The walk began under heavy cloud
Ray and Natasha
A painterly light cast on the waters downstream from Pinkhill weir
After an hour's walking the sun burst through the clouds and patches of blue sky appeared
See Scott K., 2001, Late Middle Pleistocene Mammoths and Elephants of the Thames Valley, Oxfordshire
http://www.cq.rm.cnr.it/elephants2001/pdf/247_254.pdf
Sheep in flooded field near Bablock Hythe
Chalet village near Bablock Hythe
Raja and Natasha at the Ferryman's Inn at Bablock Hythe where we had lunch. A chain mechanism pulled a flat-bottomed ferry across the river at this point operated until the 1950s by a Polish refugee ferryman called John.
Bablock Hythe ferry in the 1950s
Blizzard outside the Ferryman Inn at Bablock Hythe
Natasha at the footbridge

Ten minutes after the blizzard the sun returned
Windmill, pylon and street sign
Makeshift flood level marker from Summer 2007
Hart's Weir footbridge
Tank trap near Hart's Weir footbridge. This was the second tank trap we had seen along the Thames the first one being near Shepperton. This type of Toblerone-shaped tank traps were also known as Dragon's Teeth.
Newbridge is misleadingly named. Built in 1250 it is actually one of the oldest bridges on the Thames. There are two pubs on either side of the river here The Rose Revived and The Maybush.
The Windrush, a poetically-named 35 mile-long Cotswolds river, flows into the Thames at Newbridge
No useful bus passes Newbridge so we walked south on bridleways across the fields for a couple of miles to Southmoor to pick up a bus on the main Faringdon to Oxford road
Once over the ridge we were out of the main Thames valley and into the Vale of the White Horse. Here is the first white horse we saw.
Toby's evening shadow walking across the fields into the Vale of the White Horse