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squirmelia ([personal profile] squirmelia) wrote2025-09-30 11:28 am
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Mudlarking 48 - bracelet, marmalade, more uranium glass

I had been to the dentist and needed cheering up and lunchtime coincided with low tide so I popped briefly to the foreshore outside the National Theatre.

I found a bracelet, a button, a bit of a marmalade jar, a piece of wood, some nice sherds and another piece of uranium glass!

Mudlarking finds - 48

(You need a permit to search or mudlark on the Thames foreshore.)
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squirmelia ([personal profile] squirmelia) wrote2025-09-29 07:31 pm
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Mudlarking 47 - Battersea

I tried to go mudlarking in Battersea previously, but somehow got off the bus on the wrong side of the river and ended up in Chelsea. It was only when I saw Battersea Power Station on the opposite side of the river to me that I realised my mistake. This time though I got off the bus at the correct stop, on the south side of the river.

The set of steps downstream from Battersea Bridge led to slippery mud so I then tried the steps upstream of the bridge. They were slippery with mud but there was a handrail to hold onto and at the bottom of the steps, the foreshore was fine to walk along.

I watched a heron for a while, underneath the bridge.

There were quite a lot of bits of wood on the foreshore and some shells, but not as many as on the other side of the river.

I found another Paw Patrol toy, which at first I thought was a goblet. I found one on Friday as well, so it seemed odd to find another so soon.

I found a Ganesh idol, but left it on the foreshore, along with a pair of pink glasses, and many shoes, including some with little nails holding them together. I later found out that the Salvation Army had a kind of recycling centre near here, so perhaps that is why there were so many shoes.

I found a little pouch with symbols on it which made me wonder if it was for Holy Communion.

I found a different coloured piece of combware, not the usual yellow and brown. I also picked up blue and white sherds with a fragment of a building and of a fence on.

It was quite a miserable day and I got a bit cold and wet, but the foreshore was quiet, which I enjoyed and sang songs to myself as I walked along.

I found another piece of uranium glass! It glows brightly. I have found some other pieces of glass since the first one that glow slightly, but not brightly. I am not sure what they are - cadmium perhaps? I think now I have a better idea of what uranium glass looks like so I’ll be able to find more.

A goose hissed at me.

I found what was probably a Victorian scrubbing brush. It has bristles held together at the back with little bits of wire. There were various factories in the area back then so I wonder if it was used for scrubbing in a factory.

I found a pink eye and wondered about the toy it might have fallen off.

I found a piece of Royal Doulton with a green logo. Apparently that logo was used from approximately 1930 to 1993 so it could actually have been quite modern, although probably wasn't from the 1990s.

I found some bits of pipes with decorations on them. I have quite a few with the initials of makers, but this was the first time I found any that were patterned.

I found a piece of glass which looks to say "energy" on it. Part of a Lucozade bottle, perhaps?

I walked towards Albert Bridge until I reached Ransome's Dock and could go no further.

Mudlarking finds - 47.1

Mudlarking finds - 47.2

Mudlarking finds - 47.3

Mudlarking finds - 47.4

I headed across Battersea Bridge and noticed this sign:
Do not feed

(You need a permit to search or mudlark on the Thames foreshore.)
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squirmelia ([personal profile] squirmelia) wrote2025-09-27 07:31 pm
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Mudlarking 46 - Paw Patrol and a curious tool

It was lunchtime and I headed to the Custom House Lower Stairs.

A Paw Patrol toy washed up on the shore. I thought about the child that might have dropped it and felt sad for them. The toy seemed very buoyant, so could have travelled far along the Thames.

I found what I thought was a strange tool at the time but now think it's probably just a shell that got stuck to rusting metal. The Thames is trying to craft its own tools.

I found a red swirly sherd, with a similar pattern to another piece I found previously.

Mudlarking finds - 46

Mudlarking finds - rustyMudlarking finds - rusty

(You need a permit to search or mudlark on the Thames foreshore.)
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squirmelia ([personal profile] squirmelia) wrote2025-09-25 05:36 pm
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Open House 2025

This year I visited:

The Royal Bell
11 Elstree Hill
The Bottle Factory
Thames Distillers (at the Bottle Factory)
London Coffee Factory (at the Bottle Factory)
St Michael Cornhill
Mansion House
Maughan Library at King’s College London

Internet Infrastructure of London walking tour
Hermitage Community Moorings (with sea shanties being sung)
Sailing Barge Will (at Hermitage Community Moorings)
Kinetic sculptures at Trinity Buoy Wharf
SS Robin at Trinity Buoy Wharf

Western Riverside Waste Authority
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squirmelia ([personal profile] squirmelia) wrote2025-09-23 08:14 pm
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Open House

I enjoy the randomness of Open House.

One minute I'm eating rhubarb cake in a neighbour's self build and looking at old photos of how my street used to look, and the next I'm by the river and amongst boats, tapping my feet as people sing sea shanties, and climbing down a ladder on a sailing barge, and then I'm learning about how to become lord mayor and how they clean the chandeliers, then I'm listening to birds chirping amongst piles of rubbish, and then I'm watching kinetic sculptures in the rain and there's a dolphin riding a penny farthing, and then I'm on the helm of a Victorian steam ship pretending to steer it, and then I'm standing next to bags of coffee and holding a handful of coffee beans that have yet to be roasted, and then I'm standing next to "Thumbelina", a machine used for distilling gin, and then I'm peering at manhole covers and staring at stone carvings of telephones.