Follow Sections 1 to 10 from the Station
31 Continue west along Buckingham Road, on the left of The Three Trees pub as you face it. As you walk up the hill, Brooklands farmhouse (No. 135) is on your left. This was originally a single bay building with an external chimneystack at the gable end. There are chamfered ceiling beams and joists internally with windbraces in the roof. A timber-framed room was added in the seventeenth century. A further two storey bay was added in the nineteenth century. It is currently timber framed with a thatched roof and has a more recent series of stable extensions. Number 139, previously Home Farm, is a substantial house of the early to mid nineteenth century built in brick with a slate roof, and sixteen pane sash windows. In typically Georgian style, the two left bays are symmetrical around the front door but unbalanced by a third right hand bay. The earlier part of Number 141, timber framed and originally thatched, is that with the gable end to the road. It has an early southern wing behind the nineteenth century block. Elm Farmhouse(Number 143), built in the seventeenth century, is timber framed with a roughcast exterior and a half hipped thatched roof. Internally a timber-framed partition separated the main living room and parlour to the west. The chimneystack separates the western room, which has a lintel fireplace and Coalbrookdale iron oven door.
32 Bengal Farm (No. 170) was rebuilt in the nineteenth century but has various timber-framed extensions (previously thatched) of a much earlier date including a former cottage. Numbers 180 and 184 were formerly three cottages built around 1840 but are now one.
33 Continue along Buckingham Road crossing Whaddon Way passing an underpass (to the Racecourses estate). Continue crossing Windmill Hill Drive. Shortly you will see a gate on your right with a solemn warning about the danger of golf balls. This marks the original public footpath to Tattenhoe. Those of a stubborn disposition should open the gate, follow the public footpath to the Redway on the other side of the golf course and turn right. The less determined might walk to the junction with Standing Way and turn right there. Shortly after the gate from the golf course, pass the underpass to Tattenhoe on your left. Tattenhoe was originally a deserted village about one mile to the north. The site with the remains of the church may still be reached by footpath.
34 Follow the Redway to the north of the Golf Course. Windmill Hill is named after the windmill, which stood on the highest point on the land occupied by the Golf Course. At the next roundabout keep bearing right until you are facing the Golf Club outside 'The Red House' cottage with a cedar tree. To your left is the original Tattenhoe Lane now a pedestrian walk between high hedges.
35 At the end of hedges turn left to cross Tattenhoe Lane (Road) follow the footpath past the RAF Club and then between hedges to Derwent Drive. Turn right on Derwent Drive. When you reach Whaddon Way the Wishing Well pub is 200 yards to the right but the walk turns left to the Shopping Centre.
36 Go behind the Catholic Church, crossing Shenley Road to take the footpath into Rickley Park. For walk 2 in reverse order continue along Whaddon Way and turn left into a path before the surgery and dentist into Essex Close. To complete Walk 3 turn left along the main walk through Rickley Park and at the end turn right along Rickley Lane back to the War Memorial.