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Heat wave: in England, the source of the Thames has disappeared

2022-08-11T09:21:13.530Z


The river, which originates near the village of Ashton Keynes, has been the victim of high temperatures and low rainfall since the beginning of the year. Vacationers try to answer this question: but where is the Thames?


The dry grass path runs along a small valley.

Soon, sheltered by a curtain of trees, a dusty basin takes shape, strewn with branches, without the slightest trace of humidity.

It is, however, the source of the Thames.

A now theoretical source: for kilometers downstream, the course of this emblematic river of the United Kingdom can be summed up at best in a few muddy puddles, a striking shortcut from the drought that is overwhelming a large part of the country.

"

We haven't found the Thames yet

," says Michael Sanders, a 62-year-old computer scientist who came with his wife to walk the "Thames Path", a marked path that follows the winding course of the river, from its source to its estuary. .

It's completely dry.

There are puddles, mud, but no water flowing so far, we hope to find the Thames downstream, but it has disappeared

, ”says this holidaymaker in the village of Ashton Keynes, in a few kilometers from the source.

»SEE ALSO –

Drought: the Loire so low that it is crossed on foot

It is in this picturesque region at the foot of the Cotswold hills, not far from Wales, that the river rises from an outcrop of the water table, before meandering for some 350 kilometers towards the North Sea, watering the pass the British capital.

But for those who would usually liken the English countryside to a golf course, the shock is severe in this summer, after a winter and a spring almost unprecedented since rainfall records have been available.

Read alsoThe Gorges du Verdon are dry: no rafting this summer but swimming will remain possible

Haven't seen any animals for days

The water has receded six miles.

ADRIAN DENNIS / AFP

"

It looks like we're walking through the African savannah, it's so dry

," exclaims David Gibbons, a 60-year-old retiree who, with his wife and a couple of friends, walks the reverse path of Michael in stages. Sanders, from the mouth to the source.

A few hundred meters from the goal, he marvels at the wildlife encountered on his way up the waterway which, from a strategic and industrial navigable artery in the London region, is transformed upstream into a tourist attraction, between river pleasure and observation of the avifauna.

But for the past two or three days, we haven't seen any animals because there's no water.

She disappeared about 10 miles (

16 km, Ed

) from here

,” according to David Gibbons.

"

We've never seen it so dry and empty

," adds Andrew Jack, a 47-year-old land official living about 15 miles from Ashton Keynes, which is reached by narrow country roads dotted with stone houses of cut.

Read also Heat wave: the 41 fountains of Pernes-les-Fontaines are dry

Calls to save water

The company supplying London has announced upcoming restrictions on water consumption.

ADRIAN DENNIS / AFP

Between the main street of the village and pretty flowered buildings, the bed of the river, spanned by small footbridges, is streaked with cracks flown over by wasps, reminiscent of images of African backwaters in the dry season.

No respite in sight anytime soon: The National Weather Agency issued an orange heat alert for southern England and east Wales on Tuesday between Thursday and Sunday, with temperatures reaching 35 to 36 degrees Celsius.

Local authorities are increasing calls to save water, and the company supplying London has announced forthcoming restrictions on consumption, which will be added to those already in force in part of the south of the country.

But David Gibbons refuses to panic.

I've lived in England all my life, we've had droughts before

,” he says.

I think it will be green again by the fall

.”

Andrew Jack, who has come with his family to walk along the bed of the stream where a solitary graduated scale has nothing left to measure, admits to being more pessimistic: "

There are a lot of English people who think

'great, let's enjoy time”

(…) but that means that something has changed, and for the worse

”.

Personally, I am worried to see the situation worsen.

The UK is going to have to adapt to a warmer climate, with more and more summers like this

,” he fears.

»SEE ALSO –

United Kingdom: a whale stuck in the Thames, rescued by rescuers

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2022-08-11

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