The unloved waterway that winds its way to the Thames has a staunch defender. Paul Powlesland has spent five years calling out polluters and keeping footpaths open - sometimes with the law, mostly with his bare handsThe last yellow sycamore leaves spin downwards as vast beds of reeds whisper in the wind. An ancient oak stretches huge branches across the glinting water and, for a moment, London's third biggest river looks as graceful as it did two centuries ago.Then my walk with Paul Powlesland on the banks of the River Roding collides with contemporary Britain. There is a tributary, sending a steady trickle of sewage into the main channel. A flashy new block of riverside flats, failing to provide residents with any greenery or way to access the river. Further along, heaps of fly-tipped rubbish and the recent relics of camps created by desperate people without homes: mouldering mattresses, discarded needles and excrement. Continue reading...
'The Roding is sacred and has rights': the hammer-wielding barrister fighting for London's forgotten river
5. prosince 2022 11:30
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Celý článek: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/dec/05/river-roding-barrister-paul-powlesland-london-polluters-footpaths
Zdroj: The Guardian