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Beating the Bounds at Rodborough

  Beating the Bounds at Rodborough 23.2.20 Viability bought to you by Brunel Stage left, enter Mr Butler, on struggle and existence, From bread marches to food banks Through the Terminal arches of the Thames and Severn We form a train Robin redbreast demonstrates the Anthropocene Through Corinthian pillars of plastic Cupping his hand to sip Spring While the 575 board attests to a Dragonfly's disdain Land use revealed in 50 bankside plants. The Butterbur from Butterow Hill Full tease ahead to raise the nap Above the new reed in the Mill Pond  2 frogs spawn in the rain. Land explored along it’s boundary. That old fallen beech climbed by Ivy and Tyrus once heard the murmuration of the grain-marchers Petitioning walkers to Cirencester Toasted now by brewery Chartists. Did you see The Bear? The Clothier’s Arms? You were Fleece’d Turn off the taps

The John Bunyan or Tinker Trail

                                                                          Tabor room, Harlington Manor four poster bed see booking.com for favourable terms Harlington Manor, close to Harlington Station is available for bed and a wonderful tasty breakfast. Breakfast can be eaten in the very room where John Bunyan was interrogated after his arrest for 'preaching in a public place'. John Bunyan was a mender of pots and pans and so the heritage trail around the village is known as the Tinker Trail. He was born at Elstow 1628-1688. After breakfast the non-linear trail can be investigated. The natural inclination is to head for the oak, which Bunyan climbed into and acted as a natural soundboard to amplify his preachings. The interpretation board in Harlington Park is not to scale, and there are areas on the OS map that cannot be ground-truthed, so be prepared to walk out of the village onto a busy road before crossing by this sign and relying on your background reading. Once into t

The Black Path (AKA Porter's or Templars' Path).

The  Black path is a trail from Walthamstow to Shoreditch done justice in  these two links  Spittlefields Life . The route of this medieval footpath is  visible through street markets, shop and road names. There is no formal map of the Black path, yet a keen walker with a sense of direction,  willing to make a few twists and turns,  through several welcome green spaces, will find their way.  Tracing a trajectory running northeast and southwest between Shoreditch Church and the crossing of the River Lea at Clapton, the Black Path links with Old Street in one direction and extends beyond Walthamstow in the other.  Sometimes called the Porter’s Way, this was the route cattle were driven to Smithfield and the path used by smallholders taking produce to Spitalfields Market. Sometimes also called the Templars’ Way, it links the thirteenth century St Augustine’s Tower on land once owned by Knights Templar in Hackney with the Priory of St John in Clerkenwell where they had their headquarters.

Anatomy of Norbiton: a Circumambulatory by Toby Ferris

  Here are some segments from a  walk around the bounds of Norbiton reproduced from Anatomy of Norbiton with Toby's permission. For the full text and his beautiful pictures see http://anatomyofnorbiton.org/circumambulatory.html   'The logic of Norbiton’s streets has nothing to do with its circumference. Their grain is governed by the line of the railway, the routes into Kingston and Wimbledon. If you try to walk its perimeter you are forcing that grain, committing a minor spatial infraction.  The same can be said of the streets of its interior: they do not lead to other places within Norbiton, but originate and terminate outside it. Their business is not with Norbiton, but across it. When we walk the circumference of Norbiton, then, we do so as engineers of ideal space armed only with the string and sticks, the ambulatory measure, of our minds; we are engaged in the survey of the anfractuous, perhaps not properly existent fringe of an object which is only no

The Criminal Trespass Bill

    Dear all, BREAKING NEWS: thanks to you, MPs will hold a debate in Parliament on 25th January into Government plans to criminalise trespass! Parliament's Petitions Committee has just scheduled the debate, after our petition - ' Don't criminalise trespass ' - got over 134,000 signatures, back in early September. Massive thanks to all of you who signed and promoted the petition! But now we really need your help to contact MPs and get them to say the right things at the debate. We've written a template email, below, which you can adapt and send to your MP. When MPs hear about issues from their constituents, they're so much more likely to take action - and even if they disagree with you, they have to take your views into consideration. You can look up your MP and their email address on the Parliament website here . Remember to include your postcode when you send your email, to show you're a constituent, otherwise they won't have to respond. If you get

Walking the M25

In 2001 and 2002 I was asked to perform ecological surveys of Area 5 to support the Highways England’s Biodiversity Action Plan: that is, the M25 and its ‘stubs and tails’ (associated trunk roads or feeder routes).  During 2001 I surveyed 60% of Area 5 including bridges over water for bats (one was filmed for BBC) Inside Out programme). In 2002 I surveyed the remaining 40% The scope of the surveys was to identify bird communities as well as interesting habitats on the network. I also undertook 10 bat surveys of bridges over water, including the rivers Mole, Colne, Darent, Ash, and Wey. The survey focused on Highways Agency (HA) target habitats and species and those considered to be of conservation concern. The HA target habitats were boundary features, grassland, heathland water and woodland. The western side of the M25 – Surrey to Bucks - is a watery landscape, with good quality grassland and from the M3 to the M1 there are some interesting architectural structures The western arc h