To see more pictures of the wonderful Essex coast click here.
Saturday, 27 February 2010
Walking the Essex Coast - Vange Marshes
To see more pictures of the wonderful Essex coast click here.
Sunday, 21 February 2010
Walking the Essex Coast - Fobbing Horse
In complete contrast to the previous day, the weather was extremely raw. There has been a heavy frost overnight which made it slippery under foot, it was windy, cold with rain threatening. Unsurprisingly I met no one of this walk. I set off downhill along Wharf road, onto the marshes and atop the flood defences. It was possible to see all the way to the QE2 bridge, about 10 miles.
To see more pictures of the wonderful Essex coast click here.
Saturday, 20 February 2010
Walking the Essex coast - Mucking Creek to Shellhaven
Mucking is a fairly short walk from the station. There isn't much there apart from the church, now a private house. Apparently it was a really important Saxon transit camp and possibly the name is a mistranslation. Now most of Mucking is a huge landfill site.
Click here to see more photos of wonderful Essex coast
Sunday, 14 February 2010
London Loopy
Jubilee Country Park to West Wickham Common
Last September I meandered across the London Borough of Bromley on a fine sunny day. It was very green and rural with lots of interesting things to see and some brilliant street names.

Last September I meandered across the London Borough of Bromley on a fine sunny day. It was very green and rural with lots of interesting things to see and some brilliant street names.
To read full details of my exploits click here
Tower Bridge to Mile End
Three times a year Walk London arrange a weekend of guided walks along various parts of the seven Strategic Routes in the Capital. Winter Wanders took place on the last weekend on January and I opted for a guided walk from Tower Bridge to Mile End, led by the chairman of the River Thames Society. You will see from the photos it was a brilliant sunny day, what you can't see if the wind chill factor, it was very, very cold.
We followed the northern bank of the Thames, via St Katherine's Dock, Wapping to Limehouse Basin, where we paused for a break. Then along the Regent's Canal to Mile End.
Interesting things I learned; berths in St Katherine's Dock were shaped to fit the sterns of ships; there is a church somewhere in East London with a very large red Madonna on top; the canal isn't very deep and there are ramps build along it so that horses could get out if they fell in.
Walking the Essex Coast - Tilbury to Mucking creek
The footpath ends at Mucking Marshes, formerly used for gravel extraction and now a mjor landfill site, jealously guarded by Cory Environmental. London's rubbish arrives by river in large yellow containers and is landed using the huge travelling crane. I gave up about 500 metres from the end when the path petered out altogether. I followed a footpath from the riverside to East Tilbury, which was developed by Thomas Bata, a Czech shoe magnate, in the 1930's, with a modern factory and housing and social facilities for the workers, the houses appear to be modelled on shoe boxes.
Monday, 8 February 2010
Essex church walk
The land around Willingale is very flat and was the site of the wartime airfield known as RAF Chipping Ongar, home to the 387th Bomb Group, USAAF. Unbelievably, in 1979, Willingale was shortlisted a potential site for London third airport.
I spotted a most unusual, turbined powered scarecrow which certainly frightened me, good use of green technology!
Friday, 5 February 2010
Walking the Essex coast - Grays to Tilbury
After that it was a four miles slog through Grays and past Tilbury docks to rejoin the river at the Passenger ferry to Gravesend. The sun disappeared behind a huge cloud, thunder rumbled and it started to rain as the sun came out. Next to main cargo docks is the Cruise Terminal but services do not start until March when you take the Marco Polo to the Land of the Northern Lights, (Norway?). All the weird weather produced a very good rainbow over Tilbury power station.
Wednesday, 3 February 2010
Walking the Essex Coast - Grays to Rainham
I picked a cold grey day in January to make a start walking from Grays to Rainham, a distance of eleven miles. Most of the route is industrial taking you past oil depots, factories and freight ferry terminals. Not very pretty but very accessible.
The highlight of the day was the visit to St Clements Church, always isolated from its parishioners hidden among the marshes, is now cut off by the railway and surrounded by factories. The church is where Gareth's funeral took place in Four Weddings etc. It is now in the care of Proctor and Gamble and I was very lucky to bump into the security guard who let me have a look around. Apparently it has connections with the Knights Templar, so I'm surprised Dan Brown hasn't been around looking for buried treasure.
I had a rest at the RSPB cafe where I was hoping to enjoy a nice bacon sandwich but got a sausage one instead. The route from Purfleet to Rainham is a familiar one as it forms part of the London Loop and the last part along Havering River path was one our family's favorite Sunday afternoon walks, when falling into the Thames meant almost certain death, according to my mother. Aveley Marshes were formerly Army shooting ranges and now form part of the RSPB nature reserve. The foreshore is also accessible at this point and the views are quite extensive on a clear day.
It's about a mile back to Rainham from the Thames through a very unlovely industrial estate and over a enormous footbridge that crosses the Eurostar line to the 103 bus that carried me home.
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