The resurfacing of Douglas Footpath is now under way, almost a year after the path was first closed off for this purpose. At the moment it looks unnecessarily clean and formal (as I feared) and I can only hope that it quickly weathers back to its original state.
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.
31 January 2009
New surface for Douglas Footpath
The resurfacing of Douglas Footpath is now under way, almost a year after the path was first closed off for this purpose. At the moment it looks unnecessarily clean and formal (as I feared) and I can only hope that it quickly weathers back to its original state.
30 January 2009
The Manor House
29 January 2009
Old Stables in New Road
28 January 2009
Sea scouts
27 January 2009
Ball finial
26 January 2009
25 January 2009
Petersham Avenue closed
The incessant drive to "improve" paths that do not need improvement has now reached Petersham Avenue which runs between Ham Polo and Petersham Road, passing the German School as it does so. I only hope that the new surface is not as brash and structured as some other new paths have been, we need country paths not urban pavements.
24 January 2009
Wendy's Workshop
21 January 2009
The Manor House
The Manor House occupies a large part of the core of Ham with Ham Street and Sandy Lane forming one corner and Melancholy Walk and Cut Throat Alley forming the other. The house is normally well protected from prying eyes by tall brick walls and taller trees, but in Winter the trees lose some of their protective powers exposing this view of the back of the house from Melancholy Walk.
20 January 2009
Lake at Thames Young Mariners
19 January 2009
Tall grass

Part of Ham Lands, facing on to Riverside Drive, looks more like something out of Kew Gardens where there is a corner with several different grasses looking just like these.
Most of the Kew grasses come from exotic places such as South America so I guess that these are not indigenous but they do add a interesting contrast to the rest of Ham Lands that is overwhelming green (in a nice way).
18 January 2009
Teddington ice
I am grateful to a reader of this blog for letting me know that the Thames was partially frozen by Teddington Lock during the recent cold spell. The locks do not open much at this time of year and it just trickles through the closed locks so it is still enough to be captured by Jack Frost when he calls.
17 January 2009
St Peter's church
16 January 2009
15 January 2009
Cedar Lodge
14 January 2009
Yellow tree
13 January 2009
Frosty path
12 January 2009
Broken fence
11 January 2009
Petersham Nurseries
10 January 2009
Gate at Montrose House
9 January 2009
School gate
W 281 OLF double parked darkly
8 January 2009
Huf Haus gates

It looks as though the building works associated with the new Huf Haus on Petersham Road have been completed and there is just some landscaping to do.
The good news is that the front fence and gate match the house and are a subtle colour; the bad news is that they hide the lovely house when the gates are closed.
6 January 2009
Frosty roof
Wooden boxing
Wood is a prominent material in the construction of the old buildings in Petersham, such as this cottage in Petersham Road, where it adds considerably to the the charm and character.I am grateful to the previous owner of this cottage who explained that he built the strange wooden box to house water tanks. (May 2009)





























