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Saturday, 27 October 2012

Queenborough to Kingsferry Bridge 5th June 2010

I set off from the Queenborough hard at about 7.00 pm. I passed two sailors on their moorings and we chatted about my boat as I drifted up the Swale lazily on the tide.


The all tide hard in the background. Queenborough is a useful stop off place at the east mouth of the Swale, close to the Medway entrance. Originally Queenborough was a fortress guarding the Swale, under Edward III during the hundred years year war against the French. It was renamed after his wife Phillipa of Hainault. Now it is a mixture of a provincial town, an industrial base and somewhat run down but characterful place of historical interest.

At the long reach the wind headed and I started rowing keeping going all the way up to Kingsferry bridges. I was passed by some motor boats, all respectfully slowing down to reduce wash. When I got to the lifting bridge I was wary about going straight under and turned to row backwards, so I could see directly ahead checking the mast, although there was plenty of clearance.

Sailing dinghies capsizing to get under the Kingsferry bridge rather than wait for it to be opened - on another occasion


After passing a wharf I rested a while and then turned back. As I rowed back there was a great view of the bridges as they receded in the distance and behind me the setting sun. It was getting dark as I arrived at Queenborough just after 9.00 pm. I had timed the tides fairly well, the flood tide taking me up beyond the Kingsferry bridge and then slack water for the start of the return and an ebb tide to complete the journey.




Tuesday, 14 August 2012

The Medway Estuary 27th December 2009


The Medway has plenty of character, with the Medway towns such as Gillingham, Chatham and Rochester having a distinquished naval history. It is associated quintessentially with the novelist Charles Dickens, who appreciated the murky atmosphere with marshlands, mud and winter darkness. Likewise these features provided the setting for my journey.



I launched at Commodores Hard, which stretches out thinly into the estuary, with  soft mud at the end. Just off the hard was an old sailing boat, the same design as Ellen McArthur had used to circumnavigate the UK, looking somewhat forlorn.

The navigation buoys caught the light as I rowed on, with the large Napoleonic forts that protect the upper Medway in the distance.
The sun sank behind cloud, reappearing as an orange sunset reflecting off the water, ruffled by a light wind coming from the east. Large clouds of steam billowed out from power station chimneys, flattened in my direction by the east wind.  As I rowed steadily I could see the huge cranes on the jetty to the north and the marshes away to the south.



As I rowed onwards through a series of long reaches, wavelets built up with tide against wind and spray came over the bow with water draining out through the stern. Past Stangate Creek I could see high up above me Deadman’s Island, with stakes lining the entrance to Shepherd's Creek.  It is around this area that people were incarcerated in ships, either as convicts or in quarantine. Those that died were buried on Deadman's Island. The light was fading as I skirted round the island and up the Swale to Queenborough.

After a good supper it was dark as I set out for my return. I realised then the folly of being out in the Medway in the dark with no navigation lights and I look around nervously, keeping very close to Deadman’s island. I passed very close by a small fishing vessel  and I am sure he didn’t see me in the dark.

A previous night sail in a larger boat in the same estuary meant I knew the buoyage and was able to keep  on course. I glanced round and looked for the flashing of the buoys, checking their location on my map to stay orientated. I put on my wetsuit gloves, the temperature dropping well below zero, feathering my oars with stiff fingers.



Every so often I stood up to relieve a deadening feeling of my legs because of sitting for too long. I rowed for about five miles without seeing another moving boat, listening to oyster catchers as they circled over the mud flats. The tide had risen again and the hard at Gillingham
was half covered.