WALK
FEATURES

Newington Circular
Sunday 13th November 2016


WHERE ? MAP HEIGHTS FIGURES SLOPES TIMING TRACK EXTRA FINAL READ ME


Features of Our Walks

On our gentle seven mile walk in North Kent we reached sea level along part of the Saxon Shore Way and inland we reached the dizzy height of about 42 metres (138 feet) above sea level. It was a walk with many variations, alternating between the wide open coastal scenery and the gently undulating inland landscape with its sheep farming and apple orchards. We had good walking weather with plenty of late autumn sunshine. A most enjoyable IVC day out!




Here we are almost at sea level, enjoying part of the Saxon Shore Way.

Now prepare ye for some plots and graphs. Not too overwhelming, but hopefully quite interesting! You will see here:


How far were we from the Centre of London?

Our start and end points were both Newington (Kent) (NGT) station, which lies about 36 miles ESE of the centre of London. The centre of London is officially taken as the intersection of The Strand, Whitehall and Cockspur Street. This intersection is often referred to as Charing Cross, not to be confused with the nearby Victorian Eleanor Cross itself, nor the station in front of which the cross stands. The detailed figures, for the fun of it, are as shown below.


The starting point of our walk was within a 36 mile radius of the centre of London,
and roughly ESE thereof.

Our "straight line" distances are actually "great circle" distances on the earth's surface. We assume the earth to be spherical, which is not far off the mark. Assuming the earth to be a sphere gives us an error of about 0.1% in our distance values. Not that much really! Can't complain! Indeed, we can speak of the distances as the "hypothetical crow" (cornix hypothetica) flies.


Cornix Hypothetica, our hypothetical crow,
isn't any old bird, as we should know.
Cornix Hypothetica? He has miles to go,
many a "straight line" o'er Earth to show.


And here you can see the start point of our walk in the context of:
(1) the South East of England, (2) the centre of London (Charing X) and (3) the M25.

Outline Map of Our Walk

Our "anti-clockwise circular" walk from the village of Newington took in part of the Saxon Shore Way and also took in the villages of Lower Halstow and Upchurch. We accomplished "our mission" well within the available late autumn daylight. A nice relaxing walk with only a modest total ascent.


Outline Map of Our Circular Walk

We were east of the Greenwich meridian. The map grid scales translate to 1.112 Km per 0.01° latitude and a mean of 0.694 Km per 0.01° longitude (using the WGS84 standard), both when using 6371.0 Km as the volumetric mean radius of the earth. It is interesting to compare the present longitude distance-to-degree ratio with that for other walks. It you do this, you will see that the further north you go, the less Km per degree longitude you get. Once you get to the Lake District the reduction in this ratio compared to that for walks in the south-east is quite noticeable. In Scales, in the Lake District, we already have a slightly smaller value of 0.644 Km per 0.01° longitude - a difference of 50 metres per 0.01° longitude compared with our present North Kent walk.

Because we don't live on a flat earth - unless you are a convinced "flat-earther" - maps are inevitably a distortion of what is. In other words, it's all a matter of mapping a curvaceous surface onto a flat surface. We don't want to carry curvaceous representations of the terrain on our walks, do we? In our case, the northern length of our map grid is stretched out by something like an extra 0.10 %, to make it the same on the page as the length of the southern part of our map grid. Not that much for hiking purposes really! Can't complain.


Height Profile of Our Walk

We reached our highest point at 42 metres (138 feet) above mean sea level on our final descent to Newington Station - as per our "Facts and Figures" just below. We had variety on our walk, reaching almost sea level along the Saxon Shore Way between Lower Halstow and Ham Green. This, of course, is compatible with our total ascent of 84 metres (276 feet). Indeed, it's the total ascent which gets closer to being a measure of our fitness, rather than the maximum height reached.


Height Profile

The above plot uses a true origin for the vertical elevation (height) axis, so as not to lose track of reality. What a worthy aim!


Some Facts and Figures

Here are some "vital statistics" in metric and imperial units. The total length our walk is measured on the surface of the WSG84 spheroid. However, we can consider this, without undue loss of accuracy, as being on a conceptual "flat" plane at mean sea level, using the OS sea level reference as explained on OS "hiking" maps. There you are!


"Walk facts and figures"

Average Rising and Falling Gradients

And here, for the numerical fun of it, are the average gradients we overcame on our walks. The rising and falling (negative) gradients are both averaged over the distances given, with level stretches having rises and falls of less than ± ½ metre.


Rising and Falling Gradients

By comparison, Hertfordshire County Council recommends that its roads should not have longitudinal gradients of more than 5% and one of the steepest adhesion railways in the world, in Austria, has a maximum gradient of 11.6%.

By way of further interest, the clockwise route of the Fairfield Horseshoe in the Lake District has a total distance of 15.62 Km (9.71 miles), with the following calculations: an average rising gradient of 14.66% over 6.589 Km, a level part over 0.345 Km, and an average falling gradient of 11.11% over 8.676 Km. This is seen by many as really quite challenging - but then, when you compare it with our Newington Circular walk, it can be said that we had more leisurely and less demanding aims compared with Lakeland challenges!


Less Quantifiable Considerations

On any walk there are considerations which are very real but are often tantalizingly out of ready reach of those who wish to espouse a numerical approach to many of life's activities. Here are three considerations for starters.


Timing and Speed

It's one thing to discuss the terrain over which we walk. It's quite another to ask how we personally respond to walking over that terrain. There are a number of considerations, of which timing and speed can be taken as starting points, should you wish to wax enthusiastic in these areas!


Track File

If you are keen to see our walks superimposed on an Ordnance Survey® (OS) map or on another system such as Google Maps®, then you can use this file to do so. The numerical data in this file were hand-plotted by me from memory (no GPS!) on my return home. The data are based on WGS84. Of course, for copyright reasons, I do not show the OS-based or Google-based maps here.


Postscript

Any map is an approximate representation of what is. Practicality and scale are relevant considerations. We are not dealing with a planning application calling for detailed spatial descriptions of intricate boundaries. For us in the hiking community, the degrees of accuracy and precision should be just enough to give us useable and helpful knowledge of the terrain about us and beneath our feet. I hope my humble endeavours on this page are in this respect interesting for, and useful to, you my reader!