Thursday, 24 July 2008

Beach leaves & Faerie grass

Dried out woody arteries

Disembowled Savernake beasty

Mossy savernake beasty

Tree beasts of Savernake

Dancing on mud to f stop 6.7

Bridges and dykes

Leigh on sea becomes a series of small marshy dykes and tidal inlets that meander into the stenchy marshes of Pitsea, Fobbing and Rainham.

Muddy shoes

I do like to be beside industrial sea side

At Leigh on Sea prawns and shell fish are vacuumed up from black mud, and the oil refineries of Canvey Island and the Isle of Grain glimmer across the estuary.

Here the Thames stops being the North sea and is claimed by the Port of London Authority

Through the mud, afraid of deathly deep pits that oyster men might have dug and covered over the tide has left far out to sea and I head for the crow stone.

Wierd essex mer- light

Being back in the UK after staring for months at bold unchanging blue sky, has made me really notice how ever changing sky is in England.

Monday, 7 July 2008

Clouds at start of storm

Just before all the weather drama, the cloud edges shone

Sarah's Bouquet

Saturday night Sarah gave me a bouquet of holly hocks tweezels and garlic from her plot and here it is.

Sunday was lovely

Sunday was beautiful, we read and walked, wandered and photographed, John Berger's essay "Undefeated Despair in his book 'Hold everything dear' was very moving.

Storm starts again

We left the park and wandered down towards Wapping, the sky grew heavy so we had hot chocolate and listened to sunday afternoon jazz.

Storm Clears

The Storm cleared up, and the sky was spattered with fluffy clouds, so different from the previous hour.

Poppies n daisies, in Edward VII park Shadwell

Yesterdays Sunday walk was so full of contrasts, the weather, the wealth, and the different agendas evident in the landscape.

CornFlower in Edward VII park Shadwell

Poppy in Edward VII park Shadwell

Meadow Flowers Edward VII park, Shadwell.

Following text from this link, http://www.mernick.co.uk/thhol/shadwell.html

In 1910, the Government considering how the life and reign of King Edward VII should be commemorated, were disposed to think that the object could be best secured by local, rather than national, memorials. It was felt that London should be foremost in doing honour to the memory of the late sovereign, and the Lord Mayor at once appointed a large and influential committee representing all sections of the community to report upon the question. A fund was opened, to which a considerable number of subscriptions were received from all classes. One of the suggestions, which was ultimately adopted, was that of a park at Shadwell.

In its construction many old and dilapidated houses and buildings were swept away, including the derelict fish market which had been established under powers conferred on a private company in 1882 and transferred with adjacent property - the site being about seven and a half acres - to the City Corporation in 1901, and which was valued in their books at about £140,000. The Corporation agreed to accept £70,000 for their interest in the property, thus benefiting the funds at the disposal of the Memorial Committee to that amount.

Owing to the war [i.e. the First World War] the laying out of the land was postponed, and the Memorial Committee found themselves unable to complete the work. The London County Council, realising that if they did not step into the breach the park might not be provided, decided to proceed with the work. They enlarged the site and were able, by negotiation, to remove certain disadvantages which would affect the amenities of the park.

In the Park, rising from a granite base the front of which forms a garden seat, a Portland stone shaft bears a bronze medallion portrait of the late King Edward with this inscription:-

IN
GRATEFUL MEMORY OF
KING EDWARD THE SEVENTH
THIS PARK IS DEDICATED TO
THE USE AND ENJOYMENT OF THE
PEOPLE OF EAST LONDON FOR EVER.
OPENED BY
KING GEORGE THE FIFTH
1922

King Edward VII Memorial Park, ShadwellUntil the construction of the Park there was from the Tower [of London] to the Isle of Dogs no access to the river; no vantage place to awaken imagination and to urge the spirit of adventure by a view of the panorama of the Thames with the passing shipping. The illustration will give some idea of the value of the Park, which, to be fully realised, should be visited on a summer's day during school holidays, when it is crowded with children, some big, some small, and not a few tiny tots, playing, quarrelling, shouting in high spirits as their fathers did before them. Then should one turn to a stone boulder erected there and read the inscription incised thereon - at the suggestion of the late Mr. Charles McNaught who loved East London - to the memory of the brave adventurous men of other days, who, it must not be forgotten, once were children too. It reads:-

THIS TABLET IS IN MEMORY OF
SIR HUGH WILLOUGHBY, STEPHEN BOROUGH
WILLIAM BOROUGH, SIR MARTIN FROBISHER
AND OTHER NAVIGATORS WHO IN THE LATTER
HALF OF TIlE SIXTEENTH CENTURY, SET SAIL
FROM THIS REACH OF THE RIVER THAMES NEAR
RATCLIFF CROSS
TO EXPLORE THE NORTHERN SEAS.

Train Mirror

,
In the UK we are obsessed with surveillance and the weather, this is my favourite form of survelliance.

DLR at Poplar



Getting the Dockland light railway back to Bow Church. Whenever I travel on the DLR, I think 'oh this is the future promised in fifties sci fi and I am going home on it.

Space monster lighting

I thought that the street lighting resembled space invaders.

Poplar DLR

Poplar is dwarfed by the Dock land developments and as with all gentrification there is very little in it for the original poorer community whom developers would prefer to be cleansed from the area so the grandiose can flourish in virgin soil.

Docklands Thatcher's legacy

Scary scary docklands Thatchers' mausoleum.

©Pennie Quinton
Ah scary capitalism, Gotham City , Bank of America, megalomania, eek!!