|
|
Netley Shoreline |
|
|
漏
Crown copyright. All rights reserved. 大象传媒 licence number 100019855, 2004.
Map not reproduced to scale. |
Walk Details:
Start Point: Royal Victoria County Park's
Visitor Centre, Netley
Countryside Rangers Office: 023
8045 5157
Ordnance Survey: Landranger:
196 Solent & Isle of Wight (SU 464076)
Explorer: Hamble Common - 119, Royal Victoria Country Park - Outdoor Leisure
map 22
Distance: approx 2km (1.2 miles)
Time: approx 1 hour
Walk Conditions:
Paths in the Country Park are mainly tarmac. There are steps down to the
beach, or alternatively use the slipway. The beach is mainly shingle and
stones and may be difficult for buggies or wheelchairs - a tarmac path runs
along the foreshore, very close to the beach and can be used as an alternative.
The beach is most accessible at lowtide - check the to find when the most suitable time to do this walk is.
|
|
From
the Visitor Centre car park, cross the grass area to the Chapel building
with the dome. Walk down to the viewpoint beside the D-Day memorial.
You are overlooking Southampton Water, Fawley and the New Forest are directly
infront of you, with the Isle of Wight away to your left.
The Solent is the drowned valley of a great river which once flowed east
between what are now the Isle of Wight When the Ice Age ended and the ice
retreated 20,000 years ago, sea levels rose creating the familiar coastline
we know today. |
|
Walk
down to the beach
As the ice melted, sediment was deposited in the shallow, sheltered waters
and river estuaries which created mud and sand flats, the higher parts of
which have been colonised by salt marsh vegetation.
From the Bronze Age hunter-gatherers, through Gaul, Roman and Germanic invasions
and medieval times, people began to tame the environment and there is evidence
of fishing, oyster catching and salt making.
Look out for oyster shells on the beach, as well as clams. If the tide is
out, you'll see birds searching for food in the mud. Up to 80,000 invertebrates
could be living in a single square metre of mud. No wonder it's such a popular
refueling station for migrating birds on their way to places like Iceland
and Scandinavia. |
|
Rejoin
the foreshore path and walk in the direction of the Park entrance.
You will notice part of the seawall is closed to the public. This illustrates
one of the greatest contemporary challenges posed by the natural environment
- coastal erosion.
Some erosion is a natural process - material is removed from one coastline
by the sea, and deposited elsewhere in sandbars and mudflats. But add to
that the effects of climate change, pollution and the pressure on coastal
areas is huge. |
|
At
the pay and display sign, before the cricket pavilion, turn left back towards
the Chapel building until the path turns to the left.
This chapel was the centre of the vast military hospital opened in 1856.
It was once the biggest building in Europe and was where soldiers from the
Crimea, 1914-18 and the D-Day landings were treated.
It stands at 50 metres high - but within 18,000 years the sea levels could
have risen by 60 metres. This is mostly due to movements in the earth's
crust as it recovers from the Ice Age when the weight of ice forced the
land mass downwards. |
|
At
this point you can extend your walk by walking back down onto the beach
and walking for 45 minutes to Hamble Common - it's best to do this at low
tide.
On your way you can see some of the birdlife which uses the food-rich mud
of Southampton Water to re-fuel. It's an important habitat for oystercatchers,
teal and brent geese.
Hamble Common is the site of some of the earliest evidence of settlement
in Hampshire. The ditch and bank running right across the site probably
protected an Iron Age settlement, from around 500BC. Look out for the Bell
heather and purple moor-grass. |
|
Or
proceed past the chapel until the path bears left. Follow this path behind
the miniature railway through the native woodland area.
Look around at the different species of tree - and if
it's springtime, enjoy the carpet of bluebells. Britain is unique in Europe
for its large old trees and for its bluebell woods. Woodland covered most
of Britain until stone age and iron age man started to cut it to use the
land for farming.
The strong English oak was very important for ship building - a major industry
in the Solent area.
Our wildlife has changed over the years as well - bear, wolf, beaver were
all hunted to extinction. The grey squirrel, which was introduced from North
America in the 19th Century has replaced our native red, except for isolated
regions like the Isle of Wight. Alien species such as rhododendron and Japanese
knotweed are spreading to the detriment of our native wildlife.
|
|
|
|
|