Friday 17 July 2020

Romsey Barge Canal walk

Our car had it's MOT this morning in Romsey, which meant two and a half hours hanging about in another town, in another county; Romsey being about 45min drive away. Usually I'd do a trawl of the local charity shops and look around the Abbey, a magnificent edifice, although during this time of pandemic and social distancing, that was far less appealing. So, I decided instead to seek an alternative way to spend a couple of hours which didn't include increased fear, and upon checking out a map last night I discovered that Romsey had a canal, job done. I'd never imagined Romsey had a canal, apparently it was opened in 1794, and ran 22 miles from Andover to Southampton water (with the 2 mile section running north of Romsey being one of the few remaining sections); the canal's use was short lived closing by the mid 19th century, the spreading of the train network signalled the end for many of these smaller canals. The path of canal winds out of town through a corridor of green, but for the occasional sight of a house through the bordering woodland, you'd never know you were walking through an urban environment. The canal itself is a mix of narrow open water fringed with dense foliage, and long sections of open shallow water. On one side is an extensive wetland wildlife reserve (Fishlake Meadows) boasting a staggering number and diversity of wildlife (bird, mammal, insect and flora) beyond which the canal, by now fully choked with vegetation, continues through open countryside before just stopping, truncated by the A3057. The further along the old tow path I walked the fewer and fewer people I saw, until the last mile I walked in isolation, which was nice, even leaving me feeling at ease enough to sit a while, taking some time to breath and meditate. A really Lovely walk and a total surprise, if you're in the area and need to waste some time, I thoroughly recommend it.

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