I have walked much of what you did numerous times, but it was fascinating learning more about the industrial and ecological history of that stretch of the Medway
The large fish you saw by the sewerage outlet were most likely mullet. Specifically the thick-lipped grey mullet (not generally regarded as good eating;). Peak Sunday evening UA-cam. Thanks John.
I grew up there John, now 72 and still alive from swimming in the river, Cement, Paper and Bricks were he main industry followed by engineering and docks, really change in my life time, keep up the great walks
The Professor in the first five minutes describes exactly while I like these walks,the sky, mud flats, water and the the smells of the marsh,probably were we called out of the ooze. Thanks.
Marshes are the beautiful capillaries in the beating heart of the land and sea. And the next tine I am hacking away at vines in my garden I will tell my scratched up arms it is good for their circulation
Loved this. I remember as a kid about 1970 going on holiday to Sheppey and this environment has been forever implanted in my memory. Never returned but hope to one day...
My dad's family were Gypsy Harris, who parked at Upnor (the North bank of the Medway) before settling on Dillywood Farm. My mum used to walk me up the river banks. I left the county but it still resonates so much.
I have lived in Gillingham for 57 years and where you are walking was my play ground. I often walk there. I belonged to a local archaeological group and I did a study of the area. There is an old chalk quarry opposite the Riverside park entrance. There was a small train track leading out to horrid hill as boats pulled up. There's the old wharf at Bloor Lane end. Further along the road was an old brick work where they are building houses. Along the lower road was orchards
Good to see Prof. Kate again! Tidal landscapes are always magical and The Medway is no exception. As soon as this came on screen I KNEW samphire would put in an appearance. It comes pickled (or do it yourself) in vinegar, which takes off some of the salt, or stir it fresh picked into a cheesy pasta, which brings out its delicate flavour v nicely. A beautiful place I think, maybe a hot day doesn't show the estuary at its best; a bit less humid & smelly in Autumn, I think. Nice one John and Prof Kate! 🌟🌟👍👍
Another great walk John. Always enjoyable. Where professor Kate mentioned dead man’s island, not far from there, is a u-boat that is being well preserved by the Medway mud.
The combination of scenery with your - and Kate’s - commentary is always so hypnotic John. I especially enjoyed the colour once the sun came out. A real pleasure to take that walk with you. Thanks.
OMG heard about this walk on a Q?A you did . Had to pause and come and see it as I do this walk at least once a week. Have quite a good knowledge of london from my days as a cycle and van courier of many years in my youth and as an older man now i love watching your walks . Have lived all over the place but Gillingham is my home town. Looking forward to this. My only dissapointment was the length. The fish were Mullet the stinging nettles in shorts is a very healthy and invigorating experience. If you had continued you would have had a couple of miles of road walk but some nice pubs and churches etc. I could go on all day. I quite often do . back to the Q/A. many many thanks will be doing that walk again tomorrow .
Great to see this vid John! I'm a Twydall ite... The River Medway area was our playground. I used to watch the mud.and listen to it! I still have some Upchurch Pottery.... Upchurch is close to Otterham Quay. I can remember the brickworks... Huge open drying sheds near there too. I now live in Ramsgate. Great walk there to the Hengist Ship at Pegwell bay.. Can recommend the cheesy chips at the cafe.👍
@@KateSpencer-el1jw hi!... I don't know for sure. So there was Bloors Warf and Otterham Quay.... It was a very interesting area .. I wish my Dad was here, he knew all about the area . Opposite the brick drying sheds was an old Victorian dump on the shore side of the road. Dug up many different Victorian pots. Cream jars, ink pots, large pots, not sure what they were for. Then along from the brick drying sheds were orchards. Whose fruit could have gone by barge up to London's markets. In the 70's there was a huge boat recycling place near a Warf and the concrete barges were along the shore as a sort of sea defence, I think. Twas a long time ago! Haha. There were sooo many orchards around there. I could see Kingsnorth Power station from my school. It was in Feathery Road. And I became an environmentalist at the age of 12. It was a wonderful area by the river full of Sea Lavender. In our garden at Twydall, I found a fossil and a shot from a gun or small cannon ball. The history of the area is amazing, even Spanish ships at the time of the Armarda,, tried to go down the Medaway and special chains were put across the river from Upnor Castle to Rochester way to stop them. The ropes for HMS Victory were made at Chatham! But the area you walked is still my favourite kate.... I walked the path through the boat yard sooo many times. Thanks for your time.
I can't think of any channeler more at ease than this fella, plus nothing phony either about his dame pal -- SHOCKING, this featured naturalness happening to be ever so rare...
Saxon Shore Way goes from Gravesend to Hastings . As far as I understand many of the brickfields from Medway to Sittingbourne supplied the bricks for the London Embankment. Sadly I had a couple of friends in Sittingbourne in the 70's whose fathers were sick from the years working in the brickfields . Their lungs were trashed by the time they were fifty .
I was birdwatching around Rainham and the Marshes forty odd years ago and I well remember the sulphurous mud with the matching smell plus some sewerage,but it's remarkable how nature recovers in such post industrial landscapes! Thanks 👍 for the "virtual revisit"!
Great video John , the Medway estuary is a brilliant environment nice to see it slowly recovering, I keep also thinking of Dickens Great Expectations , I'm recovering from gastro enteritis so appreciate these films very much , Kate's information is also very interesting , see you soon 🌈👍💞
Brillliant. The wonderful aroma of Costa del Motney. I found a human femur down by the 'sea wall' back in the seventies,probably one of those poor French fellas!
Another fine walk, John, with great wisdom and knowledge imparted by Professor Kate. Wish I had the legs to be able to get down to those more remote parts you take us to. Your excellent films are the next best thing. More power to your roving eyes and knees!
Wow what a cracking video John!! Absolutely loved this one!! 🤩You and Kate were fantastic!! Thank you for all your hard work creating these videos for all us to enjoy. 🙏🙏✨✨
@@JohnRogersWalks it really shows mate. 🙏So much feeling is put in to your videos. It’s almost like we’re walking with you!! Not sure how you do it but it’s truly magical. 🙏🙏✨✨
I walked the length of the Thames a few years ago. I've been pondering ever since whether to continue that walk, from the point where the two rivers meet, to the source of the Medway. You may just have made my mind up to do it. Fascinating video. Thanks.
My stomping ground, should have popped in for a medicinal beer John 😂👍🏻 So much history on this river, Chatham Dockyard where Nelson boarded HMS victory for the 1st time, prison hulks, Charles Dickens Magwitch escaped onto the marshes across the river at cooling where Pip found him Full of history the Medway towns Horrid Hill was so named as many many convicts who escaped hulks to that island were hung there, nothing to do with industry Dead man’s island was named due to the masses of dead French prisoners of war buried there
@@KateSpencer-el1jw all i know is that it shares an equally sinister history regarding prisoners as horrid hill, any unlucky escapees who drowned washed up on the shore and were just left where they ended up, I’d imagine is was pretty horrific in Dickensian times on that stretch of the river
Saxon Shore Way created in 1981 running on existing public rights of way network. It follows (as is practical) the original coastline of Kent during Saxon era. Stoke Marshes on the other side is stunning at high tide when sea lavender is in flower (July - Late Sept)
Ahh Bloors warf ..my childhood playground..looks a bit different now without all the old cement works towers and ruins. (Apart from the railing) the sea wall (as we used to call it) was the most easily recognizable part.
Hello John - Just wanted to tell you how much I enjoyed the video of your Medway hike. The lower reaches of the Medway from the Strand to Horrid Hill were my childhood playground for most of the late 50s and early 60s. There would be a gang of us that would be down their most summer afternoons and Horrid Hill was a firm favourite for racing our bikes (although we didn't know it as Horrid Hill - we called all the nearby area Sharpes Green, presumably after the lane leading to Horrid Hill). I was always fascinated by the bits of white Dundee Marmalade jars that we would find scattered around the end of Horrid Hill and my older brother used to tease my with stories about huge sea monsters that had attacked the locals as they were eating their breakfast - mind you when the tide was in, the water was so thick and muddy you could certainly believe that a gigantic sea creature could be lurking there ready to grab the unwary. And it was only recently that I found out that those Marmalade jar pieces were part of the cargo of a barge that had foundered on Horrid Hill in 1913. The only rule was that we had to be home for tea and what with the river, the mud, numerous scrapes on our bikes - and the odd man in a funny raincoat - it's a wonder that we all lived to tell the tale. What innocent and happy times they were!
Very interesting video John & Kate. Thank u to Kate for lending her expertise on the esturary. Definitely made more sense when it’s explained so well, which ur both so good @ doing. Question: I live in the states & am not familiar w/ stinging grasses/vegetation. Were those what I’ve heard on British shows called “stinging nettles?” Thank u, John, for putting up w/ being stung every step to show us. Thanks again, take care.
As a confirmed tree hugger, I'm constantly surprised at how much I love open moorland and estuaries and the like, with hardly a tree in sight! 🤔 Fascinating spot...thanks again 👌
Faversham train station to Whitstable train station, primarily walking the Saxon Shoreway, is a lovely little walk. Historic buildings at the start and finish and plenty of bird life and salt marshes in between. Would be a great stroll for the channel. Loads of opportunities for a post-walk pint in Whitstable as well 😉. Thanks for a great video mate. The historic maps were a fantastic touch!
As a regular visitor to The Strand, Riverside Country Park and Bloors wharf on birdwatching trips I was aware of the area's beauty, but was very interested to learn of it's past history. Motney Hill is a regular hot spot for Turtle Doves each Spring. Thankyou.
Yet another amazing and thoroughly entertaining walk, thank you. I live on the North Norfolk coast with the salt marshes just across the road. Many locals harvest the samphire and sell it outside of their houses (mainly to the tourists) The best way to eat it is to boil it (don't add any salt, as it's already salty) and serve with a very generous knob of butter.
Totally enjoyed this video. Brought back memories of a child visiting the Strand. Got stuck in the mud many times running after a ball. Used to walk all along the sea wall and even cycled all the way to Sheppy and did some scrumping on the way. Thank you so much for this brought back some childhood memories.
Stinging nettles were imported to southwestern Ontario by English settlers about 200 years ago. In that environment, they tend to grow to truly obscene sizes, such that preventing stings to the face are nearly impossible. It has ecome naturalized in most provinces in Canada, but many of the medicinal qualities are also present in native and introduced dead nettle and other lamiaceae.
That was brilliant and you were right near where I live, although I’m far enough away from the sewage farm to be able to smell it! You were very close to Berengrave Nature Reserve which was a chalk pit. The fields at the bottom of Station Road and along to Otterham Key used to be the “brick fields” where there were turned and cured before firing (most of this I’ve read on the walls of the Wetherspoons behind you at the end!).
River Medway... more like River Mudway 🤣 Jokes aside, this was a really interesting video! So fascinating to see how nature can reclaim areas that we might have given up on, and completely change the landscape. Prof Kate was a wonderful guest as well. Thanks as always John x
The old wooden ship at 20:28 has been slow rotting away for some years now. Try as I might I can’t find any info / history regarding how it got there. All I know is it was named the Aberdeen.
Hi John Nice to see you down my way . I’m in Hoo so just down the road to where you started . I walked the Saxon Shore Way from its source in Gravesend in 10mile segments . I got to just past Whitstable before Covid hit . I must finish it off one day .. Cheers Kev
Haven't watched yet but done that walk many times. Its an interesting if rather bleak place like much of the North Kent marshes but seeded with bird and nature sanctuaries that offer relief. Although Dickens didn't site any of his works in this particular area you can still sense the inspiration for say Great Expectations which was sited on the north side of the Medway around the Cliffe area.
Being an estuary dweller this was a really interesting walk … so much history lost to the mud … nice to have insights from the Prof. too. Will you return to the Medway and head out towards Sheerness or cover the North side ?
Interesting to see the area where me and my pals spent a lot of time as a child. I thought the power station, which I could see from my bedroom window had been demolished? There was no smell of sewage when I was a kid. But that was before full on privatisation.
Bloors Wharf - When I was a boy sailing at Fareham in the 50s and early 60s there was a "gravel grabber" called Bloors. I think she had been adapted from an old LST (Landing Ship Tank) hull, with an excavator bucket operated from the bow to dredge the shingle banks of the Solent. I wonder if this is the origin of the name.
Thanks passed to John & Kate. A good watch.
Regards & best wishes from Western Scotland.
Thanks John and kate very interesting
I'm old and will never see Blighty again, thanks for all you do John.
Thanks John and Kate. I look forward to the next part of the Medway walk
I have walked much of what you did numerous times, but it was fascinating learning more about the industrial and ecological history of that stretch of the Medway
Just discovered this channel as algorithm from watching Living London history, so pleased it found me , 😊
welcome to the channel Sally
The large fish you saw by the sewerage outlet were most likely mullet. Specifically the thick-lipped grey mullet (not generally regarded as good eating;).
Peak Sunday evening UA-cam. Thanks John.
I grew up there John, now 72 and still alive from swimming in the river, Cement, Paper and Bricks were he main industry followed by engineering and docks, really change in my life time, keep up the great walks
love the mixture of green and grey shades, I would love to paint that, my imagination would run riot....cheers John and Kate.
The Professor in the first five minutes describes exactly while I like these walks,the sky, mud flats, water and the the smells of the marsh,probably were we called out of the ooze. Thanks.
Marshes are the beautiful capillaries in the beating heart of the land and sea. And the next tine I am hacking away at vines in my garden I will tell my scratched up arms it is good for their circulation
Loved this. I remember as a kid about 1970 going on holiday to Sheppey and this environment has been forever implanted in my memory. Never returned but hope to one day...
My dad's family were Gypsy Harris, who parked at Upnor (the North bank of the Medway) before settling on Dillywood Farm. My mum used to walk me up the river banks. I left the county but it still resonates so much.
I have lived in Gillingham for 57 years and where you are walking was my play ground. I often walk there. I belonged to a local archaeological group and I did a study of the area. There is an old chalk quarry opposite the Riverside park entrance. There was a small train track leading out to horrid hill as boats pulled up. There's the old wharf at Bloor Lane end. Further along the road was an old brick work where they are building houses. Along the lower road was orchards
It was interesting to have another perspective from someone who knows about the history of the area. I really enjoyed that.
Good to see Prof. Kate again! Tidal landscapes are always magical and The Medway is no exception. As soon as this came on screen I KNEW samphire would put in an appearance. It comes pickled (or do it yourself) in vinegar, which takes off some of the salt, or stir it fresh picked into a cheesy pasta, which brings out its delicate flavour v nicely. A beautiful place I think, maybe a hot day doesn't show the estuary at its best; a bit less humid & smelly in Autumn, I think. Nice one John and Prof Kate! 🌟🌟👍👍
You can buy it in health food type shops in London, I have tried it a few times, very nice.
Another great walk John. Always enjoyable. Where professor Kate mentioned dead man’s island, not far from there, is a u-boat that is being well preserved by the Medway mud.
Home town!! I love the Medway.
mine too
The combination of scenery with your - and Kate’s - commentary is always so hypnotic John. I especially enjoyed the colour once the sun came out. A real pleasure to take that walk with you. Thanks.
Thoroughly enjoyed this walk John and Kate thankyou both !
Thank you John for another super interesting film. And for the sacrifices your skin and olfactory system made so we could share this with you.
OMG heard about this walk on a Q?A you did . Had to pause and come and see it as I do this walk at least once a week. Have quite a good knowledge of london from my days as a cycle and van courier of many years in my youth and as an older man now i love watching your walks . Have lived all over the place but Gillingham is my home town. Looking forward to this. My only dissapointment was the length. The fish were Mullet the stinging nettles in shorts is a very healthy and invigorating experience. If you had continued you would have had a couple of miles of road walk but some nice pubs and churches etc. I could go on all day. I quite often do . back to the Q/A. many many thanks will be doing that walk again tomorrow .
Thank's Both , Great walk . Stay safe
Great to see this vid John! I'm a Twydall ite... The River Medway area was our playground. I used to watch the mud.and listen to it!
I still have some Upchurch Pottery.... Upchurch is close to Otterham Quay. I can remember the brickworks... Huge open drying sheds near there too.
I now live in Ramsgate. Great walk there to the Hengist Ship at Pegwell bay..
Can recommend the cheesy chips at the cafe.👍
Was the quay at Bloors wharf for transporting the bricks?
@@KateSpencer-el1jw hi!... I don't know for sure. So there was Bloors Warf and Otterham Quay....
It was a very interesting area .. I wish my Dad was here, he knew all about the area . Opposite the brick drying sheds was an old Victorian dump on the shore side of the road. Dug up many different Victorian pots. Cream jars, ink pots, large pots, not sure what they were for.
Then along from the brick drying sheds were orchards. Whose fruit could have gone by barge up to London's markets.
In the 70's there was a huge boat recycling place near a Warf and the concrete barges were along the shore as a sort of sea defence, I think. Twas a long time ago! Haha.
There were sooo many orchards around there.
I could see Kingsnorth Power station from my school. It was in Feathery Road. And I became an environmentalist at the age of
12.
It was a wonderful area by the river full of Sea Lavender.
In our garden at Twydall, I found a fossil and a shot from a gun or small cannon ball.
The history of the area is amazing, even Spanish ships at the time of the Armarda,, tried to go down the Medaway and special chains were put across the river from Upnor Castle to Rochester way to stop them.
The ropes for HMS Victory were made at Chatham!
But the area you walked is still my favourite kate.... I walked the path through the boat yard sooo many times. Thanks for your time.
Really enjoyed that. You and the professor work well together. Hope there will be more.
Many thanks
I’m sure we will - already some plans for an autumn walk
Great walk and great environmental history of the Kentish riverways John! Kate Spencer is always a delight!
Loved this pleased you came to my neck of the woods, always a lovely walk, obviously not near the sewage works😂
Lovely to see Kate joining you on a pungent walk along the Medway
thanks Ian
Sunday is complete thanks john
Wonderful- thanks for watching
I can't think of any channeler more at ease than this fella, plus nothing phony either about his dame pal -- SHOCKING, this featured naturalness happening to be ever so rare...
More history walks with Kate, please. If she doesn't have her own UA-cam channel, Kate should. She's a natural on camera.
Saxon Shore Way goes from Gravesend to Hastings .
As far as I understand many of the brickfields from Medway to Sittingbourne supplied the bricks for the London Embankment.
Sadly I had a couple of friends in Sittingbourne in the 70's whose fathers were sick from the years working in the brickfields . Their lungs were trashed by the time they were fifty .
You don’t hear much about the harmful effects - when did they close down?
We hiked the whole saxon shore way in February. Highly recommended
Superb! Really interesting and informative video. Well done to Kate and yourself!
I was birdwatching around Rainham and the Marshes forty odd years ago and I well remember the sulphurous mud with the matching smell plus some sewerage,but it's remarkable how nature recovers in such post industrial landscapes! Thanks 👍 for the "virtual revisit"!
Great video John , the Medway estuary is a brilliant environment nice to see it slowly recovering, I keep also thinking of Dickens Great Expectations , I'm recovering from gastro enteritis so appreciate these films very much , Kate's information is also very interesting , see you soon 🌈👍💞
all the best for your recovery Leslie
i love what i see of the medway from the M20 ..it really is my fave bit of motorway in the uk
Bravo John and Kate! Great team work and super cinematography as always👏👌🖤
Brillliant. The wonderful aroma of Costa del Motney. I found a human femur down by the 'sea wall' back in the seventies,probably one of those poor French fellas!
Wow - we used to find lots of clay pipes down there.
Fascinating John and Kate! What a landscape! ❤
So interesting . Love having an expert . It’s a place of mystery to me xxx
Another fine walk, John, with great wisdom and knowledge imparted by Professor Kate. Wish I had the legs to be able to get down to those more remote parts you take us to. Your excellent films are the next best thing. More power to your roving eyes and knees!
Wow what a cracking video John!! Absolutely loved this one!! 🤩You and Kate were fantastic!! Thank you for all your hard work creating these videos for all us to enjoy. 🙏🙏✨✨
Thanks Darren. My pleasure- I love making these videos
@@JohnRogersWalks it really shows mate. 🙏So much feeling is put in to your videos. It’s almost like we’re walking with you!! Not sure how you do it but it’s truly magical. 🙏🙏✨✨
I walked the length of the Thames a few years ago. I've been pondering ever since whether to continue that walk, from the point where the two rivers meet, to the source of the Medway. You may just have made my mind up to do it. Fascinating video. Thanks.
My stomping ground, should have popped in for a medicinal beer John 😂👍🏻
So much history on this river, Chatham Dockyard where Nelson boarded HMS victory for the 1st time, prison hulks, Charles Dickens Magwitch escaped onto the marshes across the river at cooling where Pip found him
Full of history the Medway towns
Horrid Hill was so named as many many convicts who escaped hulks to that island were hung there, nothing to do with industry
Dead man’s island was named due to the masses of dead French prisoners of war buried there
Many thanks for the info
Over the years I’ve heard so many different reasons - do you if there’s a backstory to ‘Bedlams Bottom?
@@KateSpencer-el1jw all i know is that it shares an equally sinister history regarding prisoners as horrid hill, any unlucky escapees who drowned washed up on the shore and were just left where they ended up, I’d imagine is was pretty horrific in Dickensian times on that stretch of the river
Saxon Shore Way created in 1981 running on existing public rights of way network. It follows (as is practical) the original coastline of Kent during Saxon era.
Stoke Marshes on the other side is stunning at high tide when sea lavender is in flower (July - Late Sept)
Ahh Bloors warf ..my childhood playground..looks a bit different now without all the old cement works towers and ruins. (Apart from the railing) the sea wall (as we used to call it) was the most easily recognizable part.
Hello John - Just wanted to tell you how much I enjoyed the video of your Medway hike. The lower reaches of the Medway from the Strand to Horrid Hill were my childhood playground for most of the late 50s and early 60s. There would be a gang of us that would be down their most summer afternoons and Horrid Hill was a firm favourite for racing our bikes (although we didn't know it as Horrid Hill - we called all the nearby area Sharpes Green, presumably after the lane leading to Horrid Hill). I was always fascinated by the bits of white Dundee Marmalade jars that we would find scattered around the end of Horrid Hill and my older brother used to tease my with stories about huge sea monsters that had attacked the locals as they were eating their breakfast - mind you when the tide was in, the water was so thick and muddy you could certainly believe that a gigantic sea creature could be lurking there ready to grab the unwary. And it was only recently that I found out that those Marmalade jar pieces were part of the cargo of a barge that had foundered on Horrid Hill in 1913.
The only rule was that we had to be home for tea and what with the river, the mud, numerous scrapes on our bikes - and the odd man in a funny raincoat - it's a wonder that we all lived to tell the tale. What innocent and happy times they were!
Superb as always John, thanks for sharing. Have a great week!!!
Many thanks Neil
Wonderful, interesting and a visual delight.thank you.
great duel video enjoyed didnt want it to end
Very interesting video John & Kate. Thank u to Kate for lending her expertise on the esturary. Definitely made more sense when it’s explained so well, which ur both so good @ doing. Question: I live in the states & am not familiar w/ stinging grasses/vegetation. Were those what I’ve heard on British shows called “stinging nettles?” Thank u, John, for putting up w/ being stung every step to show us. Thanks again, take care.
Thanks so much Tina. Yes they were indeed stinging nettles
Great video! Gives you some hope about environments regenerating,,
Beautiful photography once again. And just about free of the Romantic and Expressionist cliches
of the landscape genre. So good
Thanks Tracy
As a confirmed tree hugger, I'm constantly surprised at how much I love open moorland and estuaries and the like, with hardly a tree in sight! 🤔
Fascinating spot...thanks again 👌
Faversham train station to Whitstable train station, primarily walking the Saxon Shoreway, is a lovely little walk. Historic buildings at the start and finish and plenty of bird life and salt marshes in between. Would be a great stroll for the channel. Loads of opportunities for a post-walk pint in Whitstable as well 😉. Thanks for a great video mate. The historic maps were a fantastic touch!
As a regular visitor to The Strand, Riverside Country Park and Bloors wharf on birdwatching trips I was aware of the area's beauty, but was very interested to learn of it's past history. Motney Hill is a regular hot spot for Turtle Doves each Spring. Thankyou.
Beautiful, inspiring and informative. Thanks to you both 🙏
Yet another amazing and thoroughly entertaining walk, thank you.
I live on the North Norfolk coast with the salt marshes just across the road. Many locals harvest the samphire and sell it outside of their houses (mainly to the tourists)
The best way to eat it is to boil it (don't add any salt, as it's already salty) and serve with a very generous knob of butter.
Thanks John, I've never been to that area so very interesting and impressive views
Nice to see your companion was a Brummie Spencer - same as me 😄
Haha. I’m from a very long line of Brummie Spencers.
@@KateSpencer-el1jw could be some distant relative then 😀
Totally enjoyed this video. Brought back memories of a child visiting the Strand. Got stuck in the mud many times running after a ball. Used to walk all along the sea wall and even cycled all the way to Sheppy and did some scrumping on the way. Thank you so much for this brought back some childhood memories.
Just perfect, thank you John and Kate.
About time I got my hand in my pocket John . Been enjoying your wonderful escapades for some time now. Cheers. Ian
thanks so much for your generosity Ian
Great. I really enjoyed that. Thanks to you both - and especially for putting up with the sun!
I love the Ord. Little flurry clouds.
That was great. As well as being very specific to the Medway and its history, a lot can be read across to other coastal areas.
Thank you John & Kate wonderful walk along part of the Saxon shoreway
Stinging nettles were imported to southwestern Ontario by English settlers about 200 years ago. In that environment, they tend to grow to truly obscene sizes, such that preventing stings to the face are nearly impossible. It has ecome naturalized in most provinces in Canada, but many of the medicinal qualities are also present in native and introduced dead nettle and other lamiaceae.
Brought to Britain by the Romans to feed cattle.
John and Kate 🤝😊
That was brilliant and you were right near where I live, although I’m far enough away from the sewage farm to be able to smell it! You were very close to Berengrave Nature Reserve which was a chalk pit. The fields at the bottom of Station Road and along to Otterham Key used to be the “brick fields” where there were turned and cured before firing (most of this I’ve read on the walls of the Wetherspoons behind you at the end!).
Excellent walk, love the bleakness of this area, done a few walks down that way and always enjoyed the openness of the estuary... Cheers John
Thanks Chris
great and informative walk...thank you
Superb video with oodles of knowledge - just great 👍
Really enjoyed that one - thank you!
Just gorgeous landscape. Inspires me for painting!
Thanks John really enjoyed this, well I enjoy every film you make but this was very good .
A wonderful walk with excellent guides, thank you.
River Medway... more like River Mudway 🤣
Jokes aside, this was a really interesting video! So fascinating to see how nature can reclaim areas that we might have given up on, and completely change the landscape. Prof Kate was a wonderful guest as well. Thanks as always John x
Thank you!
Nice walk! I enjoyed the learned insight from Kate. I am walking The Stour in Kent if you may be interested. Cheers John!
John, I appreciate the work you put into these videos; they are always so enjoyable. And the music you choose, always spot on. 👌🏼 Thank you. 😊
many thanks Maxine
Stunning photography, and a fascinating ramble. Thanks John!
many thanks Chris
the usual wonderful wandering 🙂
Cheers Pat
The old wooden ship at 20:28 has been slow rotting away for some years now. Try as I might I can’t find any info / history regarding how it got there. All I know is it was named the Aberdeen.
Hi John
Nice to see you down my way . I’m in Hoo so just down the road to where you started .
I walked the Saxon Shore Way from its source in Gravesend in 10mile segments . I got to just past Whitstable before Covid hit .
I must finish it off one day ..
Cheers Kev
Interesting walk. Hard to believe that there was so much industry in that area. Looks lovely & peaceful now.
Haven't watched yet but done that walk many times. Its an interesting if rather bleak place like much of the North Kent marshes but seeded with bird and nature sanctuaries that offer relief.
Although Dickens didn't site any of his works in this particular area you can still sense the inspiration for say Great Expectations which was sited on the north side of the Medway around the Cliffe area.
Check out a classic post war film set on these marshes with John Mills called The Long Memory (1953). Some of the scenery is fantastic
Being an estuary dweller this was a really interesting walk … so much history lost to the mud … nice to have insights from the Prof. too. Will you return to the Medway and head out towards Sheerness or cover the North side ?
I can see quite a few Medway walks over the next couple of years Nige
@@JohnRogersWalks good to hear that, should be very interesting 😊
Interesting to see the area where me and my pals spent a lot of time as a child. I thought the power station, which I could see from my bedroom window had been demolished? There was no smell of sewage when I was a kid. But that was before full on privatisation.
The old power station was demolished but there’s still a newer but much smaller incinerator type one there
Big skies amazing images thx
Bloors Wharf - When I was a boy sailing at Fareham in the 50s and early 60s there was a "gravel grabber" called Bloors. I think she had been adapted from an old LST (Landing Ship Tank) hull, with an excavator bucket operated from the bow to dredge the shingle banks of the Solent. I wonder if this is the origin of the name.
A lovely walk indeed.
Mr Dickens used to walk from his gaff in Gadshill into London when the mood took him. Seems a fair hike though. Hope he didn't wear shorts.
Thanks for video John!!
cheers Tom
such a brave walk !
Yes a very enjoyable journey
Horrid hill = Cement works. Sewage everwhere. Saw in Roach recently
excellent stuff john , this is one of your best videos to date ,thanks
thanks Martin
A delightful and informative walk John.
Thanks Mark
More estuaries on bleak days please John.