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마지막 업데이트: 2월 19, 2026

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1. Bevere Lock에서 출발하는 운하 갑문 – Hawford Canal 순환 코스

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Jill M

10월 16, 2023, Viaduct Café

Excellent little café, lovely home made soup, toasties and cakes. Friendly and welcoming to cyclists 🚲

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The house known as Porter's Mill stands on a tributary of the Severn, with the actual mill on the opposite side of the road. The building is of half-timber work plastered, and is entered by a wood porch, with 18th-century moulded balusters fitted in the sides. There is a small hall, with stair and large fireplace on the left, and above the latter are the royal arms encircled by the Garter and flanked by the crowned initials E. R. One of the rooms contains a 17th-century plaster ceiling of interlacing design, enriched with fleurs de lis, crowns, fruit, Prince of Wales' feathers, mermaids, &c. There is also some good moulded oak panelling ornamented with lions and crowns. The short stair has good twisted balusters.

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Sasha Taylor

10월 17, 2021, Canal Lock

Porters Mill Lock No 4 is a minor waterways place on the Droitwich Canals (Droitwich Barge Canal) between Hawford Junction (Junction of Droitwich Canal with River Severn) (2 miles and ½ furlongs and 3 locks to the west) and Droitwich Junction (Junction of Droitwich Barge Canal and Droitwich Junction Canal) (3 miles and 6 furlongs and 5 locks to the northeast). The nearest place in the direction of Hawford Junction is Porters Mill Bridge No 5; a few yards away. The nearest place in the direction of Droitwich Junction is Ladywood Lock No 5; 1¼ furlongs away.

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Porters Mill Bridge No 5 is a minor waterways place on the Droitwich Canals (Droitwich Barge Canal) between Hawford Junction (Junction of Droitwich Canal with River Severn) (2 miles and ½ furlongs and 3 locks to the west) and Droitwich Junction (Junction of Droitwich Barge Canal and Droitwich Junction Canal) (3 miles and 6 furlongs and 6 locks to the northeast). The nearest place in the direction of Hawford Junction is Mildenham Mill Lock No 3; 6½ furlongs away. The nearest place in the direction of Droitwich Junction is Porters Mill Lock No 4; a few yards away.

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Mildenham Mill Lock No 3 is a minor waterways place on the Droitwich Canals (Droitwich Barge Canal) between Hawford Junction (Junction of Droitwich Canal with River Severn) (1 mile and 2 furlongs and 2 locks to the west) and Droitwich Junction (Junction of Droitwich Barge Canal and Droitwich Junction Canal) (4 miles and 4½ furlongs and 6 locks to the east). The nearest place in the direction of Hawford Junction is Egg Lane Bridge No 4; a few yards away. The nearest place in the direction of Droitwich Junction is Porters Mill Bridge No 5; 6½ furlongs away.

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A449 Tunnel (eastern entrance) is a place on the waterways on the Droitwich Canals (Droitwich Barge Canal) between Hawford Junction (Junction of Droitwich Canal with River Severn) (3¼ furlongs and 2 locks to the west) and Droitwich Junction (Junction of Droitwich Barge Canal and Droitwich Junction Canal) (5 miles and 3¼ furlongs and 7 locks to the east). It is at one end of A449 Tunnel. The nearest place in the direction of Hawford Junction is A449 Tunnel (western entrance); ½ furlongs away. The nearest place in the direction of Droitwich Junction is Egg Lane Field Bridge; 3 furlongs away.

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A449 Tunnel (western entrance) is a minor waterways place on the Droitwich Canals (Droitwich Barge Canal) between Hawford Junction (Junction of Droitwich Canal with River Severn) (2¾ furlongs and 2 locks to the west) and Droitwich Junction (Junction of Droitwich Barge Canal and Droitwich Junction Canal) (5 miles and 3¾ furlongs and 7 locks to the east). It is at one end of A449 Tunnel. The nearest place in the direction of Hawford Junction is Hawford Visitor Moorings; 1 furlong away. The nearest place in the direction of Droitwich Junction is A449 Tunnel (eastern entrance) (New tunnel under the A449, with towpath. ); ½ furlongs away.

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Hawford Visitor Moorings is a minor waterways place on the Droitwich Canals (Droitwich Barge Canal) between Hawford Junction (Junction of Droitwich Canal with River Severn) (1¾ furlongs and 2 locks to the west) and Droitwich Junction (Junction of Droitwich Barge Canal and Droitwich Junction Canal) (5 miles and 4¾ furlongs and 7 locks to the east). The nearest place in the direction of Hawford Junction is Hawford Lock No 2; ¼ furlongs away. The nearest place in the direction of Droitwich Junction is A449 Tunnel (western entrance); 1 furlong away.

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Hawford Lock No 2 is a place on the waterways on the Droitwich Canals (Droitwich Barge Canal) between Hawford Junction (Junction of Droitwich Canal with River Severn) (1¼ furlongs and 1 lock to the southwest) and Droitwich Junction (Junction of Droitwich Barge Canal and Droitwich Junction Canal) (5 miles and 5 furlongs and 7 locks to the east). The nearest place in the direction of Hawford Junction is Hawford Lock 2 Bridge; a few yards away. The nearest place in the direction of Droitwich Junction is Hawford Visitor Moorings; ¼ furlongs away.

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Hawford Lock 2 Bridge is a minor waterways place on the Droitwich Canals (Droitwich Barge Canal) between Hawford Junction (Junction of Droitwich Canal with River Severn) (1¼ furlongs and 1 lock to the southwest) and Droitwich Junction (Junction of Droitwich Barge Canal and Droitwich Junction Canal) (5 miles and 5¼ furlongs and 8 locks to the east). The nearest place in the direction of Hawford Junction is Hawford Lock No 1; ¾ furlongs away. The nearest place in the direction of Droitwich Junction is Hawford Lock No 2; a few yards away. There may be access to the towpath here.

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Hawford Lock No 1 is a place on the waterways on the Droitwich Canals (Droitwich Barge Canal) between Hawford Junction (Junction of Droitwich Canal with River Severn) (¼ furlongs to the southwest) and Droitwich Junction (Junction of Droitwich Barge Canal and Droitwich Junction Canal) (5 miles and 6 furlongs and 8 locks to the east). The nearest place in the direction of Droitwich Junction is Hawford Lock 2 Bridge; ¾ furlongs away.

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Hawford Junction is a major waterways place at the junction of the Droitwich Canals (Droitwich Barge Canal) with the River Severn (main river - Stourport to Worcester). Droitwich Junction (Junction of Droitwich Barge Canal and Droitwich Junction Canal) is on the Droitwich Canals (Droitwich Barge Canal), 5 miles and 6½ furlongs and 9 locks to the east. Worcester (Riverside moorings) is on the River Severn (main river - Stourport to Worcester), 3 miles and 7¼ furlongs and 1 lock to the south. Severn - Stourport Broad Locks Entrance (The Broad Locks are for Wide Beam Boats only. Narrowboats are to use the Narrow Locks.) is on the River Severn (main river - Stourport to Worcester), 8 miles and 3½ furlongs and 2 locks to the northwest. The nearest place in the direction of Droitwich Junction is Hawford Lock No 1; ¼ furlongs away. The nearest place in the direction of Worcester is Bevere Lock Weir Entrance (Channel leading to the Weir); 2¼ furlongs away. The nearest place in the direction of Severn - Stourport Broad Locks Entrance is Severn - Salwarpe Junction (Junction of the River Severn and the River Salwarpe); ¾ furlongs away.

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Originally the Mug House was the church ale house, and its history goes back to the Plantagenets and the House of Lancaster. "Brew houses were at one time an essential form of income for the church, for with some 75 feast days to celebrate; it meant money in the coffers of the church." It is known that Puritans closed most of the ale houses locally because of the drunken and lewd behaviour of the populace at the time but the Mug survived. In 1638, the Constable of Claines had closed six filthy public houses in Claines, in an attempt to quell the plague, but again not the Mug House! "Our poor are provided for, the highways repaired, riot we know none, gamesters we know none, drunkenness none." The name “Mug” is said to be connected with the old time Communion plate, or possibly also associated with clinching a deal over a “mug” of ale. The Mug House was the venue for the parish “Vestry” meetings. In the 1784 Vestry meeting 2 shilling and 11d was spent on a new cloth for the Communion table, whilst the ale bill for the same meeting was £3 15 shillings! Claines Parish records recall  "if it shall be necessary at any time to have a Church Ale for the maintenance of the said church, it shall be lawful for them to have the use of the whole House during their Ale” The proceeds of the ale were devoted to Church repairs, provision of service books, communion plate and vestments. The Mug House contributed to the riotous festival wakes which featured in Claines Churchyard in medieval times, which included bull and bear bating, dancing and “drunken roystering”. In 1750 a number of parishioners bound themselves under a penalty of 40/- to attend and endeavour to halt the evil practices. The original location of the parish stocks was between the Church and the Mug House, last used in 1853 when “a cowman occupied this instrument of public disgrace for being paralytic drunk.” By the time of the early censuses, the early innkeepers were women: in 1841 Ann Mansill aged 60 and living with her, Henry Mansill, 40, possibly her son, who was a merchant. By 1851 Ann is still there, listed as a victualler, now in her early 70s and has the support of Sarah Russell from Hartlebury who was a house servant. Around 1855 Sarah Williams (29) took over as victualler and in 1861 she was living there with her brother Elijah R Williams, who was a clerk at the Post Office. Earlier Elijah had lived at home with his parents James and Elizabeth who were the schoolmaster and schoolmistress at the National School House, Claines. Then men took over: firstly Joseph Knott in 1871, he is listed as Innkeeper aged 62, from Astley, Worcestershire, and his wife Mary, 54, from Watford in Hertfordshire, but by 1879 and through to the 1881 census, Frank Evans (29) and his wife Mary Jane (30) ran the Mug and lived there with their baby Amy. By the 1891 census, Charles Daniels (28) and his wife Florence (25) had taken over. Interestingly Charles who had been born in Bourton on the Water, had previously worked as a footman at Brockhampton Park, good training for a licensed victualler! Florence also had a good background, as her father John and mother Ann were Innkeepers at the Fox and Hounds Beer House, at Stogursey, a small village in Somerset, near Bridgwater. There was a Somerset link too, in 1901 when John Minton (40) from Hereford and his wife Bessie (36) from Yeovil in Somerset took over, but by 1905 Albert Beck was in charge and then in 1911 George Hobbs. (Albert Beck left the Mug to become a farmer and dairyman at Chatley Villas, Droitwich Road, Claines. He was found drowned in the river at Bevere Lock in 1915) George and his wife Mary had lived in Coachmaris House, in Minto, Roxburghshire. Mary herself was from Kinlock in Perthshire, though George was originally from St Johns, Worcester. In 1901 they had two sons George and Cameron and father George was a coachman. Being in service, was probably good training to run a pub! In 1911, son George (24) was living at the Mug and working as an Engine Fitter, whilst George was listed as the Licensed Victualler aged 53 and Mary his wife was 49. Wally Trow was possibly the longest serving landlord, from the the 1930’s to the 1980’s, serving over 50 years. He was followed by Geoff and Barbara, John Crabb and then in 1990 by Judy Allen who has kept up the excellent traditional local presence and hospitality of the Mug House. In 1947 renovations were taking place at the Mug and within a wall, the silver head of a medieval bishop's crook, a crosier, was discovered. It is a mystery of why it was secreted away in the Mug House but could have been hidden with the rest of the Church Silver during the reformation. It is now used every year by the Claines Boy Bishop. In the 1950s the vicar told the publican of the Mug: "You fill my church and I'll fill your pub" ! He did and more than one service was “piped” down to the Mug to ensure no one missed it. The Mug House and the Church share many customers and live healthily side by side. Generations of Bell ringers, choir members and parishioners have frequented the Mug House and continue to do so today. The older children of the Church Sunday School meet at the Mug, every Sunday, they are "God's Own Pub Club"!

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The church of ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST consists of a chancel 23 ft. 8 in. by 17 ft. 2 in., north and south chapels 9 ft. 2 in. and 9 ft. 3 in. wide respectively, of the same length with the chancel, a modern north vestry on the north side of the north chapel, nave 43 ft. 10 in. by 15 ft. 10 in., north and south aisles 8 ft. 10 in. wide, a modern additional north aisle, west tower 10 ft. 7 in. square and a modern south porch. These measurements are all internal. The present church appears to have been entirely rebuilt in the early 15th century upon the site of an older building, some fragments of which, dating from the late 12th century, and consisting of the moulded base and capital with a few of the drum stones of an arcade pier and some arch stones of a doorway, with an embattled moulding, were discovered beneath the north wall of the north aisle on its demolition for the modern extension. The north and south chapels were added early in the 16th century, and a rood gallery constructed or enlarged at the same period. In 1887–8 a new north aisle was added to the existing aisle, the north wall of the which was moved outwards and rebuilt practically stone for stone. The walling throughout the church is of large squared sandstone, laid in more or less regular courses. The east window of the chancel is of three trefoiled ogee lights with vertical tracery within a two-centred head. At the south-east is a plain piscina recess with a square basin, originally projecting, but now cut back flush with the wall. The north and south walls are occupied by the chapel arcades, each of two bays with two-centred arches. Those of the north arcade are of two orders, the outer hollow-chamfered and the inner wave-moulded, and interesting example of the reversion to type charateristic of early 16th-century work. The column and responds continue the orders, which are interrupted by bell capitals of a clumsy section. The south arcade has arches of one order only, moulded with a plain chamfer, set back a little from the wall face and supported by an octagonal column, with responds of the same form. The two-centred chancel arch is of a single chamfered order, with semi-octagonal responds having moulded capitals and bases, of the same plain section as those of the nave arcades. Externally there were originally diagonal buttresses at both the eastern angles, but that at the south-east appears to have been taken down and set square with the east, wall on the addition of the south chapel. This is shown both by the disturbance of the facing here and by a short portion of the original return of the plinth mould, which surrounds the whole of the early 15th-century building. The east window of the north chapel has a straight-sided four-centred head, and is of three trefoiled lights with vertical tracery over. The mullions are hollow-chamfered, and the tracery is set near the middle of the wall with a wide external casement. The square-headed window of three trefoiled ogee lights at the north-east is one of the original north windows of the chancel reset, and is of the same general type as those used throughout the church in the work of the earlier period. The remainder of the north wall is occupied by an arch opening into the modern vestry. At the north-west is a doorway with an elliptical head opening into the rood stairs, which are contemporary with the chapel. A two-centred arch of two chamfered orders, with responds of the same form as those of the chancel arcade, opens into the north aisle. The wall at the south-west angle is said to have been cut away and two squints cut from the aisle to the chapel, and from the chapel to the chancel, in the first half of the 19th century, when a small font was placed here. A portion of the plinth mould of the north wall of the chancel is visible at the south-east. Both here and in the case of the south chapel the whole of the length of chancel wall occupied by the arcade has been cut away and rebuilt. Externally the east wall has a plainly moulded cornice, now surmounted by a gable, which is evidently of later date, the present high-pitched roof being an addition. A piece of quatrefoil panelling at the north-east shows that there was originally a panelled parapet, similar in type to that which crowns the walls of the south chapel. The pinnacles which surmounted it have been reset at the angles of the tower parapet. At the eastern angle is a diagonal buttress of two offsets, and at the west end of the north wall a buttress of a similar number of offsets is visible inside the modern vestry, one of the east windows of which, removed originally from the north wall of the chancel to the chapel, has again been removed to its present position. The plinth of the chapel is of the same section as that of the chancel, the stones having probably been re-used. Over the north-east window is a large grotesque gargoyle. The south chapel has one east window similar to that of the north chapel, but the tracery is more symmetrically set out, and generally shows traces of a slightly earlier date. The two square-headed windows in the south wall, of three and two lights respectively, are the reset south windows of the chancel, and are similar in detail to the reset north windows. Between them is a blocked doorway. An acute two-centred arch with semi-octagonal responds opens into the south aisle. Externally the walls are crowned by a heavily-moulded cornice and a pinnacled parapet panelled with quatrefoils. The pinnacles are crocketed, gabled and panelled; on each is carved a blank shield below a rose. The parapet is unpanelled on the east, and appears to have been disturbed, the coping being set at a less inclination than the cornice, which follows the slope of the low-pitched lean-to roof. There is a diagonal buttress at the south-east, one between the two windows of the south wall and one at the junction of the chapel with the aisle, all of two offsets. A plain chamfered plinth runs round the walls The nave arcades are each of four bays with acute two-centred arches of a single chamfered order, supported by octagonal columns and responds having moulded capitals and bases, similar in section to those of the chancel arch. In the apex of the east gable is a single cinquefoiled light. The north wall of the north aisle has been taken down and re-erected as the north wall of the additional aisle, added in 1887. Its three-light square-headed windows, three in number, are reset in this wall, with the original buttresses between them, and a diagonal buttress at the north-west angle, all of two offsets. The west window, which occupies its original position, is of similar design. All correspond in type to those of the chapels described above. An arcade of four-centred arches divides the two aisles. The south aisle has a west and three south windows of the same pattern as those of the north aisle, with buttresses between them and at the south-west angle. Between the two western windows is the south doorway, which has a plain chamfered two-centred head and segmental rear arch. The tower is of three stages with an embattled parapet, at the angles of which are placed the four pinnacles of the north chapel. At the west are diagonal buttresses of four offsets. The tower arch is of a single acute two-centred order, and the west window of the ground stage is a square-headed three-light window of the type prevailing throughout the building. In the north and south walls are blocked doorways. The ringing chamber is lighted on the north, west and south by single ogee-headed lights, and the belfry by square-headed windows of three trefoiled ogee lights. The plinth mould of the chancel, nave and aisles is continued round the base of the tower. The roofs of the chancel and chapels are modern; the ceiling of the north chapel conceals internally its later high-pitched roof. The nave has its original trussed rafter roof, and some of the timbers of the aisle roofs are also of original date. Externally the roofs of chancel, nave and aisles are tiled, those of the chapels being leaded. In the north porch are preserved some fragments of encaustic tiles of the 15th century, including the four-tile Talbot design so common in the neighbourhood. In the vestry is some early 17th-century panelling. In the east bay of the south chancel arcade, moved here from the churchyard, where it had been for many years, is the elaborate table tomb of John Porter, who died in 1577. It is now very imperfect, part only of the panelled sides remaining. Upon the top is his recumbent effigy. Of the inscription only the fragment— 'IOHN PORTER WHICH WAS A LAWYER 1577' — survives. The panels of the sides have semicircular heads with shells in their tympana and blank shields inclosed in smaller trefoiled panels below, the whole exhibiting a curious and characteristic mixture of Gothic and Renaissance. Above the three shields on the north side are the initials 'I.,' 'I.P.' and 'P.' Below is decipherable 'Anno Domini 1577.' That this tomb has always been a cenotaph is shown by a tablet now in the north chapel inscribed as follows: 'Subtus requiescit sed in erectissima | spe resurrectionis Iohannes Porter | Iurisconsultus qui Obiit Anno Do[mini] | 1577 | Omnia transibunt, nos ibimus, ibitis, ibunt | Ignari, gnari, conditione pari.' | In the floor at the west end of the nave is a slab with a Passion cross having a shield in the centre and the arms crossed at the ends incised in outline upon it. The slab is probably of the 13th century. Upon the east wall of the north aisle is an elaborate mural tablet to Mary Porter, widow of John Porter, who died in 1668. Other mural tablets include those to Henry Wynne 'of Clifford's Inn,' who died in 1693; to Elizabeth wife of Phincas Jackson, who died in 1714, and several of her children who died young; and to George Porter, who died in 1709, and his wife Elizabeth, who died in 1720. In the nave floor are many slabs, none earlier than the late 17th century. There is a ring of five bells inscribed as follows: treble, 'Francis Wythes, William Reynolds, Churchwardens 1686'; second, recast by Warner of London in 1886 from a bell said to have been of the late 14th century; third, 'Gloria in Excelsis Deo 1622'; fourth, 'Jesus be oure spede 1623'; tenor, 'God bless oure Nobell King 1623.' The plate consists of an Elizabethan cup, the foot gone and the rim renewed, the hall-mark of which has disappeared; a cover paten, which doubtless belonged to it, inscribed on the foot 1571, with the mark of 1570; two silver cups, a flagon, and a paten of 1846, a chalice and paten of silver-gilt of 1902, a silver paten, a silver chalice and paten formerly used at the mission room at Fernhill Heath, three mounted cruets and a silver bread box, all modern.

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Interesting route close to canal.

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Single track good for MTB

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Lovely quiet place good for break.

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A sneaky view up the Severn.

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David

4월 5, 2021, Hawford Canal

Peaceful strip of canal. Towards the river there is a nice grassy area for a picnic. Overlooked by an old ran camp (not public).

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This path is on a bridleway, and rideable (mtb). The footpath along the river Salwarpe is lovely but liable to get waterlogged. I've spotted heron's in the area.

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차일즈위컴브로드웨이도더힐브로튼 해켓뒷다리휘팅턴드로이트위치 스파티버튼이브샴한버리힌튼 온 더 그린베스포드브레든스 노턴Bredon Hill National Nature Reserve도버데일웨스트우드케머튼업튼 워렌스트렌샴하빙턴에킹턴애스턴 서머빌페브워스트렌치우드스페츨리클리브 프라이어햄튼 로벳Churchill힘블턴브레디콧알딩턴노스 피들마틴 허싱트리하조르핀빈사우스 리틀턴쿡힐스툴튼쓰록모튼허딩턴찰턴오버버리수도원장 모튼브릭클햄프턴옴버슬리피어턴화이트 레이디스 애스턴언덕과 무어오딩리엘름브리지노스 앤 미들 리틀턴애버턴버링엄데포드세지베로우루스 렌치브레트포턴벡포드애쉬튼 언더 힐그래프턴 플라이포드스톡 앤 브래들리엘믈리 성네더턴킹턴하틀버리Drakes Broughton과 Wadborough위컴퍼드엘믈리 로벳배드시노턴 쥬스타 켐시콘더튼살와프그레이트 컴버튼업튼 스노즈버리브레던노턴과 렌치윅빅마쉬잉크베로우크롤와이어 피들피플턴플래드버리리틀 컴버튼돔스턴비샘프턴등심교회 렌치크롭톤허니본난튼 보샹플라이포드 플라벨퍼쇼어오펜햄

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