Saturday, 13 June 2026

Walking the Capital Ring Section 6, Kingston Vale to Richmond.

13th June 2026

For some reason I wake at 05:30 and can’t get back to sleep. I get up and check the weather, it’s going to be a fine day. I book a train journey, make a picnic lunch, and head out to complete Section 6 of the Capital Ring from where I left off last time in Kingston Vale to the finish in Richmond. At 10:05 after three trains and a bus I’m standing by a Capital Ring signpost looking across the busy A3 road.

Capital Ring Section 6, A3 at Kingston Vale

The lights at the pedestrian crossing change and I cross the A3 and enter Richmond Park via Robin Hood Gate. Fifty yards into the park my ears are assaulted by the cacophony of dozens of bicycle freewheel hubs click-click-clicking from all directions as they sweep around the roundabout at the bottom of Broomfield Hill, the 10 mph speed limit apparently not applying to cyclists.

I manage to get across the road and onto a sandy track heading north west across the park and the sound of bicycles is replaced by that of Parakeets. The sandy track turns into a path across the grass as it climbs the flank of the wonderfully named “Spankers Hill” before dropping down again towards Pen Ponds car park. The fine weather has brought out many walkers and the family picnics have already begun.

A herd of deer lie in the sunshine some 500m off to the right which is good because there are signs everywhere warning people not to get within 50m of the deer. I’m not sure anyone has told the deer mind you.

Capital Ring Section 6, Lawn Plantation in Richmond Park.

That would explain why as I head across the open ground towards Pen Ponds I briefly spot a pair of ears twitching above the top of the bracken, just revealing the presence of a fawn hidden about half the requisite distance from the busy main path.

Pen Ponds come into view and I cross the causeway between the upper and lower ponds, pausing to take a few photos.

Capital Ring Section 6, Upper Pen Pond in Richmond Park.

Past the ponds I begin climbing again on the main track but about half way up the hill I turn left to follow the Capital Ring on a much smaller path between Queen Elizabeth’s Plantation and Sidmouth Wood. After a while I notice that there is no one else around and the only voices I can hear are those of the Parakeets and Chiffchaffs. Both are mostly unseen, occasionally flitting about the ancient oak trees that edge the plantation.

Capital Ring Section 6, ancient oaks in Queen Elizabeth's Plantation in Richmond Park.

I see people again as the route curves around Oak Lodge and I follow the tarmac drive to Queens Road. The road is busy with both cars and head-down-not-stopping-for-anyone lycra-clad men on bicycles. I wait for a small gap in traffic and cross the road. You can stick that bell where the sun don’t shine mate ๐Ÿ˜› 

I can’t help thinking there should be a pedestrian crossing at this point, not just for the Capital Ring but because of the busy Pembroke Lodge car park nearby. To which I divert for the “conveniences” before retracing my steps to rejoin the Capital Ring as it heads west down some steps and swings right. Here is the western flank of Richmond Park and I can see across to the Surrey Hills. I fail to identify Ham House despite having been there twice but I do spot Twickenham Rugby Stadium despite never having been there at all.

Capital Ring Section 6, view from the western slope of Richmond Park including Twickenham Stadium.

Where the Ring turns left downhill towards Petersham I take the worthwhile diversion right up the hill to King Henry’s Mound, from the top of which Henry VIII is said to have waited for sight of a flare that would confirm that Anne Boleyn’s body and Anne Boleyn’s head were no longer contiguous. Also from the top of the mound there is a protected view of St. Paul’s Cathedral 12 miles away in the City of London. Protected in that no tall buildings are allowed to be built that would get in the way. The trees are a different matter. I’ve put a red circle round it in the following photo. Only if you can get to the telescope on the mound and point it in just the right direction might you just about be able to see the dome of St. Paul’s.


The telescope was busy and I’ve seen through it before so I retrace my steps back off the mound onto the Capital Ring and head down the steep slope towards Petersham. A runner passes me four times as I walk down the hill, twice going up and twice going down. He’s obviously healthier than he looks.

Capital Ring Section 6, heading down to Petersham Gate, Richmond Park.

At the bottom of the hill I leave Richmond Park through Petersham Gate, cross the road and the Pelican Crossing and duck under the low hanging tree into a shaded alleyway which runs around the back of St. Peter’s Church graveyard to a lane which leads to Petersham Meadows. As I walk along the path across the meadows I have to avoid several groups of walkers. One of those groups is brown, four-legged, and have bells around their necks. ๐Ÿฎ That group is the only one that has mastered the art of walking in single file. Tarquin, Jemima and their friends (I don’t know if that’s actually their names but this is Richmond) should take lessons.

Capital Ring Section 6, crossing Petersham Meadows.

On the far side of Petersham Meadows I reach the River Thames at Buccleuch Gardens. Since it is almost midday and I don’t have much further to go and there’s a bench in the shade I stop to eat my picnic lunch. It seems that I was a bit liberal with the mustard in my ham sandwich earlier this morning and now everything is yellow. Fortunately none of the dogs gambolling in the gardens notices. After lunch I continue along the riverside into Richmond and my word it’s busy on the waterfront! I see there’s some waterborne event on with lots of Cornish Pilot Gigs being rowed back and forth. Well it’s a nice day for messing about in boats.

Capital Ring Section 6, Richmond Bridge and a Cornish Pilot Gig.

I weave my way through the crowds to the end of Section 6 at Friars Lane by the Capital Ring signpost.

Capital Ring Section 6 ✅ Since I’ve now completed Sections 1 to 11 further adventures will be in wildest Norf’ London.

The riverside pubs of Richmond are absolutely rammed so I make my way to The Tap Tavern in the town centre and sit outside in the sunshine with a refreshing celebratory pint. The bins behind the shops aren’t as scenic as the boats on the river but it’s not so far to walk to the station and get the train home.

My Flickr Album for Capital Ring Section 6 has been updated and nowcontains 64 photos, many of them from a gloriously sunny Richmond Park. (opens in a new page or as a slide show below if your viewer supports it).

 

 Capital Ring Section 6

 

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