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.
1 comment:
Lovely walk and great blog too. Thanks Toby. Hope to be able to join you again soon for a streach of the upper Thames cbxx
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