The National Trail staff has published a useful list of toilet and water points on the Thames Path.
The arches on Payne’s and Borthwick Wharf at Deptford are being preserved as part of the massive redevelopment. They are often likened to a Venetian facade so the Venice Preserv’d Restoration play is being staged there until Sunday 8 June.
Full details of the play, tickets and where to meet (it’s nearby in Greenwich) can be found on the Venice Preserv’d website.
Thames Admirer has some interesting before and after flood photographs of the river above Oxford.
On May Day Thursday 1 May the traditional Jack in the Green will be on the Thames Path as it leaves the Dog & Bell in Deptford’s Prince Street at 11.30am.
The Jack will be dressed the night before from 8pm.
The pub is on the Thames Path, behind Convoys Wharf, and the May Day route will again touch on the Thames Path downstream at Deptford Creek (about 12.30pm) and soon after in Thames Street in Greenwich.
The tour continues during the afternoon around Greenwich pubs.
The Fowlers Troop Jack in the Green website has the full details.
The National Trail website is still reporting flooding and a closed towpath upstream of Goring Bridge.
The very first programme on London’s new TV station London Live came live from the Thames Path on Monday evening.
Marleena Pone opened the broadcast from the riverside next to Waterloo Bridge.
London SE1 has the story and pictures.
On the second night the crew was downstream broadcasting live from the Greenwich Peninsula.
CAMRA, the Campaign for Real Ale, has announced a list of 210 Local Pubs of the Year to help launch its Community Pubs Month.
This is the shortlist for the CAMRA National Pub of the Year to be declared in early 2015.
On the list is The Nag’s Head at Abingdon which has the Thames Path passing the door. Indeed it is on Abingdon Bridge and after along closure reopened in 2012. Within a year it was Oxfordshire’s pub of the year.
Real ale includes Abingdon brewed Abingdon Bridge ale and the food is good.
Meanwhile there are plans for a theatre on the downstream end of Nag’s Head Island.
The 350-seat theatre would only be used in the summer with daytime availability for amateur groups and buskers. The project team is seeking funding.
The Convoys Wharf development has been given the go-ahead tonight by Mayor of London Boris Johnson.
The controversial development covers historic Deptford Dockyard which with the adjoining Sayes Court Garden have been highlighted by the World Monuments Fund Monuments Watch as being at risk.
Trinity House was founded here 500 years ago, Elizabeth I came here and the Golden Hinde docked here.
The Mayor’s decision is subject to provision for Sayes Court garden restoration. The National Trust, which was founded as a result of a failed attempt to save the Sayes Court building and garden, has the backed the garden plan.
During the hearing at City Hall mention was made of the Thames Path being routed along the riverside where newsprint for Fleet Street was until recently landed.
Today’s inland route does have the advantage of passing the unique Dog & Bell pub.
River Thames News has an important story about a rescue by the Shifford lock-keeper.
This comes just after the Abingdon lock-keeper came to the rescue.
“The path is generally walkable,” says the Thames Path National Trail office.
It is certainly drying out although there are plenty of signs of the flood damage along the way.