Ham Photos is a growing archive of photos of Ham (at the meeting of Richmond upon Thames and Kingston upon Thames in south-west London), where I have lived since 1996. It captures the small changes that are easily missed and delights in the unusual, the unexpected and the unnoticed.
25 June 2007
New flats on Cassel Hospital site
21 June 2007
New path in Church Road
Somebody seems to have decided that we need more paths locally and this is a new addition to Church Road. It is not as ugly as the bright orange path in Richmond Park but it is pretty ugly none the less.
16 June 2007
Boundary post on Ham Parade
The Legless Frog has a new sign
The Legless Frog (formerly the Hand and Flower) has now got its new signs up.
13 June 2007
N 133 DVS has a few problems
The grass is as high as an elephant's eye
Buttercups in Ham Lands
10 June 2007
Ham Common, Part IV
Ham Common is divided into four distinct parts. There is the wooded part east of Upper Ham Road that stretches to Richmond Park and the grassy part west of the road, which can be further divided into three parts being split by the avenue of trees leading to Ham House and by the road, The Common, leading to Ham Gate. This is the triangle of Ham Common at its northern end, bordered by Upper Ham Road to the east and The Common to the south.
9 June 2007
Avenue of trees
Looking across Ham Common
HAG garden in bloom
The Hand and Flower is now The Legless Frog
The Legless Frog opens today in what was the Hand and Flower.
Bouncy Castle at Ham Fair

This is one of the "attractions" at the Ham Fair (2007). The Fair tries to cater for all ages and part of this is a collection of bouncy and slidy plastic things that is normally placed near to the main avenue of trees. I find them to be incredibly gaudy but I suspect that the smaller children like them.
Building on the Cassel Hospital site
Work on the new block of flats on the Cassel Hospital site seems to be going quite slowly with no visible progress in the last few weeks. At least the gate was open this morning allowing me to take a broader picture of the sight.






















