account arrow-down arrow-left arrow-right closecontact-us emailFacebookheart instagramjoin linkedin phonepinterestplaysearch twitteryoutube
Join us for a guided walk in London; please book beforehand.
Back

Join us for a two hour walk that takes in the sights of the river Wandle and the Wandsworth Canal.

The walk is organised by IWA Towpath Walks Society.

The meeting point for this guided walk is at Earlsfield Station (National Rail).

[The photo shows the tidal river Wandle joining the Thames – by David Curran, CC BY-SA 4.0 ]

 

Book now
Event Dates

Sunday 16th June

Location

South London

Access for all

River Wandle and the Wandsworth Canal

Join us for a two hour walk that takes in the sights of the river Wandle and the Wandsworth Canal.

The walk is organised by IWA Towpath Walks Society.

The meeting point for this guided walk is at Earlsfield Station (National Rail).

[The photo shows the tidal river Wandle joining the Thames – by David Curran, CC BY-SA 4.0 ]

 

Details

Time

2:30pm

Book your place

To take part in this walk, prior booking is strongly recommended: Please contact London Walks.

Tel: 020 7624 3978 or email [email protected]

Ticket Type Price
Regular rate £15
Concessionary and student rate £10
Children aged over 16 (with adult) £10
Children aged 8–15 (with adult) £5
Children under 8 (with adult) Free

View event location

Location

South London

Earlsfield station, Garratt Lane, London, UK

Find directions to the Event

Events

Waterway underfunding

Hundreds of miles of waterways – along with their unique heritage and habitats – are currently starved of funding and rely on constant lobbying by us to safeguard their future.

Sustainable Boating

We want boating on canals and rivers to be more sustainable and – even though the current overall contribution to UK carbon emissions is very small – we want to help reduce emissions on the waterways.

Waterways Heritage at Risk

Britain’s canals and rivers are a unique, living heritage. But that heritage is at risk – from urban development, lack of protection, loss of skills and knowledge and climate change.

You can help Save Waterways Heritage.

Waterway restoration

Restoring the UK’s blue infrastructure – our inherited network of navigable canals and rivers – is good for people and places.