Saturday, 10 August 2013

Island 208 - Northey, Essex

Northey is small tidal island located a mile to the south east of the town of Maldon in Essex.  It is situated in the estuary of the River Blackwater and its highest point is only 4 metres above sea level.. Northey isn't Britain's most scenic island but it has a remote wilderness feel to it and it is very important for wildlife.  I spent an enjoyable and peaceful hour walking round it by myself.

Northey is owned by the National Trust and you have to get permission to visit.  However this is very easy - all you need to do is telephone the resident warden, who will check the tide times for you.  The island is not accessible for about 2 hours either side of high tide.  She also gave me the combination number for the padlock on the gate at South House Farm, which enabled me to drive as far as the small car park just before the causeway.  You are not allowed to drive on to the island unless you have rented Northey House as holiday accommodation.  There is also a contact email address but if my experience is anything to go by I wouldn't bother trying to email them, as I am still waiting for a reply 2 months later!  I was asked to call in at the warden's house, as there is an admission charge if you are not a National Trust member and she also sells a useful and informative laminated leaflet/map for a very small fee, which is worth purchasing if you want to get the most out of your visit.

The island is not signposted off the road, so you will need a map of some sort.  Alternatively you could park in Maldon and walk down the sea wall until you see the causeway, which is obvious, as it is raised above the level of the surrounding oozy mud and has a post with a yellow triangle marking it.  I don't know how deep the mud is on either side of the causeway but knowing how deep marine mud can be I wouldn't recommend trying to access the island at low tide by any other route.

The total area of Northey Island is around 300 acres.  However since 1897 when part of the sea wall was breached, only 80 acres are always above sea level.  The rest of the island quickly reverted to salt marsh.  Northey is an important high tide refuge for wildfowl and waders, as it is the highest salt marsh in the Blackwater Estuary.  Many species of birds overwinter in the Blackwater Estuary, including brent geese.    The mudflats and saltmarsh are also used by large numbers of grey plovers, shelducks, dunlins, avocets, greenshanks, golden and grey plovers and black tailed godwits.  The dry part of the island is mainly used for grazing cattle.   Northey is part of the Blackwater Estuary Site of Special Scientific Interest.

There is a metalled lane running up the west coast as far as Northey House.  The lane is lined by hedgerows of ash, oak, pine, hawthorn, crab apple, dog rose, lilac, privet, elder and horse chestnut.  It is possible to walk around the perimeter of the rest of the dry part of the island on a path that runs on top of the sea wall.

It is thought that the causeway to Northey was first constructed by the Romans.  The Battle of Maldon was fought somewhere to the south of the causeway in 991 AD.  A Danish raiding party landed on Northey.  Byrhtnoth, Earl of Essex raised an army.  The Vikings offered to go away if they were paid to do so.  Byrhtnoth refused to pay them but allowed them to cross the causeway to fight on equal terms, a critical mistake, as this meant that he lost his advantage.   Byrhtnoth and most of his army were killed and the English had to spend the next 70 years paying the Danes and later the Swedes as well to go away.   The island was inhabited at the time of the Domesday Book when it was known as Carseia.

In 1923 Northey Island was bought by Sir Norman Angell.  He was a writer and politician and he won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1933.  He built Northey House next to an earlier farmhouse and constructed turreted walls around the garden.  The farmhouse was destroyed by a bomb during the Second World War.  Sir Norman owned the island until 1967.  In 1978 it was given to the National Trust by Mr & Mrs E.A. Lane.

A new area of saltmarsh was created in the south east corner of the island in 1992 because the process of coastal squeeze was causing the salt marsh at this point to disappear.  Coastal squeeze happens when a salt marsh, which would naturally move inland is no longer able to do so because of the presence of a man made sea wall or other barrier and therefore is eroded away.  Samphire, thrift, sea lavender and sea asters grow on the salt marsh.

 Looking towards Northey

Northey from mid Causeway

Looking west towards Heybridge Basin
There is a bird hide nearby.

National Trust sign

 
Thames Barge
 
Hulk of a Thames barge on the saltmarsh to the west of Northey House.

Northey House
 The house is rented as holiday accommodation. I didn't like to get to close, so the photo of it isn't great.
Northey House

Looking east from the south east of the island towards Southey Creek








Causeway from Northey

Wednesday, 7 August 2013

Island 207 - Barry Island, Glamorgan, Wales

Barry Island is no longer a true island, as some of the land separating it from the town of Barry was filled in when the docks were built in the 1880s.

I came to Barry Island once on a day trip from Essex (yes, I realise it was a long way to go for the day but it was a special railway trip that picked us up at the station at the bottom of our road and took us all the way to Barry) but all I remember is that it there wasn't much to do on Barry Island on a rainy Sunday in the 1970s.  Therefore my expectations weren't high for my next visit 38 or so years later but I was surprised that I really liked the island.   I visited on a sunny Saturday in June and the centre of the island around Whitmore Bay Beach and the Pleasure Park was very busy.  However the rest of the island was pleasantly quiet.  I was planning on staying for about an half an hour just to take a few photos.  However the queue to get off the island when I arrived at 5pm was about a mile long, so rather than sit in a traffic jam I chose to stay for a couple of hours and explore the island properly.  By the time I left at 7pm the traffic jam had disappeared.

I walked around Friars Point and Nell's Point both of which are sites of special scientific interest and on to Jackson's Bay.  I was surprised to find that there are a number of residential streets on the island.  A few men were hard at work trying to create some allotments out of some sloping waste land at the north end of the island.  I understand that Julia Gillard, Australia's first woman prime minister was born on Barry Island.

Butlins opened a holiday camp at Nell's Point in 1966.  They sold it in 1986 and it closed in 1996. The area is now a smart housing estate.  There is a National Coastwatch Institution station on Nell's Point, which is manned by volunteers.  The remains of Second World War gun emplacements can also be seen at Nell's Point.  The RNLI opened a lifeboat station on Barry Island in 1901.  Barry Yacht Club is located close to it.  Barry Tourist Railway is located in the restored Victorian station building.  They run trains on certain days in the summer and at other times in the year from Barry Waterfront to Barry Island.

Barry Harbour - looking north

Whitmore Bay and the Pleasure Park from Friar's Point
Friars Point and Nell's Point are SSSIs due to their unusual geology: Mercia mudstones and carboniferous limestones.  Friar's Point, which is owned by the Vale of Glamorgan Council, is one of the best calcareous cowslip dominated hay meadows in south east Wales. It is home to bees, hoverflies and rare species of crickets and grasshoppersThe Pleasure Park opened in the 1920s.

Western end of the island - looking towards Barry
 
Queue for the train home on a summer Saturday

 
Barry Docks from the eastern end of the island

Former church, now a private house
 If you look very closely you can see that the large window has been transformed into a solar system.  The smaller windows to the right of the door are decorated with dragons.

Remains of St Baruc's chapel above Jackson's Bay at the eastern end of the island
Baruc drowned while collecting a book from Flatholm.  His body was found on the beach at Barry Island and the island may be named after him.

Jackson's Bay
Named after Sir John Jackson, who constructed Barry Harbour

Shops opposite the Pleasure Park
 - don't expect any healthy food - it was all hotdogs, hamburgers, fish & chips, ice cream etc.

Seafront at Whitmore Bay

A game of cricket at the western end of the island
A quiet contrast to the crowds around the Pleasure Park
 
Welcome to Barry Island!
I thought at first it was a bathtub that the people were sitting in but I think that it is probably a boat!


The railway line runs alongside the road bridge
Looking north west