Friday 27 July 2012

River Kennet on Paddle Points river map website

Canoeing and kayaking routes on the River Kennet are now appearing on the highly recommended Paddle Points website which provides canoeists and kayakers with the opportunity to use a Google Maps based search facility for new trip ideas, and permits registered users to record details of known routes and local features.

The home page of the Paddle Points website...

...provides access in a single click to a map of over 3000 markers (and whilst the rapidly growing number of European entries indicate the positive experiences of overseas paddling, the UK entries will hopefully contribute to increased levels of canoeing and kayaking tourism expenditure in the UK).

Users of the Kennet Navigation and the River Kennet are now also logging information on paddling routes.

Details include such as potential launch sites, weirs, locks and car parks, as well as nearby amenities including pubs and cafes recommended by paddlers.

The facility to include pictures of river features with additional written advice for paddlers is also included on the site.

Thursday 26 July 2012

Kennet Waterside Series and DW Race dates for 2013

Potential participants in Newbury Canoe Club's Waterside Series of canoe races and/or the annual Devizes to Westminster International Canoe Race will no doubt be aware of the 2013 dates already.

However, a small minority of other river users seem to find the concept of boats racing along a cut canal difficult to comprehend (or even that such athletes might need to practice a bit first).  In 2011, for example, Bracknell based Newtown Angling Club's March newsletter reported in its club match results section that for its "East Towney" match on 23.01.11 that

"The diary entry for this match simply reads – weather reasonable – prospects good - no fish…CANOES! – and this basically is a pretty succinct summary of events on the day. This venue looks a bit bleak in winter but conditions weren’t too bad, chilly, a bit grey and overcast with a gentle breeze and the water showing a tinge of colour. No sooner had the whistle blown than umpteen canoes descended upon us – apparently they were training ‘en masse’ for some charity event, or other, paddling down to Westminster – pity they hadn’t advised their angling brethren (who pay to be on the bank) of their intentions, we could have gone elsewhere." [Source: http://www.newtownac.co.uk/news.htm]

In order to help such organisations' future planning the following dates may be of assistance.

Sunday 03 February 2013: Waterside A - Start: Great Bedwyn 09.00 to 12.00 Finish: Newbury 11.00 to 14.15 

Sunday 17 February 2013: Waterside B - Start: Newbury 10.00 to 11.30. The turning point is to the west of the A340 road bridge near Aldermaston Wharf.  Finish: Newbury 12:00. to 14.30.

Sunday 03 March 2013: Waterside C - Start: Pewsey Wharf 09.00 to 11.00 Finish: Newbury 12.00 to 14.30.

Sunday 17 March 2014: Waterside D - Start: Devizes 07.00 to 08.30 Finish: Newbury 12.30 to 14.30

Please note that some of the race dates are occasionally cancelled or changed if the K&A Canal/Kennet Navigation are frozen, so please check for updates here: http://www.watersideseries.org.uk/index.htm
It won't bother anglers who will be enjoying the closed season rest, but from Friday 29 March - Monday 01 April 2013 (the Easter Bank Holiday) the Devizes to Westminster International Canoe Race will take place (it will be the Friday and Saturday that will affect the Kennet & Avon Canal and the Kennet Navigation).  If you're not paddling elsewhere on the day (lots of suggestions on this blog on alternative sections of the River Kennet for recreational paddlers to avoid the race competitors), why not spend a couple of hours cheering on the teams who raise £1000's for charities each year by participating in this gruelling 125 mile marathon.

On a final note for those "who pay to be on the bank"

- Individual BCU Membership (which covers the obligatory licence to paddle on the Kennet and the Thames) is currently £37.00 per year (adult over 23 years), £29.60 (for 18-22 years) or £22.20 (under 18). This compares to the current full season coarse rod licence of £27.00 (senior/disability concession of £18.00, junior concession of £5.00, and children under 12 free).

- Annual club membership of, for example, Reading Canoe Club is currently:

Adults
£170
 OAP ( over 65)
£  75
Novice (little experience & up to 3 times/ week)
£  60
Junior (after 1. year & lower than B group)
£  70
Intense Junior ( A & B group)
£120
Student
£120
Associate
£  20
Family
£360
* Many recreational focused clubs offer lower membership fees, and you don't have to be a member of a club to enjoy recreational paddling, but you may not get far racing without such.  It's a bit like trying to fish on the Kennet without access to privately controlled club waters; perhaps anglers should be lobbying such as the AT for more free access.

- Then there's the taxes we all pay for making up the £9.4m shortfall between the EA expenditure on fisheries and income from rod licences [2009-10 figures].  Update: 2010-11 EA accounts here.

- There's also the income to fisheries from the public purse from such as the Millenium Commission /EA funded Fish Pass Project on the Thames and Kennet (£1.4m+ from memory (although the Millenium Commission's website seems to have disappeared)), the additional EA funding for the fish pass at the weir at the head of Drapers Osier Bed Stream (£63k), and numerous contributions by such as the EA, Natural England and Thames Water for river rehabilitation programmes on private upsteam fisheries, e.g. http://riverkennet.blogspot.co.uk/2010/06/river-kennet-restoration-near.html

- Despite the unlikely prospect of any GB angling medals, fishing clubs are also benefitting from the current Olympic funding: http://www.anglingtrust.net/news.asp?itemid=1251&itemTitle=Burton+angling+club+secures+%A350%2C000+from+sporting+legacy+fund&section=29&sectionTitle=News.  Which is fine; I'd much rather see young people enjoying outdoor activity time with their families than stuck on a game system (or worse) whilst Ma and Pa head for the pub. 

Update: I forgot the cost of entering the Waterside series of races:

Senior: Pre-entries £10.00 per seat per race, or £36.00 per seat for the whole series.  Late entries £3.00 per seat per race.
Junior: Pre-entries £8.00 per seat per race, or £28.00 per seat for the whole series.  Late entries £3.00 per seat per race.

Could we now drop the argument that canoeists and kayakers don't pay towards shared use of our inland waterways?  Tight lines and happy paddling.

Thursday 12 July 2012

Volatile riverine levels on the Kennet

It's somewhat of an increasingly historic generality, but the River Kennet is supposed to rise in belated reaction to rain permeating the aquifer, and slowly release gin-clear water a few days later.  Or at least so far as the Upper Reach and some of the Middle Reach is concerned, but the Lower Reach is heavily influenced by the Kennet Navigation and urban run-off, as well as the Lambourn and Enbourne tributaries.

I've therefore been waiting for the rain to produce the right levels of flow to explore some obscure branches of the lower River Kennet, and a recce on the way home from the office on Monday night (09.07.12) looked promising, but just a three nights later (12.07.12) it looks like I might have missed the window of opportunity...  or maybe not!

Sunday 08.07.12 provoked interest...   but by 18:00 on Monday 09.07.12 the EA gauge showed levels were falling, despite the River's appearance at a number of marker sites...

The flow and water level at Barbel Bar is determined by the weir at Sheffield (Shenfield) Mill (next to Kate Bush's former island house) which feeds from the Kennet Navigation, and the less controlled weir at the head of Draper's Osier Bed Stream which falls from the Sulhampstead loop.  Although it serves as a guide to potential levels at other local locations, the varying degrees of artificial control over the lower reach's riverine channels mean that inspection and adherence to the Scout motto to "Be Prepared" can offer often short-lived windows for unusual canoeing and kayaking opportunities on the River Kennet.

Despite looking nearly washed out on Monday the river level at Barbel Bar was already falling...

...whilst further upstream at Padworth Bridge the brown waters were also paddleable, but closer to recent lows than highs (click on the image to enlarge it).

Still further upstream, Aldershot Water near Thatcham, looked to be an entirely different prospect from it's normal appearance.  It's just a short (approx. 265m) run from the Navigation down to the riverine section that runs between Chamberhouse Mill and Brimpton Mill, and probably of little interest in it's own right, but it offers access to a section of the Kennet that may be one of the least paddled sections of the river despite it's proximity to Thatcham.  

Aldershot Water typically displays very low water levels despite being a direct run-off (river right) from the Navigation and an overflow from surrounding (and ever expanding) gravel pits (that have now irretrievably removed any remnants of a Roman road).

At normal flows the river level at the head of Aldersot Weir can be photographed simply by wading out just below the weir pool, from where it's clear that the weir cannot be run directly from the navigation due to headspace under the towpath bridge...

...and the crenalated ledge below the weir.

Monday night showed that the rainfall was producing some somewhat higher levels, and whilst it subsequently petered out for a couple of days (and the weir still requires a portage), it's raining again now, so the downstream run could be on...