Thames Path Trailblazer Walking Guide 3e : Thames Head to Woolwich (London) & London to Thames Head: Planning, Places to Stay, Places to Eat
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Follow the path of Britain''s best-known river from London to the Cotswolds or from the Cotswolds to London. Here is all the information you need to walk the Thames Path.
The Trailblazer Thames Path Guide is a practical, all-in-one, two-way guide to walking the Thames Path National Trail. The guide shows the route in both directions, from the Thames Head (the Cotswolds) to Woolwich (London) & London to Thames Head, including large-scale trail maps printed in two colours, places to stay, places to eat and public transport information. It is the first guide to the Thames Path that includes the Trail''s extension in London to the Woolwich Foot Tunnel, where it links with the England Coast Path National Trail.
- 89 large-scale walking maps (1:20,000)
- Guides to 99 towns and villages
- Planning, places to stay and places to eat are all included
- Itineraries for all walkers
- Detailed public transport information *
- Practical information for all budgets
- Downloadable GPS waypoints
Barrier in London. Officially 184 miles (294km) in length (although the actual distance you walk will depend on a number of decisions you make en route), the path meanders, accompanied by its watery muse, through pristine and tranquil countryside, past historic sites and buildings, via pub, lock, weir, and the occasional scattering of waterfowl, to a city, once the fulcrum of an empire, and now the heart of modern day England. The river, responsible for the metropolis'' very being, tells tales, inspires artists, accommodates swans, geese, and water voles, reflects the silhouettes of red kites and kingfishers, provides employment, entices adventure, and allows time for carefree pilgrims to procrastinate and think. Following its banks is a grand way to go for a ramble.
The path begins, as the river does, in a meadow in the Cotswolds; its upper reaches lonely and wild, the meadows and banks the domain of waterfowl and willows; a collage of wild flowers, otters, fishermen and farmers. As the waters deepen and spread the settlements along its banks gradually begin to grow in both size and grandeur, and reaching Oxford, the solitude of the river slowly subsides and the trail becomes as much about historic towns, churches, abbeys and castles as it does the river. Lechlade, Abingdon, Wallingford, Henley ... they all owe their location to the Thames, and different eras, when the river was a life source, a place of conflict, a boundary, a mode of transport and the provider of leisure, which, thankfullyfor us, at leastit remains to this day. Squeezing through the ancient Goring Gap, loomed over by the Chiltern Hills, you pass Runnymedethe site of the signing of Magna Cartaand Windsor Castle; where the aeroplanes overhead hint at the ominous size of the city to come.
Walking in London is not as blighted by sound, fury and concrete as many may imagine, as the riverand especially the route along the south bank in Londonremains relatively countrified, at least as far as Putney, from which the approaching sights of Westminster and Tower Bridge offer comparably fine vistas to anywhere along the Thames'' green and scenic upper reaches. Leaving central London, the regenerated dockland areas of East London (ideas of what constitutes ''wild'' in the modern world are of course open to debate) lure you to your journey''s end and the conclusion of a most enjoyable and magnificently-varied riparian ramble, quite like no other in Britain.
Yet the Thames Path is more than just a trek, more than a long walk, more than just a national trail; the river acts as a postgraduate course in the history of a nation, a counselor to the modern world, a reminder of the importance of protecting the natural habitats which gave us what we have....
But most importantlyat least, for those wishing to spend some time in the river''s company, and indeed planning on doing so with the help of this bookthe Thames Path is a fluvial escapade of the finest kind.
- Includes 90 walking mapsthe largest-scale maps available. At a scale of just under 1:20,000 (8cm or 3-1/8 inches to one mile) these are bigger than the most detailed walking maps currently available in the shops.
- Unique mapping featureswalking times, directions, tricky junctions, places to stay and eat, points of interest. These are not general-purpose maps but fully-edited maps drawn by walkers for walkers.
- Itineraries for all walkerswhether hiking the 184-mile route in its entirety or sampling the highlights on day walks or short breaks.
- Includes detailed public transport information for all access points.
- Practical information for all budgetswhat to see, where to stay, where to eat: pubs, hotels, B&B, camping, bunkhouses, hostels.
- GPS waypoints. These are also downloadable from the Trailblazer website.
- Plusextra color sections: 16pp color introduction and 16pp of color mapping for stage sections (one stage per page) with trail profiles.
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