Friday, 18 June 2010
The Source
After 29 days of walking we finally reached the source. Including the section between Greenwich and Tower Bridge which we walked twice once on each bank; the 14 miles downstream from the start of the path and the seven miles above the source in Gloucestershire, we covered about 216 miles. Roll of honour: Bunny, Cathy, Stefania, Alexandra, Alistair, Ian, Louise, CB, Gary, Katja, Janys. Alice, Marcin, Alfie and Amanda did two walks. Maggot came on three walks. Natasha came on eight walks. Chris came on nine walks. Raja came on 26 walks. Ray came on 27 walks. ....And myself Tobias who led, planned and promoted all 29 walks. The Thames Walk to the Source (2007-2010).
This is the beginning......
Reaching the end of the Thames path we linked up with the Thames and Severn Canal
Janys
A ditch of weeds.....
The ditch of weeds turned into a channel of pondlife
Ducklings in a row
Indiana Jones and Thames Severn Tunnel
After lunch at the Tunnel House
Raja in Cirencester Country Park
Different types of fences are displayed at the entrance to the sawmill
Chris found this honeycomb piece of wood that had been used as a drill plate protector. He took it home along with a bottle of Black Rat cider.
Home for winter bees
Amanda stops at the sawmill to adjust her sock.
Wednesday, 5 May 2010
After a break of more than one-and-a-half years we finally walked the 11 mile 28th stage of the Thames walk from Cricklade in Wiltshire to the highest town on the river Kemble in Gloucestershire.
We began at Cricklade which is the place where the the Roman Road Ermin Street crosses the river. It became a fortified town and site of a royal mint under Alfred the Great defending against the Danes until Canute captured the town and tore down the town walls. The town's North Meadow is home to 80% of Britain's wild Snake's Head Fritillaries.
Chris, Ray and Raja came on the Twenty eighth and penultimate Thames walk.
Crickade High Street
On the bridge at Cricklade
Walking through a field of show jumps
What can I say: mooooo!
Gravel extraction has resulted in flooding in this area and the river flows around and through nearly 150 lakes near Ashton Keynes. The body of Chalky White was dumped in one of these lakes.
The marshlands of the Cotswold Water Park
The path into Ashton Keynes where we had lunch
The Thames as a meandering little stream
Ray pretends to cross the river on a tree trunk
Raja
Spring lambs
Spring lambs by the infant Thames
Kemble station
Chris on the platform at Kemble
The trees seen from the platform at Kemble remind me of looking at photographic film
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