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Robin Hood's Bay, further south along the coast, is a highly recommended detour from the route. The picturesquely steep fishing village was once rife with smuggling, and its tiny streets are traffic-free cars have to be left of the top of the village. The Music in Miniature Exhibition is a collection of astonishingly detailed models illustrating English musical history, while the Laurel is a charming fishermen's pub at the foot of the village.
The rocky shore is a rich hunting ground for fossil hunters. The Cleveland Way leads south above the shore towards the hamlet of Ravenscar (a curious intended seaside resort that never materialised all that's left is a hotel and a parade of failed shops) and the highest cliffs on the east coast.
Take the A169 south from Whitby then fork right to Goathland.
Sheep graze along the verges of the long moorland village of Goathland, familiar to many from the TV series Heartbeat. The North Yorkshire Moors Railway (timetable: (01751) 472508) makes a stop on its way from Grosmont to Pickering (mixture of diesel and steam services); at Grosmont the loco shed has a viewing window on to a repair area as well as a model railway layout.
Goathland itself has an excellent walk for the Mallyan Spout Hotel (a handy lunch spot) to the slender waterfall of Mallyan Spout, and southwards along the wooded valley of West Beck, where flat rocks provide wonderful picnic places. Further along is the Wade's Causeway (also known as a Wheeldale Roman Road), the best-preserved stretch of Roman road in Britain, extending over a mile across bracingly open scenery.
Carry on towards Pickering on the A169, passing the lonely Saltersgate Inn (a popular walkers pub) just north of the Hole of Horcum, a huge natural hollow below the west side of the road (a popular place for paragliders). The car park up here is a useful starting point for walks around the Hole, with gently graded moorland tracks heading south to the village green at Levisham (where the Horseshoe has good food). East of the main road, Lockton Low Moor gives way to the dark conifer plantations of Dalby Forest, set up with a scenic drive as well as plentiful car parks, colour-waymarked paths and picnic sites. From the forest edge you can cross the open moor for an encounter with the strange mushroom-shaped rock outcrops known as the Bridestones.
Pickering is another attractive red-roofed town with splendid 15th-century murals in its imposing tall-spired church. Pickering Castle is a good example of a Norman motte and bailey and served for many years as a royal hunting lodge, though many stones were later quarried to be used elsewhere. The site is quietly atmospheric and there is a good view over the town. Close by, Beck Isle Museum is a 17th-century riverside house stashed with all manner of local bygones including period shop interiors.
At Wrelton go north to Cropton and then west to Lastingham.