You have touched on an interesting part of Shropshire G&P, doesn't often get mention on here, for the very reason pdstsp mentions.
Looks an interesting walk with some cracking views too. Never walked that part of Shropshire, only the Long Mynd, Wenlock Edge and Caer Caradoc - great walking country.
When you were looking towards the rest of the county, keep your eyes averted from Hereford, you would be looking across the Corvedale a valley that joins Craven Arms with Bridgenorth. Barely gets a mention, as most walkers seem to trundle along the Edge and miss the deceptive slope of the edge to the south. Lots of interesting ground between there and the flanks of the Clee.
We had a really fascinating days walking a good few years ago playing 'Catch us if you can' with the the local hunt, by the time our paths had crossed several times and we were opening gates for them, we were on friendly terms even getting salutes from the master. This was more on the Brown Clee, so perhaps you may be going back there.
This area taught me an interesting piece of theory of walking, when I was hoicked onto a LAF, didn't get there because I was a rambler or anything, so fresh minds create inventive thinking, which led to my immediate termination, when a landowner took over the chair. With the Corve Dale and the Clee Hills Shropshire offers a superb walking area east to west joining the Midlands to Ludlow, The Capital of south Shropshire. Just south of Bridgenorth there is a footbridge at Arley over the River Severn, 'think of this as valuable infrastructure', I tried to say and then look at other like 'valuable infrastructure' that does not have Rights of Way over them and ask the question will the add value to our access network. Shropshire does not have a recognised east to west that could be part of a national C2C. Might be an interesting line of thinking if you continue to explore that area.