tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
tamaranth ([personal profile] tamaranth) wrote2005-07-28 09:44 pm

Then and Now

Then

Now

Twelve trains to Central London every hour (+ DLR)

Two trains to Central London every hour

Five rooms

Seventeen rooms

Looking at the pretty colours of the evening smog

Watching the stars come out from the football pitch lawn

Scaly carnivore, singular

Furry carnivores, plural

Virgin phone signal

No Virgin phone signal (Vodafone connection real soon now)

Bored teenagers on mini-scooters / yelling at each other

Birdsong

2500 books

About 1000 books (the rest are in the loft or headed/heading for new shelves)

straggly pot-plants

verdant vegetation

a river running past

a river running past (rainy days only, end of the road)

pikey high-street chain stores

nice mix of independent shops and chains

Maritime Greenwich, 20 mins walk

Brighton (2 trains an hour)

tumuli

South Downs

Bookshops that stay open until 11

Amazon

muggings

strangers who say 'good morning' and smile

[identity profile] tamaranth.livejournal.com 2005-07-29 01:53 pm (UTC)(link)
nah, the Quaggy joins the Ravensbourne at Lewisham station (which is probably a wonderfully rich archaeological site and shows signs of reverting to savagery most evenings). I was surprised at how far up it's tidal: you can walk through Brookmill Park and see the slack water where tide meets current, on a rising tide.

[identity profile] zoo-music-girl.livejournal.com 2005-07-29 02:01 pm (UTC)(link)
I had a look at a map after I posted and I can see where it joins. Amazing that it's tidal so far up from the sea and the Thames!

[identity profile] tamaranth.livejournal.com 2005-07-29 02:27 pm (UTC)(link)
The Thames is so strongly tidal (and tidal further inland than it used to be -- now the tide goes as far as Teddington, but apparently only to Putney in Viking times) that I suspect most of its tributaries -- such as Deptford Creek, into which the Ravensbourne flows at Deptford Bridge -- are tidal simply by having Thames water forced into them. At a rough estimate, I'd say the Ravensbourne's tidal limit is about a mile to a mile and a half from the Thames -- and some of that's culverted, which forces the water further and faster in both directions.