Oh no 😢 bro went thru all that crawling and canoeing for nothing
@chrisgarty4 күн бұрын
Ed Pratt should do the River Churn until it meets the Thames so he has everything covered! 🙂
@aaronjones86534 күн бұрын
Ya if he does this after then he’s truly completed it. “From the source to sea” doesn’t mean it has to be in that order, just that you did the entire distance. What he’s doing is incredible already and still legally true, however this would be a short bonus that would add even more factual evidence. I bet he’ll do it one day😂
@kevinandreoli31762 жыл бұрын
2:50 in and I love the fact that Paul opens a gate, walks through, and carefully closes the gate when the video clearly shows that there is no fencing attached to the gatepost! :)
@chasbodaniels17442 жыл бұрын
Haha yes, so I reckon Paul isn’t one of those guys who crosses the solid yellow line to pass, or who runs red lights. By the book at all times!
@henrybest40572 жыл бұрын
I also noticed that the ruts made by vehicles go through the big gate and not around it. Rules is rules! 🙂
@cdl02 жыл бұрын
@@chasbodaniels1744 It is a double white line in the UK, and remember left is right and right is wrong as well. :-)
@henrybest40572 жыл бұрын
@@Senshikaji That explains the 'Stealth Rebecca' in this video.
@colinlawford31372 жыл бұрын
I live in Kemble and walk round Thames Head regularly, so going up I go one side of the gate and on the way back go the other side. I must try the gate!
@jppagetoo2 жыл бұрын
Am I the only Google earth fanatic? I followed the River Thames from London all the way up to Thames Head. I enjoy doing things like this. I love that you did this little video and showed these places on vide (Google only has a few photos). Thank you! All the canals around the UK are also facinating! I had no idea that these were created until a few years ago. So interesting to followow and see what is there.
@davidcervantes9336 Жыл бұрын
Nope. Not the only one for sure. Here's another one. I salute you, geo-brother. 🖖
@pavelow235 Жыл бұрын
"cartophile" is the word you are looking for.
@jppagetoo Жыл бұрын
@@pavelow235 Yeah! That would be a good term for it.
@AlisonBryen Жыл бұрын
I do this too! I'm a total river geek...
@hammadraza460911 ай бұрын
I did this too... Heres to my Geo Brother hi-five😊
@iankemp11312 жыл бұрын
I could certainly always see the logic for Seven Springs being regarded as the source, especially as it has the small advantage of actually being properly wet all the time. Interesting though to hear of the alternative sources round Thames Head and whether the digging of the canal altered historic water flows, nice research! If the source were changed and the Churn became the Thames, we'd then need to find another name for the Thames west of Cricklade!
@InterFelix2 жыл бұрын
Traditionally, the logic would actually be applied the other way round - a river gets its name from the longest contributing river. Which would mean London would be on the river Churn, not Thames! But as always, there are loads of exceptions to that rule, which is also why Hamburg is not on the river Moldau, but on the river Elbe for example.
@BibtheBoulder2 жыл бұрын
Judging by the state of it through London I would suggest it is renamed The Ganges...
@antonycharnock29932 жыл бұрын
@@BibtheBoulder Or "The Ankh" (Thankyou Terry Pratchett)
@bremCZ2 жыл бұрын
Severn
@Showsni2 жыл бұрын
@@bremCZ The Severn is a river (where the Severn and Thames Canal gets its name), but Seven Springs is the number seven (because there are seven of them) and isn't anything to do with the river.
@hedleythorne2 жыл бұрын
I am so pleased that someone has created a video about an internal debate I have had for years. In fact, there is a tributary to The Churn which starts in a nearby college, which would make The Thames even longer than Severn Springs being the source.
@DeontjieКүн бұрын
Rivers usually has more than one source.
@regbarnard28662 жыл бұрын
I grew up less than a mile from Severn Springs, everyone around us referred to it as the source of the Thames, I recall a painted wooden plaque that stated this until it fell apart some time in the 1960s. I was surprised to discovered later that another place laid claim to this despite being closer to Lechlade
@christopherseton-smith74042 жыл бұрын
As we all did in those far off days!
@regbarnard28662 жыл бұрын
@@christopherseton-smith7404 If you are the Chris Seton Smith who grew up in Cheltenham, I hope you are well, Regards Reg
@christopherseton-smith74042 жыл бұрын
Had to return for family reasons. All the best, Chris.
@kimford99654 ай бұрын
I've lived in the area for 30+ years and shortly after moving here, I was told the Severn Springs was source of the Thames.
@TheEmbeddedHobbyist2 жыл бұрын
As a kid when going on holiday to south Wales, we used to stop off at the Seven springs for a break. this was before the M4 was built. great to see that the spring has not changed much in the last 50 years. Still looked as I remembered it. lost so many stopping places to and from Wales when they opened the M4, OK it was much much quicker but lost all the sense of adventure. We would go to bed in our clothes (5 years old) as we would set off about 6am and not get there to late afternoon. I must at some point do the drive down the A40, A48 it's now in the bucket list. Thanks for being back the memories.
@mikeakhurst18552 жыл бұрын
Those are lovely roads to drive down now,very scenic. Hope you get to do them on your bucket list.
@hueckelaromat2 жыл бұрын
how sweet to read your recollection from your experience back in the day!
@TheEmbeddedHobbyist2 жыл бұрын
@@hueckelaromat coming down the hill to cross the bridge on bridge street in to Chepstow. still looks good on google.
@patthewoodboy2 жыл бұрын
same here. Harlow to Lampeter used to take ages before the M4 was built. Was a very interesting journey. Used to go Via Tring , witney , basically the old A40
@MervynPartin2 жыл бұрын
@The Embedded Hobbyist. Just replying to your comment which brought back memories for me of road trips by car from Cardiff to London along the A48/A40- going via Gloucester past the "Flying Machine" hotel and "The Air Balloon" at the top of Crickley Hill (Why do I remember pubs?). The journey used to take 5-6 hours. I do remember seeing the signposts for Seven Springs on those trips.
@TheTimTraveller2 жыл бұрын
Your videos are always well-researched Paul, but this one really shows how far you go to check your sources (sorry) (seriously though - some great investigating work here, v interesting!)
@pwhitewick2 жыл бұрын
😅😅..... I think this one did flow well.
@Jack-xi8ji2 жыл бұрын
Now that's what I call a dry sense of humour.
@crispoman2 жыл бұрын
@@pwhitewick We all knew you'd rise to the challenge. And you not only did that, you also challenged the rise.
@WellingtonIronman2 жыл бұрын
This series is easily TV worthy. I've said before but your production values are exceptional. The story telling, the editing, presentation talent, even the music. Just brilliant.
@pauldavies17106 күн бұрын
Better than TV
@BassMaster17766 күн бұрын
Ed Pratt is gonna be pissed 😂
@lindenmeyer112 жыл бұрын
Very interesting! However, I must point out that exactly 1km downwards from Seven Springs, the river Churn meets another Tributary that is in fact 800m longer then the one from Seven Springs! Meaning the suposed Thames Head is in a small pond beside `Oxford Cottages` (2km West of Seven Springs along the A436) Exact coordinates: 51.84685N 2.07808W. In June I cycled from there to Teddington Obelisk in 4 days :)
@lindenmeyer11 Жыл бұрын
I tried to tell you... :)
@robinhayhurst59432 жыл бұрын
Just loving the shot you going through the gate with no fence beside it! What the humourist you are!
@christopherwalker-lyne92822 жыл бұрын
At the risk of seeming disrespectful of the talents and efforts of the team that put this beautiful programme together, I can’t help mentioning the (by now rather obscure) fact that the Goons once dedicated a programme to identifying the source of the Thames, which they traced to a dripping trap somewhere. Sadly, I’ve forgotten where the dripping tap was supposed to have been located. They turned it off of course, with predictable results. Fortunately, the river seems to have recovered since then.
@Niiixxxx10 ай бұрын
Lol when you said 'dripping tap' I immediately thought 'bread and dripping' and thought the goons had tapped into this source of dripping - it was making no sense but I thought it was probably a Goons thing - then I realised the relevance of 'dripping tap'.
@dannimac7777 ай бұрын
it was Michael e tine in It's A Square World the source being a dripping tap in a Gloucestershire field.
@douglasfleetney50312 жыл бұрын
That. Was. BRILLIANT! I really enjoyed that video Paul. I love stuff like this. I do know, from The book on the Thames and Severn Canal, that they almost always had to close the summit level in the Summer due to a lack of water at the head spring of the Thames. The fact that the Titanic is more waterproof than the Oolite the canal was built through and the records show that there were constant problems with leakage and sudden loss. I agree with you that the Severn Springs are a better candidate for the source. The Canal was a good idea, pity it was so badly surveyed and constructed on the cheap, dry in summer and frozen in winter, not ideal. Thank you so much for doing this video, really appreciated.
@isaacplaysbass85682 жыл бұрын
Fascinating, I would love to see a series that traces a river or rivers, from source to sea, by foot, hovercraft, boat, microlight etc. as the terrain and access permit!
@thesteelrodent17962 жыл бұрын
the UK has quite a few rivers that have been buried in tunnels and pipes to allow cities to grow over them, and to stop people from using the rivers as sewers. Might make it difficult to trace those the full length unless you know exactly where they're buried
@ABrit-bt6ce2 жыл бұрын
Wellies around here at the top of the Trent. :)
@dh20322 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info Martin Zero channel would be good place to start, he's one the going old sewer pipes drainage systems (mostly the very old stuff)
@professorsogol58242 жыл бұрын
Just last weekend, I rode my bicycle along the Tsurumi from its designated headwaters down to close to where it flows into Tokyo Bay. (The last bit is surrounded by factories.)
@tinnagigja37232 жыл бұрын
Good idea, though I feel like sea to source is more interesting. Might just be me.
@richardwaters85422 жыл бұрын
The tower isn''t a foley - it is one of quite a few round houses on this canal. They were lengthsmen's houses
@leofoley6342 жыл бұрын
this is a foley.
@stevetaylor74032 жыл бұрын
Suggest you look at the definition of “folly”.
@ThunderboltWisdom2 жыл бұрын
@@stevetaylor7403 He's stating that he is a "Foley": Leo Foley to be precise. So if he built an ornamental building himself it would be a Foley Folly. 🤪😉
@mikeakhurst18552 жыл бұрын
The removal of gravel from the Ashton Keynes area I think also makes the area by the Thames Head drier than it used to be. I remember water always running through the fields by Kemble which rarely happens now.
@flyball17882 жыл бұрын
Good point. I lived in Ashton Keynes '79-'85 and the little stream along Main Street was always flowing, even in dry summers. Anyone know if it still does (haven't been back in >30 yrs)? There were a lot of gravel pits back then too though - learnt to Kayak on one of them. Probably even more now though.
@colinlawford31372 жыл бұрын
@@flyball1788 Still flows well in Ashton Keynes. Come the end of the summer it is dry in Ewen, next village up to Thames Head
@ruairidhmunro2 жыл бұрын
@2:57 ... glad to see you acted responsibly and shut the gate behind you. Wouldn't want to let the livestock out the field. :-)
@greghilton77972 жыл бұрын
Rebecca trained him well. 😁
@penrith502 жыл бұрын
That gate obviously serves a very important purpose 😁
@rh59712 жыл бұрын
I have done similar research in regard to a waterfall in a cave in the state of Kentucky in America. No one knew where the water from the waterfall went after it fell. Such fun and interesting investigative work! Great video. CHEERS!
@MervynPartin2 жыл бұрын
Ever since I was kid (when dinosaurs roamed the Earth, according to my sons) I understood that Seven Springs was the source of the Thames. Names for rivers could have been local in origin, so the people around the Churn may not have known that it was the Thames further downstream. I think that you just have to go for the furthest source of the water which ultimately becomes the Thames. By the way, did the gate at 2:53 have some invisible fencing either side?
@peterlang33692 жыл бұрын
Yeah I saw that as well, why use the gate !
@isilder2 жыл бұрын
You can see the track in the grass showing that most people don't use the gate. But he has to stick to the marked public right of way ,ss best he can,for content going to youtube .. so yeah the invisible fence is the idea that its private land except along the marked track . Looks like some government department or something put a " right of way" gate there, as if they replaced fencing with the gate ..well you know, because they might install a fence..or they might use it as a horse jump ?.
@dh20322 жыл бұрын
@@peterlang3369 land mines, they make a very good fence, (or defence)
@twotone30702 жыл бұрын
Just his little joke, he may have done it before. Makes me smile anyway.
@Odin0292 жыл бұрын
Paul's inability to walk around a closed gate with no fence always makes me chuckle. It doesn't happen in every video, but when it does its gold.
@eggy772 жыл бұрын
It's just got to be done surely, especially when being filmed.
@donsharpe57862 жыл бұрын
I have watched the Thames become drier over the last 60 years. It was pretty dry but was a trickle as it crossed the A 429 and we walked up the dry valley to the original stone at the source.
@philipwilkin19752 жыл бұрын
I love how Paul opened and went through the gate when there was no fence beside it
@zGJungle2 жыл бұрын
I drive past Seven Springs a few times a week, never knew the history of the name, very interesting, I'll stop there next time.
@peterlewis14438 күн бұрын
Fascinating! Growing up as a local, I think we always wondered about the source of the Thames, particularly when the various channels through fields which you showed were often dry. I hadn't realised the link between the canal and the river, although I perhaps should have as we covered the canal in some detail for our ''O'' level history a few decades ago... just a point about the "folly" you refer to at 1:00min, that is an example of the canal company's signature cottages of which there were, I think seven or so along the route of the canal. Good point about the Churn also...
@andyhill2422 жыл бұрын
I guess like you have said that a river's source can change over the years and also season to season and even depending on weather conditions.
@thesteelrodent17962 жыл бұрын
not sure about the UK, but there are some rivers elsewhere in the world that change direction during rain and thaw, which means the start of the river isn't always the same
@isilder2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, sometimes its the clouds and sometimes its the bedrock
@SmallSpoonBrigade2 жыл бұрын
It really depends, around here most of the rivers originate in mountain basins where there wouldn't be any opportunity to move year to year. The source would essentially be the lowest part of the basin, usually a marshy bit of land where the water would collect would be the source. But, I'm sure that if you've got a flatter landscape with few actual hills and mountains to collect the water, that it could be a bit trickier, especially if there's a spring involved where the rocks can and do shift around over time.
@SmallSpoonBrigade2 жыл бұрын
@@isilder If you want to go that route, it's basically always clouds and occasionally springs, but there's rarely enough water coming from springs to make for an actual waterway of any significance.
@paultrussy2 жыл бұрын
Just make a sign stating: 'Source of the River Thames' and wallop it in place with a fourteen pounder. Job done 🙌👍
@richardmassoth82372 жыл бұрын
Please don't forget the flowers and wildflowers! Such a nice day... I so much enjoy your videos!
@joeryan11532 жыл бұрын
The Shannon has as its official source a deep hole in a hillside in Co Cavan called the Shannon Pot. This pool or pot is very deep and in Irish mythology it is believed to be the spot where the grand daughter of the sea Sionnan came to be tempted in a Garden of Eden thence the name. However the area is famous for its Karst Geology and cave systems. It is now believed that the catchment goes much wider and crosses into Co Fermanagh only coming to the surface at the Shannon Pot. At 240 miles it's the longest river in these islands.
@alexcharlesworth75802 жыл бұрын
Nice little video as usual. Always been fascinated by the Thames and Severn Canal. A successful restoration is being carried out on much of it. The little 'folly' near the beginning of the film is a lengthsmans cottage that housed a maintenance worker, bit like a caretaker I think for that section of the canal. I believe one of five unique roundhouses that can be found on this canal. A complete and still inhabited example can be found near Stroud at Chalford.
@marilynbalderstone6962 жыл бұрын
That was very interesting. I never managed to get to the supposed source of the Thames when I lived in Gloucestershire but I can tell you about the building you saw near Sapperton tunnel and it was one of 5 roundhouses for canal lengths men to live in. Not very convenient but one further on nearer the Thames has been extended and incorporated into a house. Apologies if someone else has said this already. One at Chalford, Coates, Cerney Wick, Marston Mersey and at Leclade.
@nigelt12182 жыл бұрын
@Arnold Cooper look
@Jesus.is.the.Way.23862 жыл бұрын
millions being spent to renovate it all - sadly not for goods...sand gravel etc
@TheRealDaveC2 жыл бұрын
As a former resident of Cheltenham, I too consider Seven Springs to be the "true" source of the Thames. Plus the springs tend to be more active than that field near Cirencester :)
@sddsddean2 жыл бұрын
The 'folly' at 1:00 is an old lock keepers house. On the T&S they built several like that and there is one by the old A5 at Gailey on the Staffs and Worcs canal.
@chrisdavis42852 жыл бұрын
Not Lock Keepers cottage (no lock there) ,but a Lengthmans cottage - the only one to have an inverted roof to collect water.
@sddsddean2 жыл бұрын
@@chrisdavis4285 agreed, I think there are some lock keepers cottages of the same design, but a lengthman would have been ‘similar’ to a lockkeeper.
@willwitters85872 жыл бұрын
Fascinating stuff! You may find the Ohio River interesting too: Officially it starts at the confluence of two rivers in Pittsburgh (weird enough in itself) and at the point where it "joins" the Mississippi River, the Ohio has a larger volume. So really, the Ohio should be said to start in northern Pennsylvania, flow into New York State, back into Pennsylvania, be joined by the Mississippi and flow into the Gulf of Mexico. But it's another case of naming conventions predating accurate measurements.
@rosiefay72832 жыл бұрын
Surely the Missouri trumps the Ohio as being the real Mississippi. And by the Missouri I include its headwaters too, despite the different names. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brower%27s_Spring
@wes94512 жыл бұрын
Well, also the Mississippi is seen as a kind of continental divide. If you look at old historical sources many refer to east or west of the Mississippi.
@robcarvalho12 жыл бұрын
Maybe we should call it the MissOhio south of Cairo. ;-)
@FinneasJedidiah2 жыл бұрын
As he says in the video, the volume of the rivers don't matter for determining which is the tributary, just the length. And the Missouri is much longer than the Mississippi and Ohio rivers, so it should be the main river and the Mississippi and Ohio should be considered tributaries
@kbearl2 жыл бұрын
Even with the traditional source of the Mississippi being Lake Itasca there is Elk Lake that connects and flows into it, but has not been considered the source because it does not have enough water flow to be considered a river
@christianwall71812 жыл бұрын
Really nice video and great research. A lot of these things are quite arbitrary: properly, the Seine through Paris ought to be the Yonne as the flow where the two rivers meets is greater from the Yonne - the research that proved it went down like a lead balloon…
@petertaylor49802 жыл бұрын
Lead balloons go down very well, so the meaning of that phrase is just as arbitrary...
@mfaizsyahmi2 жыл бұрын
If that's the logic then the river through Egypt is called Atbara and the one through New Orleans is called Ohio. The convention instead is when people know _for certain_ that a tributary is longer than the one with the larger volume, the longer one wins and carries the name.
@thewhitewickmixtape2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@tomlee8122 жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed this one, and the amount of research and effort you put into your productions. I remember, in the early 1960's, visiting the 'source of the Thames' stone you showed and it certainly had a trickle of water then. By the way, I loved the way you went through the isolated gate, rather than round it. Very British and very much appreciated.
@BernardIngram Жыл бұрын
I have often wondered the same thing for decades. Since 1978 in fact when I and a friend walked to the source of the Thames near Cirencester and afterwards examined an OS map to find otherwise. I think the river Coln has a shot at it as well - it's roughly the same length from the Coln-Thames confluence to the sources of the Coln and the Churn but the Coln is very tightly meandering so quite difficult to measure.
@Teesbrough2 жыл бұрын
Last time I went to Thames Head the Neptune statue was still there. The ‘folly’ is one of several Roundhouses along the Thames & Severn. [A complete one is at Chalford]. Back in the early 1960s my parents approached the Bathurst Estate about this one at Coates in the hope of renting it as their home. An unfavourable response, sadly, since when the Estate has allowed the building to become derelict.
@leeclift46662 жыл бұрын
Great to see you back in the shire Paul. Living in Gloucester seven springs was always the start of the Thames.Thank you for posting this a lovely part of Gloucestershire.
@mydanishgarden31122 жыл бұрын
My old neck of the woods, I grew up believing that Severn Springs was the start of the Thames. I was also aware that rivers were made up of a number of contributories, so I always took it with a pinch of salt. I would also say, if anyone is going to go to Severn Springs, the pub there isn't the best, the Green Dragon at Cockleford, which is only a couple of miles away is far superior.
@Jesus.is.the.Way.23862 жыл бұрын
.....but the latrines in the bad pub are the true source of old man thames; green dragon is an imposter
@mydanishgarden31122 жыл бұрын
@@Jesus.is.the.Way.2386 I haven't ever thought of it that way, but I like your thinking. Green Dragon is a good Cotswold pub and the food and beer is far superior.
@christopherseton-smith74042 жыл бұрын
Although the road to the Green Dragon is a nightmare to negotiate on a bike.
@BRUSHYSURFING2 жыл бұрын
An interesting puzzle to solve would be to find out why the source was changed by decree by John Leyland in 1542. The roman apparently used the longer source. i assume it was for political or economic outcomes. it might be interesting to see who owned the surrounding lands in those days. who got taxes for "thames trade etc.
@mattcastle8392 жыл бұрын
There is another spring, also considered the source of the Thames, which is located 1.3km South of the Origin, this spring seems to be constantly 'wet' providing much of the water that feeds into the Thames near Kemble.
@richardhunt15572 жыл бұрын
I was going to say just that - the spring is about 2 foot deep and bubbling out the ground at what3words ///looked.tilts.conducted. Very warm as well. All signed off the road on the right hand side as you come into Kemble from the east with parking for a couple of cars. Feeds a nice shallow chalk stream back to the road and *massive* abandoned railway embankment.
@rosiefay72832 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this video and giving us the facts. 8:55 "What would we gain?" We'd end a misconception. By acknowledging the Churn as the highest reach of the Thames, rather than a tributary, we acknowledge the correct length of the Thames, and also acknowledge that the Thames is, as you say, Britain's longest river.
@pwhitewick2 жыл бұрын
Very true Rosie. Very true
@zhoufang9962 жыл бұрын
It would also give me an extra point on my last pub quiz!
@martinellis6762 жыл бұрын
Or does it make the Thames a minor tributary of the longest river: the Churn?
@slome8152 жыл бұрын
Not really though. Historically speaking usually the main branch of a river is the one where the water flow is the largest, or alternatively, the river that goes the straightest at the confluence of 2 rivers. While I don't know if the Thames or Churn is the largest at the confluence of those rivers, the Thames certainly is the one going the straightest, and the Churn is the one joining it. If the main branch of a river would be the one where the source is the most distant, it would create a lot of weird instances of fairly large rivers needing to change their name at a point where a tiny but fairly long creek joins it. The idea that that a river should be names up to it's furthest source is a weird modern thing. And one fairly specific to the anglophone world. It's probably just a misunderstanding of the definition. The source of the Thames is indeed the furthest point up the river thames with water, that is at thames head. The source of the Churn is the furthest point up the river Churn, at seven springs.
@fp30e2 жыл бұрын
Paul, Rebecca, An excellent video. I did not know that about the Thames. Have a great week. Take care.
@flyball17882 жыл бұрын
Very much enjoyed this one. I spent my teens in that neck'o'the woods with the Thames and its source often getting dragged into school geography lesson. I remember being mostly bored by the whole thing at the time, not helped by my dad (teacher at St. Sampson's in Cricklade) going on about it after every school day out :) The only thing about the Thames that I really remember is @ Lechlade where you could muck about, eat food, drink coke (or the odd blagged beer) with mates and girlfriends. Found the video much more interesting than those geography lessons - and I never knew about the Roman stone on the Churn. If only we'd had YT in the 80s.....
@hinzuzufugen73582 жыл бұрын
Brilliantly shot and edited video. I came here because I wondered why the Thames' source is this and not that... Well, which is what and how it is named is more often based on "traditions" rather than on measurable facts. Rivers are a good example for that, maybe the most vivid. The farthest source of the Mississippi first feeds the Missouri...
@jasonmurdick98642 күн бұрын
Gorgeous countryside. Had a chuckle at the "River Churn" being called a river.
@lindamccaughey66692 жыл бұрын
Really loved that thanks. What a beautiful area. Loving the history also. Thanks for taking me along. Please stay safe and take care
@PhilLewis-xg7iv9 күн бұрын
you should be on the tele paul, that gate with no fence was class. your too good for us. i agree 100% that the 3rd source was the real one. and it was marked by a roman stone.
@wentonmastermind2 жыл бұрын
Paul and Rebecca - you have certainly turned the tide in favour of the Churn. I was, however, disappointed that I did not see the fair Rebecca. Also - around three minutes in you went through a gate - where there was no wall or fence on either side. Nit-picking apart, a lovely and picturesque piece of research.
@peterstandley88602 жыл бұрын
A great video Paul. One of the things I plan to do before I depart this earth is to walk the Thames from its source so will visit Thames Head but will start at the source of the River Churn now
@martinmarsola64772 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the tour today. Looking forward to the new launch. Cheers Paul!😊
@rogerwhittle20782 жыл бұрын
Based on nothing but knowing history is often founded on rumour and hearsay, I'd bet a pound (Sterling) to a pinch of pooh, you are right Paul. It just has that indefinable ring of the likely truth. Well done, research as always, spot on.
@davidberlanny33082 жыл бұрын
A lovely walk and an interesting collection of facts. Very enjoyable, thank you. Good luck from Spain!!
@BarneyLeith2 жыл бұрын
In my teenage years in the 1960s I lived in a village near Kemble in Gloucestershire. The road from Cirencester to my home village crossed the course of the Thames at Ewen. It was almost always dry.
@paulbennett45482 жыл бұрын
" Would you believe, missed it by that much" A fascinating video, keep up the good work.
@darrylldoucette68952 жыл бұрын
Fascinating and educational video. In future videos, please dwell on your positioning maps a little longer to make it easier for those of us outside the UK to get oriented as to where you are exactly. Beautiful scenery. Thank you.
@yandan70102 жыл бұрын
2:57 that sky, jeez. 😔
@thomasdieckmann57112 жыл бұрын
And again: very intersting! Really glad I discovered your channel.
@w00takis2 жыл бұрын
I lived in Cotswolds for about 4 years. Amazing place. Thanks for the video and the memories
@BoydXplorer2 жыл бұрын
Great upload. Interesting to watch. Excellent narration. Tnx4sharing.
@yomammasofat10002 жыл бұрын
I had no idea how the hell you were gonna get through that fence, thank god you found the gate
@reneharkamp43092 жыл бұрын
As an ex narrowboater I enjoy this very much THANK YOU
@morg522 жыл бұрын
Here in the US, I've always wondered why the Mississippi river was said to start in northern Minnesota instead of Montana. If you follow the river to its furthest reach, the Missouri river course would make the Mississippi substantially longer. Lake Itaska is said to be the source of the Mississippi but there are small streams that feed into it. Seems to me that the whole source idea is a social construct.
@markshaw2702 жыл бұрын
Thing about the Thames is it's mostly brackish water, and infact more an estuary than an river in its entirety, plus the fact it's tidal. Also like you say with the rivers and streams that feed into it, as for the Thames has plenty of those too.
@HenrysAdventures Жыл бұрын
Very interesting video Paul. I've yet to go to the source or not the source of the Thames myself.
@ModelMinutes2 жыл бұрын
Fascinating - having spent quite a lot of time around the area you visited in this video it was certainly interesting to see it in another way, rather than just place names that you drive through
@AdamOpie2 жыл бұрын
Lovely morning catching up on your videos. Thank you for so much excellent content!
@MasterTheDoom2 жыл бұрын
I grew up in Kemble just around the corner and spent years playing in the woods and in the river. We used to map the movements of the source across the year, as we knew when it was spring rains in early March and flowing from the "Source Stone", we could get out the thick wetsuits and swim down to South Cerney really quickly with the fast-flowing flooded river.
@colinsmith12882 жыл бұрын
What a journey of discovery to know the river thames is in fact englands longest river and the humble but beautiful origins of it's source. I can see a lot of research and foot slogging has gone into this research and for that l am thankful.Also the surrounding locations were stunning.
@pwhitewick2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Colin
@anthonymoore60092 жыл бұрын
Very informative, well researched item 👍. You got closer to the source of the Thames than the Wrecker site. 😃
@brettpalfrey46652 жыл бұрын
A dry day at Thames head! I have been there in early Spring 2008, and there was indeed a pool of bubbling water here, and the water flowed down a field and through the dry culvert you showed...
@maryroberge23142 жыл бұрын
Perfect. Thank you so much for all your hard work. We really enjoy our Sunday afternoon!!
@dianespears60572 жыл бұрын
Interesting video. Enjoyed it. Loved the weather. Thank you.
@robertwedd11112 жыл бұрын
Fabulous video again 👍 Kemble, near the source of the Thames, also supplied water to Swindon railway works.
@bobsrailrelics2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Paul. I always thought Seven Springs was the source but I guess not. Very interesting video 👍
@lesleyhawes68952 жыл бұрын
I am now 78, but back in 1952 when I was 8, my parents and I were moving to a new house, and that involved visiting my Dad's parents in Gloucester. On the journey back to Surrey, Mum always looked, on the OS map to see if there was anything interesting that might be worth visiting. One thing she found was Seven Springs, where no mention was made of the River Churn, in all guide books it was labelled as the Thames at the time. I actually remember them choosing a different place, and was indignant.
@jocelynstephens70582 жыл бұрын
Approximately 50 years ago a South Today journalists did a multi part walk from the start of the Themes to the sea. I was so taken by it that 40 years later I went to find the source of the Themes. The way that I remembered it from that program was what you showed with a wall and water flowing between the stones. What we found was a dry solid wall with a plaque on it saying that it was the source that you did not show. We hunted around a bit more and a farmer (or farm worker) directed us to a spring in a wood. Others had been there as there were pennies thrown in the spring. It was nothing like you had shown but a couple of clips did seem to be in the area. He did say that he was to understand that it was water from the mountains in Wales that traveled under the Severn estuary.
@tangletwigsfairymeadow62432 жыл бұрын
Bit like the Top Gear lot looking for the source of the Nile. Excellent and thought provoking, thank you
@rev.fanboysfuntime38952 жыл бұрын
You really are rocking this.
@michaelhowse88932 жыл бұрын
As you said, Seven Springs as the source of the river Churn never dries up. Whereas the current official source of the Thames (map ref ST 980 995) at 365ft ASL, does. Also there is a thought that a spring in the grounds of the National Star College at Ullenwood (map ref SO 941 165) at 716ft ASL, could in theory make the Thames even longer still. Thanks for your interesting and thought provoking video's.
@UsualmikeTelevision2 жыл бұрын
Paul is 1000 percent correct and we should lay a marker with you name on it "Whitewick's official source of the Thames" I always enjoy your videos! Thank you.
@kiles992 жыл бұрын
Great video Paul - inspired by yourself, as well as Tim and Geoff, I have been toying with having a go at a video (and was considering a topic of the Thames sources), but you have used much of my "source" material here. I'll have to find something else now! Have never heard the theory about a spring in Sapperton tunnel though - very interesting.
@pwhitewick2 жыл бұрын
Go for it Keith! Always more than one way to tell a story
@ThunderboltWisdom2 жыл бұрын
Just do it. Add a bit more to the story, do a different take on it and make it your own. At least you already know that folk are interested in the subject matter. Just try to answer some of the questions that people are asking after watching this video, like the canal roundhouse, or what does the "leak" look like. How close is the Severn? Is there a hill in between where you can see both? And what's up with the invisible fence? I'd watch it!👍
@alistairshaw32062 жыл бұрын
Good, Interesting video again Paul. When I used to tour the Cotswolds, I was told that the upper reaches of the Thames was called the River Windrush. That was at Bourton on the water and Upper and Lower Slaughter.
@sarkybugger50092 жыл бұрын
Putting in the leg work, so we don't have to. Very informative video, and a lovely day out. Cheers!
@IanConcannon11 күн бұрын
Thirty odd years ago, i planned to canoe the thames. Did reconnaissance, checking for access, shops weirs etc. I made a major error. My checks were in winter, i turned up in summer. No water. Difficult getting through the reeds on foot, dragging the canoe. Coated in insects. Swans dont want you there either and theres one every quarter mile.
@richardpitwood24212 жыл бұрын
Great video as always. Could the Severn be extended by looking to see if it has a longer tributary?
@davidmatthews30932 күн бұрын
I visited the ‘source’ of the Danube in the Black Forest in the summer. It’s very ornate and has been a tourist attraction for centuries. The water flows from the ‘source’ into an established nearby river, the Danube. It’s obvious that the real source is higher up in the hills.
@aviavix44788 күн бұрын
came here from the Ed Pratt video..as i was confused about the source of the river.. thanks for the explaination... i am from India(north eastern part) and our rivers generate from Glaciers.. so for me this river system was so confusing to comprehend.. but you made it clear..thanks
@colinireson93392 жыл бұрын
A really wonderful, interesting video. Thanks for sharing your research.
@Jimfowler822 жыл бұрын
I love your guys videos. Very calming. Thank you
@roderickmain96972 жыл бұрын
When I was young and lived nearby(ish) in Oxfordshire, my parents always took friends and family to the Seven Springs (even make the point of counting them all) and say this was the soucre of the Thames - as per the Latin inscription. My early memory says that the road went along what is now the lay-bye behind the springs and you just looked out across the fields. Somewhat disappointing to find it isnt....or is it?
@telebubba55272 жыл бұрын
It's stil quite up in the air. I wanted to have a look on Google Earth (not maps) and instead of doing a hand search I just typed in "Source of the river Thames" in the searchbox. Several markers pop up around Kemble (even one in the middle of a road crossing😂), but the northern marker is the place where the inscription stone stands. There are even a few streetview spots where you can have a closer look and if you have wikipedia turned on you can read the story there. In the article Seven Springs is also mentioned, so there is still some debate around it. Seven Springs has also got a marker in the same search by the way.
@luxford602 жыл бұрын
Good to see you using the gate even when it had no fencing attached either side.
@bullettube98632 жыл бұрын
The river Churn where I live would be called a creek! It seems to me that by building a canal parallel to the Thames the builders hastened the drainage of the headwaters. Other attempts to drain the fields etc would have succeeded in drying up the local drainage. Your spring looks like it's going to be a dry one this year, which if it continues into the summer means a drought. I know a lot of people like the idea of milder winters and a dry spring, but the long term effects will be very damaging to the overall environment.
@hetrodoxly12032 жыл бұрын
You'd call it the 'creek Churn'? small waterways are generally called streams or Brooks but if you're using it's name we usually call it river......
@seraphina9852 жыл бұрын
@@hetrodoxly1203 I think you will find that Creek is the same as Brook in that it is conventionally added to the end of the name not the beginning. So it would more likely be Churn Creek.
@richardhunt36982 жыл бұрын
I was at thameshead about 4 years ago when there was a large lake in front of the stone marker with running water going continously downstream. In fact where you were at timstamp 2.00 mins was a running stream which went back up the hill in the direction you walked from the canal bridge.
@pwhitewick2 жыл бұрын
Interesting. Perhaps more leaks in the canal?
@CGM_68Күн бұрын
@@pwhitewick The main source of the Seine is located on the Langres plateau at an altitude of 446 m. Several other French rivers have their source there too. Main being the important word in the opening sentence. As can be seen on the map at 4:12 there are a series of springs. So there is no single location which can be said to be THE source. That both the Thames and the Severn begin near Thames-head shows this to be the true source (Watershed). While it is customary to regard the longest tributary or stem as the source, it is far from the only definition of the word source.
@OUTBOUND18411 күн бұрын
What greatness had not floated on the ebb of that river into the mystery of an unknown earth...
@raytheron2 жыл бұрын
Yet another brilliant video, Paul! Thanks!
@leewatson81292 жыл бұрын
Most summers the Thames is dry at Ashton Keynes, which is a little over 3.5 miles from joining the Churn at Cricklade.
@forevertipsy35502 жыл бұрын
love the choice of music. really suits the video
@petetrundell54542 жыл бұрын
Interesting stuff, and I’m going to delve even further in history and throw a curve ball at you. The naming of rivers beyond a junction of tributaries is somewhat random. I believe the source of the Thames, as far as prehistoric Britons were concerned, was the River Kennet. It’s path is predominantly east-west in line with the mouth of the Thames. Rivers were of great significance to the Neolithic people and were linked to many of their ceremonial monuments including the Avebury complex, site of Silbury hill and the source of the Kennet.
@SimonFairbourn2 жыл бұрын
And yet the valley to the North of Silbury Hill feeds the Kennett. There's a few more miles of headwater there from everything South of the bank near Wroughton.