Walk 40 – Shanks Pony Trail: Kilmarnock and Knockentiber – 4.5 miles

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A steel sculpture in the shape of a horse
This walk celebrates Kilmarnock's heritage as a big player in the 20th century shoe-making industry! The route is named after the Shanks Pony sculpture found at the end of the cycle path. Most of this walk is on quiet country roads behind 'the whisky estate' in Kilmarnock, connecting onto the #73 National Cycle Route for the return. On a clear day the Isle of Arran can be seen in the distance! There is also a 3 mile version of this route described in this guide.

Terrain: This walk is graded easy. Mostly pavements and quiet country roads, with three short busier sections. No gates, stiles or steps on the 4.5 mile route. If you opt for the shorter 3 mile route there is a small patch of grass to cross at the back of the John Walker Drive play area, which can sometimes be muddy and leads to a gate which is permanently ajar, just enough to walk through. The shorter route doesn’t go all the way into Knockentiber, instead cutting up a steep embankment onto the cycle track.

buggy friendly image  Buggy friendly walk (4.5 mile version). There are even two play parks on the route, one at the start and one in Knockentiber!

  Small car park just off John Walker Drive, Kilmarnock (KA3 1NE) near the entrance to the recycling centre. Local bus service stops on Western Rd or Hill Street, a short walk from the start point. Kilmarnock bus and train stations are approx 1 mile away.

Dunsmuir Park & Knockentiber

WALK REPORT: 22 April 2016

Its Friday night at 6:30pm, and a sign of how life has changed is that instead of getting showered and dressed to go out clubbing, I am pulling on my hiking trousers and trainers and heading to meet my friend Lynsey J for a walk!

You live in a town all your life and tend to visit the same places all the time. One of the things I am enjoying about my 100 walk challenge is exploring new parts of Kilmarnock I never knew existed. Tonight was an example of that! As it is right behind where they live, Lynsey and her husband walk, run and cycle these roads regularly but it was a first for me. I did my usual trick of spotting roads going off in other directions, giving me ideas for future walks such as one out to Kilmaurs which Lynsey will hopefully join me on soon!

What I probably enjoyed most about this walk was the good old chat we had! We meet up regularly but both being mothers of 2 kids, our catch ups are normally spent chasing pre-schoolers around a play park or softplay rather than actually chatting so it was nice to have nothing else to do but walk and talk. Other mums (and dads) will perhaps sympathise  with the scenario of meeting a friend with the kids, spending a couple of hours with them and coming home realising that you hardly finished any of the conversations you were having and therefore don’t actually know how they are or what they have been up to! Happens to me all the time. Tonight was different though and I really enjoyed it 🙂

A waterlogged field beneath a dark grey cloudy sky, a band of orange glow in the distance
Open countryside view from this walk – what it shows really well is the huge expanse of grey cloud floating around above our heads, while the surrounding areas were seemingly basking in the last of the evening sunshine!
Golden sunrays emerging from dark grey clouds above a silhouette of Arran's mountains
Sunset behind Arran
A steel sculpture in the shape of a horse
This is the Shanks Pony sculpture after which this walk takes its name. It’s not a great photo – I had condensation inside my phone’s camera lens at the time! I’d endeavour to get a better one…. Anyway, the sculpture celebrates Kilmarnock’s heritage as the centre of shoemaking in the 20th century. Some of you might remember Saxone shoes?? The steel which the sculpture is made of was chosen because of its leather-like colouring. When up close it looks rusty but in fact it is that colour and texture naturally. The old Scottish expression ‘to use Shanks Pony’ meant to travel on foot (hence the link to shoes).
Old iron gates which are slightly ajar, leading to a country road
If you opt for the 3 mile route this is the gate you are looking for at the far side of the play park.
Narrow earth trail on a steep wooded embankment
Again this is for those considering the 3 mile route, so that you can see what the steep embankment is like. It starts off easy enough, getting steeper as you near the top.

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