Tuesday, 26 February 2008

Culham to Radley

The twentieth Thames walk was a ten mile trek around a very large meander of the river at Abingdon. Apparently walking along the meanders of a river is supposed to be roughly 3.14 times the distance the crow flies. But with the distance from Culham to Radley along the railway track being only two miles this week's walk's meander ratio was about five.
Tree spirit

George Orwell's grave in Sutton Courtenay churchyard

House at Culham
Trees on the horizon at Warren Farm upstream from Abingdon

Sunday, 17 February 2008

Didcot to Culham

Another beautiful day for the third of the February walks up the Thames. The walk explored the area upstream from Dorchester where last week's walk end, but because of the vagaries of rural bus services we decided to begin the walk from Didcot Parkway (a couple of miles south of the Thames) and walk across the fields to approach the river round the back of Wittenham Clumps. There was also a short stretch at the end of the walk away from the Thames to get to the nearest convenient railway station north of the Thames. So the Thames of this walk could more accurately be described as from Dorchester to Appleford. Didcot power station built at the end of the the modernist decade (1958-1968) was visible for the entire walk. This was partly because it stands up so high from the Thames flood plain horizon and also partly because the walk was a very strange shape this week like an elongated and northeasterly-slanted 'n' with the Thames forming the curved part of the shape. Greenpeace reckons Didcot to be the second most polluting power station in the British Isles after Drax in Yorkshire. Didcot had the highest life expectancy of any town in the UK in 2001 with those living in the town expected to reach the ripe old age of 86 - 31 years longer than the 55 years of life that could be expected in the worst parts of Middlesborough. But is a long life a good life? Didcot was also ranked as the 20th worst place to live in the UK in the 2003 book Crap Towns with "no cultural facilties" and an "awful town centre"!
After walking through the northern suburbs of Didcot for a kilometre and crossing the A4130 we suddenly found ourselves in open fields lit by bright winter sunshine, but with a slight morning mist lingering.
We arrived in Little Wittenham and noticed this intriguing tunnel box maze through a gate on the road.
We decided to explore....
And emerged in a tennis court surrounded by huge box hedges
The shady side of the bridge at Clifton Hampden
...and the sunny side. The bridge was built by the prolific Victorian architect George Gilbert Scott in 1864, the year before he designed St Pancras Station. He was also responsible for the Royal Albert Hall and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
Ray, CB, Chris and Raja outside the Plough in Clifton Hampden where we had lunch
CB on Clifton Hampden Bridge
The final kilometre of the walk was made more interesting because of a classic map-reading error. What I thought was a footpath turned out to be a parish boundary. We ended up walking across a couple of ploughed fields, crashing through a few hedges and climbing an embankment before reaching Culman station and finding that we had just missed a train and had an hour-and-a-half wait before the next one. We had a drink and a game of pool in the Railway Tavern at Culham station which doubled up as an Indian restaurant.

Monday, 11 February 2008

Wallingford to Dorchester-upon-Thames

The origin of the word Thames is at least 2,500 years old and is shrouded in mystery but one of the most credible theories is that it derives from the Sanskrit word 'tamasa' meaning 'dark river' or 'dark water'. The name was brought to Britain by the Celts. Another story is that the Thames is actually a contraction of Tamesis - a name formed from the names of the two rivers which run into each other at Dorchester on Thames - the Thame and the Isis. According to this the Thames above Dorchester should actually be called the river Isis and only becomes the Thames after it has joined with the river Thame (no 's') at Dorchester. The two rivers are not of equal size with the Thame pictured here being like a small stream flowing into the much larger Isis. Peter Ackroyd makes much of the Isis theory in his book Thames - Sacred River and believes that the story has mythological resonance. Isis, which is the name of an Egyptian Godess of memories, rivers and fertility, the protectress of agriculture and the arts of healing, is apt because the parallels he draws between the Thames and the Nile. He also points out that three Roman effigies of Horus the son of Isis have been found in the Thames by London Bridge. The Thames and Isis names are also interesting because they represent both male and female aspects of the river. Isis as the river goddess and the Thames which is often referred to as Old Father Thames. The meeting point of the Thame and Isis where Birinus (a Bishop sent by Pope Honorius I, succeeded in converting King Cynegils of Wessex to Christianity in 634.
Isis Goddess of the Thames. There was once a temple to Isis on the banks of the river at Southwark
Raja slipped and fell in the mud again

Marcin A vine with a trunk as thick as a tree on cottages in Shillingford The sky was full of contrails from aircraft flying out of nearby RAF Benson.

Ribbons of reflection in a field by the river Thames

The light on the river was intense

Wittenham Clumps hillside Radiohead made a video of Faust Arp in 2007 here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gt8K-5fMA2I The 2,000MW Didcot Power Station is in the distance. It was built between 1964 and 1968. Greenpeace describe it as Britain's second worst polluting station after Drax in Yorkshire. It was voted Britain's third worst eyesore in 2003 by Country Life readers. They voted windfarms the worst eyesore!

View from Wittenham Clumps looking northeast towards Wittenham village and Day's Lock on the Thames.

Castle Hill: site of the Sinodun fortress.

Detail from the Poem tree on Castle Hill carved into the bark by Joseph Tubb in 1844-45. "As up the hilll with labr'ing steps we tread. Where the twin Clumps their sheltering branches spread. The summit gain'd at ease reclining lay. And all around that the land befell. Where the low bank the country wide surrounds. That ancient earthwork form'd old Mercia's bounds. In misty distance see the barrow heave. There lies forgotten lonely Cwichelm's grave. Around this hill the ruthless Danes intrenched. And these fair plains with gory slaughter drench'd. While at our feed where stands that stately tower. In days gone by up rose the Roman power. And yonder, there where Thames smooth waters glide. In later days appeared monastic pride. Within that field where lies the grazing herd. Huge walls were found, some coffins disinter'd. Such is the course of time the wreck which fate and awful doom award the earthly great.
Ray with Brightwell Barrow in the background
New Moon over Wallingford marketplace
Cholsey railway station at dusk
Alice dances at Cholsey Station

Tuesday, 5 February 2008

Goring to Wallingford

For the first time since Hammersmith there appeared to be a choice for the entire route of the this stretch of the walk over which side of the river to walk on. Because of reasons which later turned out to be spurious we chose to walk on the west bank/north bank. This path was actually part of the Ridgeway walk (which connects Grimes Graves in Norfolk with Avebury in Wiltshire) rather than the official Thames path. One unintended result was that the walk this week did follow the river as closely as we usually track it. The river was in sight for only about half of the walk and we walked beside it for only about a two mile stretch. One impressive sight along the way was this kite which soared in and amongst the trees and telegraph wires just north of Goring. It appeared to have a large chunk bitten out of one of its wings.

Alfie, Ray, Natasha, Chris, Louise and Raja came on this the eighteenth stage of the Thames walk.

An eight passes through the double arches of Moulsford Viaduct. The older part of the bridge dates from 1838 and is another bridge built by Isambard Kingdom Brunel. The first two we passed were at Maidenhead and at Gatehampton near Goring.
Louise became the seventeenth Thames Walker
Workmen's tools left on the ground at North Stoke. Michael Caine lived at the Rectory Farm House in North Stoke, while Ian Gillan, formerly of Deep Purple used to live in a large house here and did the rock star thing by building a guitar-shaped swimming pool.
After arriving in Wallingford we ended up getting a taxi back to Goring to eat at the Miller of Mansfield. The pub was trying much too hard (and hilariously) to be an edgy urban hangout in a completely rural Oxfordshire village. Here Alfie is chillin to the vibe and just "Being"