running Trails around Huish guide. Gravel biking enthusiasts can tackle routes like 'The Ridgeway Trail' or 'Juggler's Lane' from the Gravel biking around Huish guide. For easy hikes, consider the 'Wilcot and Kennet & Avon Canal Trail' or 'West Woods Beech Avenue loop' found in the Easy hikes around Huish guide.

Are there hiking trails near these natural monuments?

Yes, there are several hiking trails that allow you to explore the natural monuments. Many footpaths pass through sites like Avebury Stone Circle, connecting it to other prehistoric remnants. For specific routes, the Easy hikes around Huish guide features trails like the 'Wilcot and Kennet & Avon Canal Trail' and the 'West Woods Beech Avenue loop', which offer opportunities to combine natural exploration with historical discovery.

What is the best time to visit the natural monuments around Huish?

The best time to visit the natural monuments around Huish is generally during reasonable daylight hours, especially for sites like West Kennet Long Barrow which is free to enter during these times. Spring and summer months (April to July) are ideal for enjoying the surrounding natural landscapes, as the weather is typically milder and the flora is in bloom, making for pleasant walks.

What should I know about accessibility and permits for visiting these sites?

Many of the sites, such as Avebury Stone Circle and West Kennet Long Barrow, are free to visit and do not require permits during reasonable daylight hours. However, paths can be muddy, especially in fields, so good footwear is recommended. For specific details on accessibility or any potential changes, it's advisable to check the English Heritage website for sites they manage, such as Silbury Hill and West Kennet Long Barrow.

Are there any hidden gems or lesser-known natural monuments near Huish?

While not entirely 'hidden,' Devil's Den Dolmen on Fyfield Hill offers a fascinating, slightly off-the-beaten-path experience. This ancient burial chamber, with its distinctive capstone, is steeped in local legend and provides a quieter historical exploration compared to the more popular sites. Walkers Hill also features lesser-known historical elements like Adam's Grave (a Neolithic long barrow) and cross dykes, offering a blend of natural beauty and ancient history.

What do visitors enjoy most about the natural monuments around Huish?

Visitors frequently praise the unique opportunity to get up close and interact with ancient history, particularly at Avebury Stone Circle where you can touch the stones. The impressive scale of sites like Silbury Hill and the ability to explore inside West Kennet Long Barrow are also highly valued. Many appreciate the combination of historical exploration with scenic walks and the tranquil atmosphere of the surrounding landscape.

Can I find cafes or other amenities near the natural monuments?

While the natural monuments themselves are often in rural settings, the village of Avebury, which is encircled by the Avebury Stone Circle, offers amenities such as cafes and pubs. For other sites, nearby towns and villages like Marlborough would provide a wider range of options for refreshments and accommodation.

What wildlife can I expect to see around the natural monuments?

The natural landscapes surrounding the monuments, particularly areas like Huish Moor (though distinct from the monument locations), are rich in biodiversity. You might spot various butterfly species, including Small Pearl-bordered Fritillary and Marbled White, especially between April and July. The diverse flora, including Ragged Robin and various orchids, also supports a range of insect life, such as dragonflies like the Golden Ringed Dragonfly and Large Red Damselfly, particularly near streams and pools.

Most popular routes around Huish

Road Cycling Routes around Huish

Most popular attractions around Huish

Places to see

Store rating

Get inspired with the komoot mobile app

With a free komoot account, you can easily find, customize, and navigate endless outdoor adventures.

or

Join komoot Now

Store rating

Explore more

Extend your search for the best caves by checking out these guides of the top ones around Huish:

DevonDorsetWinscombe & SandfordSomersetBanwellCornwallBurringtonChurchillLoxtonPuxtonWringtonGloucestershireBlagdonSt. EndellionSancreedCompton MartinUbleySt. TeathWest HarptreeEast HarptreeOtterhamButcombeDavidstowLesnewthForrabury And MinsterAdventTintagelSt. KewCamelfordWinfordPaulSt GennysSt. JustSt. BuryanNempnett ThrubwellChew StokeTrevalgaWiltshireSt. JuliotMadronPadstowSt. BreockSt. Minver LowlandsSt. ErvanCongresburySt. MerrynSt. IsseySennenHinton BlewettStowey-SuttonBackwellChew MagnaOgbourne St. AndrewPreshuteWinterbourne MonktonEast KennettAveburyFyfieldWest OvertonWarbstowSt. LevanAldbourneSt. Minver HighlandsCuryMawgan-In-MeneageSt KeverneMullionPenzanceGrade-RuanSt. IvesCherhillMarlboroughSavernakeChiseldonBerwick BassettEgloshayleMichaelstowHilmartonSt. BrewardCompton DandoWinterbourne BassettAltonStanton St BernardCompton BassettMildenhallAll CanningsLudgvanWroughtonClyffe PypardBroad HintonBroad TownOgbourne St. GeorgeKeynshamMawgan-In-PydarWhitchurchZennorTowednackBishops CanningsBarrow GurneySt. EvalMilton LilbourneWilcotMorvahPewseyCorstonMarksburyKelstonSt. Martin-In-MeneageCrowanHanham AbbotsDundryHanhamCalne WithoutHayleBishopstoneWadebridgeSaltfordTreneglosBittonLiddingtonWanboroughSt. Columb MajorNewton St LoeWootton RiversWoodboroughEtchilhamptonHeddingtonDevizesLong AshtonPortreathGwinear-GwithianSt. ErthBath and North East SomersetSt. AgnesSt. NeotRamsburyNorton MalrewardFarmboroughOldlandManningfordNorth HillSt. CleerWick And AbsonGunwalloeNorth StokePristonPublowLydiard TregozeCold AshtonDoyntonPilning And Severn BeachPatneyMarazionStokeclimslandEnglishcombeCameleyMorwenstowLandewednackStoke GiffordWinterbourneCarn BreaIlloganBlislandAltarnunNewquayFarrington GurneyHigh LittletonSouth MarstonHighworthAbbots LeighJacobstowCharlcombeWendronBeechingstokeRedruthBrockleyCharfieldLyneham And BradenstokeBreageStertFiltonHillMarshfieldRushallUpavonCalneSt. Austell BayAlmondsburyPill & Easton-In-GordanoWraxall And FailandBaydonMenheniotSt. IveSouth HillDownend and Bromley HeathRedlynchBathamptonBradford-On-AvonBathfordTimsburySt. EwePatchwayDyrham And HintonCamborneSistonSt. HilarySt. BlaiseLinkinhorneSt. MewanCarlyonCombe HayDunkerton and TunleyLewannickPoundstockLezantQuethiockSt CatherineFlax BourtonBradley StokeSwainswickBatheastonAustYattonWarlegganDobwalls And TrewidlandEastonNorth NewntonFreshfordLimpley StokeWinsleyStanton DrewWingfieldCallingtonChelwoodOldbury-Upon-SevernFrampton CotterellLiskeardCharltonCamertonSt. Michael'S Mount

Nearby adventure guides

Things to Do around Wilcot

background

Get ready to conquer new peaks

Sign up for Free

Explore
RoutesRoute plannerFeaturesHikesMTB TrailsRoad cycling routesBikepackingSitemap
Download the app
Follow Us on Socials

© komoot GmbH

Privacy Policy