I took Friday off from work; only the second day’s annual
leave I have taken this financial year. I felt in need of a break as, despite
not many of us being in, it’s been pretty much non-stop at work. A couple of
weeks ago, we finally received our revised ISO and CE certification, after a
frenetic 14-month period.
Our application and transition to our new accreditation body involved a considerable amount of work, and whilst I wasn’t involved at the sharp end, I still played a major role in terms of preparing documentation and other paperwork necessary for our transfer.
Our application and transition to our new accreditation body involved a considerable amount of work, and whilst I wasn’t involved at the sharp end, I still played a major role in terms of preparing documentation and other paperwork necessary for our transfer.
Our new notified body is TÜV Sud, a highly respected testing
and accreditation organisation, based in Munich, Bavaria. This means, we are
now subject to German law, in respect of our dealings with our new NB – so much
for “taking back control!”
TÜV Sud didn’t leave us hanging about, as on Wednesday they
conducted the first of a series of agreed surveillance audits. Because of the
pandemic, the audit was conducted remotely using Skype, and although I wasn’t
called in for the closing meeting, it appears to have gone well.
So, with this major hurdle now cleared, the idea of a day
off was even more appealing than usual. Apart from a day spent getting my car
serviced in mid-April, my previous day’s leave was at the end of the first week
in March, when I travelled up to Britain’s brewing capital – Burton-on-Trent,
to enjoy a “Proper Day Out” in the company of the “real pub men” of the Beer
& Pubs Forum.
That day out seems like a lifetime away, and a visit to any
pub now is unfortunately out of the question, but what was feasible was
knocking off another section of the North Down’s Way. Son Matthew was keen to
accompany me, as he’s been going stir-crazy these past ten weeks of lock-down,
so it was just a case of which section to go for, and where to start from.
I’d been looking at the map and had noticed a free car park
and viewing area on the crest of Blue Bell Hill, close to the A229 – M2
junction. The NDW passes close by, so we’d be able to pick up the trail and
head in either direction. My plan was to walk in a westerly direction, towards
the River Medway. It was just over 4 miles to where the route crosses the
river, by means of a footway on the viaduct carrying the M2 motorway and
high-speed rail-link high across the Medway, just to the south of Rochester.
It seemed quite doable, even though it meant retracing our steps and walking a further four miles back to the car. We left home shortly after 10 am. Traffic wasn’t too heavy, even on the stretch of the M20 motorway that bypasses Maidstone. We reached the top of Blue Bell Hill and, despite getting slightly lost in the maze of side roads just below the summit, found the car park we were looking for.
There was just one problem, it was closed due to guess what?
the Corona-virus pandemic. I wasn’t best
pleased. The car park is owned and maintained by the Kent Wildlife Trust, and
I’d made a point of checking on their website about opening times and
accessibility. I double checked when we got home, again nothing about the place
being closed. The only reason we could think of was, as the site was un-manned,
it was closed to prevent access and occupation by so-called “travellers.”
It was time to put plan B into action which involved a drive
west, along the M20 and M26 as far as Wrotham. There we parked up, in a quiet
street, just down from the recreation ground and a couple of hundred yards away
from where the NDW passes through the village.
It seemed strange to be back in a place that I’d last set
foot in five months ago. Back in January I’d walked there from Otford, following the route of the NDW. I’d ended my journey with a celebratory pint in
Wrotham’s Bull Hotel, but with all pubs in the village firmly closed, there
would be no welcoming pint of beer at the end of this walk. Matthew and I had
each brought a packed lunch, so at least there would be the chance of a
sandwich or two. Not quite the same, but sometimes we have to compromise.
It’s a shame then, that some brainless individual had chosen
to dump a pile of household rubbish there! This type of vandalism is
unfortunately becoming all too common in rural areas, particularly after
council tips were closed due to lock-down restrictions. Eventually we reached
the summit and level ground, but not before we’d passed a lengthy brick wall
enclosing a garden that appeared to be part of a much larger property.
We found the spot where the NDW passes through the village
and quickly joined the A227. We followed the road as it passes over the M20
motorway, before heading off in an easterly direction along the rather narrow
Pilgrims Way. This narrow road then veers off to the north-east, following the
base of the North Downs escarpment, and there were several “off-road” sections
were the trail diverges off into grassy fields.
The latter were full of grazing sheep, but fortunately
nothing larger, or fiercer and we made good progress towards Hognore Wood,
where we knew we would have to climb to the top of the escarpment. To our right
we could see across to the Medway gap in the distance, whilst just the other
side of the Pilgrims Way, there were several fields of poppies – all looking
resplendent under the rather cloudy skies.
It was quite a climb up through the woods, and the stony
track, which was hard going underfoot, seemed to go on forever. We met a fellow
walker, descending the slope with his two dogs, but apart from two ladies –
also with a dog, plus alone cyclist, there was no-one else out and about. The
woodland is known as Wrotham Water; a Site of Special Scientific Interest,
owned by the National Trust and manged on their behalf by the Woodland Trust.
We carried on until we emerged back onto the A227, a short
distance long from the now sadly closed Vigo Inn. This attractive old pub closed several years
before the current crisis; its loss being sadly lamented by all who love
traditional pubs. For years the Vigo was the only pub where customers could
play "Dadlums"; a form of table skittles, peculiar to this part of north-west
Kent. The photo below, taken in the mid 1980’s, shows me plus a group of CAMRA
friends, gathered around the pub’s Dadlums table.
The pub is named after the battle of Vigo Bay, a naval
encounter which took place in 1702, during the War of the Spanish Succession,
but prior to that it was known as the Upper Drover. Although the pub is sadly
no more, its name lives on as that of the nearby Vigo Village; a modern
settlement built in the mid-20th century, on a site that once housed an army
camp during World War II.
For pedants, the area around both pub and village is known
as Fairseat, which itself is a hamlet in the parish of Stanstead.
It was here that we did an about turn, but not before noting the position of
the bus stop. Once this virus situation is properly under control, and a sense
of normality returns, I can take a bus from Sevenoaks, to the stop opposite the
former Vigo Inn, and resume the North Downs Way.
From the Vigo, it is an eight mile walk to
Cuxton, a village on the west bank of the Medway and in the shadow of the
Medway Bridges. Cuxton will be an ideal end point for that stretch, as it has
its own railway station, on the Medway Valley line. From there, I can get a train
back home to Tonbridge.
That’s all in the future, but to conclude our
walk, Matthew and I followed more or less the same route back to Wrotham,
although once at the bottom of the escarpment, we stuck to the tarmacked Pilgrims
Way. It had started to rain, as we approached the village; nothing substantial,
just a little annoying, but it was wet enough to prevent us from sitting out in
the recreation ground to enjoy our sandwiches. Instead, we sat and ate them in
the car.
Our walk was just over five miles in total, which
means another two and a half miles knocked off from the NDW total. Small steps
in the general scheme of things, but still nice to get away from work and regulatory matters and instead, get out and enjoy the glorious Kent countryside.
4 comments:
Glad you're getting in some new walks, Paul. Keeps the brain as well as the body active, doesn't it. That little bit of Kent (which I lazily call "near Brands Hatch") has some really diverse walks, and pubs if they open again.
"Near Brand's Hatch," is a pretty good description Martin, and slightly to the north of the NDW there are some quite decent pubs.
That part of Kent is also known for being home to one or two notorious gangsters - possibly because of its proximity to south London, but to me it's dodgy, second-hand car dealer territory - think Boycie from Only Fools & Horses!
It's not an area I know as well as that of the Kent-Sussex border, but is definitely a part of the county worthy of further exploration - just keep your nose clean, and don't ask too many questions!!
Just found this site today. I did the NDW from Wrotham to Dover through the first lockdown. Some it is marvelous, I must say. Others not so much. Cuxton across the Medway to Wouldham is one that's not so great. Still, glad you're enjoying it! Shame about the rubbish in Hognore. I live down the road and often see rubbish left around.
Interestting read
Post a Comment