Listening to the stories of the dramas last year when small boats were washed into the mouths of gorging weirs, the thought of peering through my shallow berth and seeing the following sign pass by is a tad daunting. Perhaps this demonstrates a lack of courage!
Days Lock is a lovely spot, oozing with ancient history plus an association with Winnie the Pooh. See information below extracted from the excellent Visit Thames website (http://www.visitthames.co.uk/).
The area around Day's Lock is said to be the most historic place in Oxfordshire. There are many reasons for this: a hilltop fort was built by iron-age man on Castle Hill and when the Romans invaded they built a camp where the nearest town would be founded - Dorchester.
For centuries this has been a religious area. Neolithic man built ritual henges a mile upstream. During the sixth century, St Birinus established the first cathedral in Wessex.
From the lock you can see two hills topped by trees. These are the Sinodun Hills - known usually as the Wittenham Clumps and less respectfully as Mother Dunch's Buttocks. The unfortunate Mother Dunch was the wife of a less-than-popular local medieval squire.
Day's Lock is the main gauging station for measuring the flow of water in the river. It has another claim to fame too - in 1605 King James I instigated the Oxford-Burcot Commission which built the first locks on the Thames in the 1620s. Burcot is a small village near Day's Lock.
The lockkeeper here is Stephen J Long. He has worked at Day's Lock since 1988 as a relief keeper and became resident in 1994.
The World Poohsticks Championships are held each year on the Little Wittenham and Dorchester footbridges next to Day's Lock. The game is described in A.A. Milne's book, The House at Pooh Corner, written in 1928
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