Directed by Adam Morris. At some point, you'd think that just giving up on the SUV would be easier than writing all these silly columns. In theory, if the tide times were right, you could be dropped off at the centre, and walk back via public footpaths to the coast, then The Broomway. English: Wakering Stairs: The Broomway A more head-on photograph of the ancient 'Broomway', an ancient trail connecting Foulness with Great Wakering. By T Smith READERS MAY have read my earlier posts about the Broomway, that fabled old byway, and its surrounding areas in my articles titled 'A Closer Look at Foulness Island', 'Broomway' or 'Islands And Creeks'. Over the years there have been many of these, known as headways, and they afford the traveller a route back to safety in an emergency. But having walked The Broomway, I can see that this path could be the most deadly of all. Note that the Island's pub is long since closed. The shot was taken as the tide was coming in but clearly visible is the start of the path out into the sea, with the 'broom' markers on either side of the path. When the tide goes out, a pairs of walkers embark on the deadliest path in Britain; to Foulness Island, across the otherworldly mudflats of Maplin Sands. The Broomway is a barely mapped out walk connecting Great Wakering and Foulness Island (Image: Roger Jones). It should be no deeper than six inches, but if it is, it could be a warning that the tide is coming in earlier than anticipated. Late last summer, David and I walked The Broomway, arguably the most dangerous path in Britain. The Broomway, named as such for the ancient legend of the path being set out with upside down brooms in the mud, connects the island of Foulness with the Southend mainland at Wakering Stairs.. Right now, the tide in Southend-On-Sea is rising. She is more like someone who stood trying to command the tide not to come in, and then when she felt the water coming up over her knees, retreated a few feet towards shore, and stood pretending she had never been standing anywhere else, and resumed her efforts. The 44-year-old started the gargantuan task in 2015 when his children were just aged one and two. Southend-On-Sea, East of England. The Broomway, a desolate sea path which connects Great Wakering to Foulness Island, is said to have claimed the lives of more than 100 people. Note that the Island's pub is long since closed. But that hasn't put off Quintin Lake, who is taking it on as part of a five-year challenge to walk the entire coastline of Britain. Before this walk, if I'd thought about dangerous paths, I might have come up with a mountain pass or a steep track along a cliff edge. The photograph was taken looking down from the landing stage. The Ordnance Survey maps show various offshoots from the path, running off The Broomway and back to land.



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