1
Wendover Arm: Stream Channel from Sluice Gate
This Channel takes water from the sluice on the canal bank towards the Weston Turville Reservoir. Under normal circumstances it only carries a small amount of water.
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Image and
Image
Image: © Chris Reynolds
Taken: 1 Apr 2009
0.10 miles
2
Grand Union Canal (Wendover Arm)
The disused (as can be noted from the pipe crossing!) Wendover Arm of the Grand Union Canal at the Halton Lane bridge. The canal was constructed and opened in 1793, primarily to provide water to the Tring summit of the main Grand Union Canal. However water leakage through the banks was great and despite numerous efforts at repairs and the use of the Arm for commercial purposes, it was closed in 1904.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 8 Apr 2006
0.14 miles
3
Wendover Arm; Sluice Gate
The Wendover Arm was designed in 1797 to carry as much water as possible to what was originally called the Grand Junction Canal. However under certain conditions it might be necessary to drain the canal, or to allow surplus water to escape. This sluice would allow surplus water to escape in a controlled manner where it could be held in the Weston Turville Reservoir. Initially this would have been to supply mills in Aylesbury and for a few years it was pumped back into the canal.
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Image and
Image
Image: © Chris Reynolds
Taken: 1 Apr 2009
0.15 miles
4
Gate onto Halton Lane, Weston Turville Reservoir
Image: © Chris Reynolds
Taken: 13 Apr 2009
0.15 miles
5
Information Board re Wildlife, The Wides and The Wendover Arm
This information board is located by the Wendover Arm canal between Halton Lane and Wharf Road. It has the following wording:
Top middle
Built at the base of the dry Chiltern slopes, the Wendover Arm has enabled
species such as the dragonflies and damselflies to hunt over large areas
previously too far from water. Likewise species dependent upon aquatic
plants, such as the moor hen, have been able to find homes where none would
have been previously available. Perhaps the most spectacular of the Arm's
commuters is the kingfisher. Although it is a shy bird, the quiet walker
can often be rewarded by a brief glimpse of electric blue darting ahead a
few feet above the water.
The Wides.... Below the canal was cut across its path, one of the many
springs arising at the base of the hills flowed through marshy grassland
before forming a stream draining to the River Thame. One of the few
naturally wet areas crossed by the Arm, this land now forms The Wides.
Right
Beyond The Arm...The opportunities for wildlife created by the building of
the Wendover Arm go far beyond the waterway and its fringing vegetation.
Weston Turville reservoir completed in 1799, was built to store excess
water to compensate mill owners for the loss of the water flow from the
Wendover Stream. With its extensive reedbeds and a marshy fen, the
reservoir is now listed as a Site of Special Scientific Interest and is
managed for wildlife by British Waterways and the Berks, Bucks and Oxon
Naturalists' Trust.
Middle left
A Wildlife Corridor... Boats may not have used the canal since 1904 but the
Wendover Arm is still a bustling transport route teeming with daily
commuters and residents alike. Ever since it was first watered in the
winter of 1796, the canal has acted as highway and haven for the many
plants and animals that depend upon the water or its wet margins for part
or all of their lives.
Middle centre
When the canal was first flooded, The Wides were open water and natural
turning points or winding holes ("winding" because boaters used favourable
wind to help turn the boat). Over time reeds have crept in from the banks,
trapping silt as they do so. As they move further forward, the land behind
becomes drier. Willow herb and reedmace grow into the drying reed beds,
raising and drying the soil still further. Willow carr and damp woodland
complete the slow succession from open water to dry land.
Images of the canal together with kingfishers, damselfly, dragonfly, duck
and moorhen can also be seen in this photo.
Image: © David Hillas
Taken: 19 Jun 2021
0.16 miles
6
Wood Adjacent to Halton Lane
This path provides a convenient route to access the Wendover Arm of the Grand Union Canal - with parking close to the gate to Weston Turville Reservoir.
Image
Image: © Chris Reynolds
Taken: 1 Apr 2009
0.16 miles
7
Moorhen on its nest on the Wendover Arm
Image: © Chris Reynolds
Taken: 1 Apr 2009
0.17 miles
8
Swans on the Wendover Canal
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 26 Sep 2015
0.17 miles
9
The Wides - Wendover Arm
The Wides is one of the few remaining wetlands crossed by the Wendover Arm canal.
Streams flowed through the marshy grassland of Halton Moor to join the Wendover Stream and eventually the River Thame. It was here, in 1824, that two young women (one soon to be married) were drowned when their punt sank.
Image: © Mark Percy
Taken: 7 Jul 2013
0.17 miles
10
A Coot ripples the Water of The Wendover Arm
Nature comes up with attractive patterns – if you keep your eyes open. In this case the tall straight trees on the far side of “The Wides” provide a linear pattern which is gently distorted by the small waves made by the coot.
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Image
Image: © Chris Reynolds
Taken: 1 Apr 2009
0.17 miles