Tuesday, 7 December 2021

Looping and Ringing


It has 607 square miles and over nine million inhabitants. There are 9,197 miles of roads and 2,671 miles of rail.  There are 3000 parks and green spaces which cover 18% of its area - but its glory is two long distance paths called The Capital Ring and The London Loop.  The Ring is 78 miles and is the inner circle while the Loop is the outer circle and is 150 miles.  

Being retired has enabled me to fulfil a long held ambition to get to know the city that I’ve lived in for two thirds of my life. Every weekend, and even more in lockdown, we explored one of the sections which can be anything from four to ten miles.  The paths link as many parks and green spaces as possible and when that’s not possible they follow the more interesting parts of the built environment. Some of which follow. 
The picture at the top though is London’s heart - the Thames which, when you get to know it, is the most fascinating river in England. 

Fairly close to home is St Mary’s in Bexley where Ted Heath often played the organ.  It’s spire is shingled with two storeys and is the only example in England. 






Here for example is the grave of the founder of the Salvation Army buried in Abney Park in a cemetery reserved for Nonconformists and therefore quite simple in contrast to the florid Victorian C of E examples.  


Here’s Horsenden Hill - silver birches against a cerulean sky. 


4 comments:

  1. This ended rather abruptly. Haven’t got the hang of posting pictures yet.

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  2. Your pictures are fine. I once had lunch with Ted Heath in Salisbury. Complete plonker but he introduced me to Armagnac, for which I will always be grateful.

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  3. Well I never! How did you fix that? Was it through your music?

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    1. I was Assistant Director at the Royal Ballet School and I think he thought I was a ballet dancer. Big disappointment for him.🤣

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