It only takes half an hour‘s cycling along London‘s canal and river towpaths before you leave the submerged shopping trolleys behind and find yourself in proper countryside. Saddle up and discover hidden nature reserves, eccentric pubs and the history of ice cream
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| Paddington to Hayes: 14 miles (3.5 hours) |
Paddington to Hayes
14 miles (3.5 hours)
Around
Little Venice and Paddington (1), the Grand Union is a bit of a
disaster for bikes: boat-owners, justifiably annoyed with cyclists
whizzing past only inches from their homes, have erected knobbly
barriers to prevent you riding on the towpath. It gets a bit more
promising from the junction with the Harrow Road – a nice, wide, paved
towpath, surrounded by playgrounds in the shadow of the Trellick Tower
(2). Soon, on your right, is Kensal Green Cemetery (3), and on your
left Wormwood Scrubs Park (4). You wind through North Acton before you
get to the best bit, where the canal crosses over the top of the North
Circular (A406) at Park Royal (5) – you can actually see an eight-lane
highway pass under the water. Around the same point you start to see
floating riverside offerings sent from the Hindu temple at Neasden (6).
From here on it’s all parks – Sudbury Golf Course (7) is on your right,
although the towpath gets a little scruffier from around Greenford
onwards. You’re also reminded that, only about 70 years ago, it really
was all fields around here, and there are still remnants of the canal’s
relationship with light-industry in Southall and Hayes (Taylor Woodrow,
Nestlé, EMI). It gets much prettier around Cowley and Uxbridge (Bulls
Bridge, Stockers Lock) (8) but, if you’re knackered, you can always lug
your bike back on the train from Hayes & Harlington or West Drayton
back to Paddington.
Feature continues
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| Bow to Tottenham: 7 miles (one hour) |
Bow to Tottenham
7 miles (one hour)
Hmm:
Stratford, Bow, Leyton, Hackney, Clapton, Walthamstow, Stamford Hill,
Tottenham Hale, Edmonton… On paper this sounds like a white-knuckle
cycle ride through the grimmest estates in north-east London, an
assault course through burned-out cars and psychotic gangs of hooded
youth. And it is, until you discover the River Lea. Also spelt, rather
bafflingly, as the River Lee, or the Lee Navigation, it enters the
Thames as a proper river called Bow Creek but the cycle path starts,
rather unpromisingly, in Bow, where the river has mutated into what
looks like a canal. There are grim views of the A12 and some skanky
junkyards until you go under the DLR line and enter a semi-rural vista.
You get to a junction: the right path is a picturesque but scary
tributary that takes you to Carpenter’s Road (with a vertigo-inducing
ten-foot drop into the canal) (1); avoid that path and instead take the
left-hand turn, which takes you across a small bridge to Old Ford Lock
(which has a handy drinking-water tap).
Here it gets seriously bucolic: huge skies and lush greenery, punctuated only by the odd high-rise and the occasional burst of graffiti. Go on for half a mile and you reach a second junction: here you can cross the bridge and turn left onto the Hertford Union Canal. This will take you under the A102(M) Crossroute and past the Top O’ The Morning pub (129 Cadogan Terrace, E9 5HP) and link you up with the Regent’s Canal, right near the Rose Gate entrance of Victoria Park. Otherwise, continue up the River Lea, hugging the lower end of Hackney Marsh (2). Urbanity re-emerges at Clapton, where you’ll find two canalside pubs: the Princess of Wales (146 Lea Bridge Rd, E5 9RB) and the Ship Aground (144 Lea Bridge Rd, E5 9RB). Take the small tunnel under the Lea Bridge Road, follow the bend and you reach another junction. You can cross an iron bridge into the pretty nature reserve that is Walthamstow Marshes (3), where you’ll find cows, geese, ducks etc, with a bucolic route to Coppermill Lane and St James’s Street.
Carry on along the west
side of the River Lea and you cling to the post-industrial debris of
Clapton, passing an old cockney boozer called the Anchor & Hope (15
High Hill Ferry, E5 9HG), two pleasant Stamford Hill parks (Springfield
and Markfield) and a shingle track. Soon you’re at Tottenham Hale,
where you pass under Forest Road and continue past a network of huge
reservoirs. Go past Tottenham Lock and Stonebridge Lock and soon you
could almost be in Norfolk – all greenery and gaily-painted barges.
Only the enormous network of electricity pylons remind you that you’re
still in London.
3 comments
Take a look at this site:
maps.camdencyclists.org.uk
It shows the 'official' London Cycle Network and many other routes contributed by London cyclists. Why not contribute your favourite route?
I've cycled from Holborn to Walthamstow & across the marshes at night for about 6 years and have never seen so much as a evil pigeon. Maybe not recommended to female riders on their own but it's pretty safe!
You would be very foolish to attempt cycling through Walthamstow Marshes after dark, as muggings along this route are a regular feature.