This trail on the Gloucester & Sharpness Canal is an excellent place for a first paddling trip and is one of many along this historic canal. In the distance, you can glimpse the Forest of Dean, pass the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust Reserve, and reach Splatt Bridge as a turning point.
The Sharpness to Gloucester canal is a new experience for most English paddlers – much more like a continental European Canal or the Caledonian Canal in Scotland, easily wide enough to avoid anglers’ lines and with large ships going up to Gloucester docks at times.
The Gloucester & Sharpness Canal was built and opened in 1827, after a period of stops and starts on the project due to ongoing financial difficulties. The purpose was to bypass a long and dangerous bend on the Severn estuary at Arlingham.
The paddle steamer ‘Oliver Cromwell’ used to ply up and down the canal, but she unfortunately sank off the coast of Anglesey in 2018 whilst on the way to her new home in Ireland.
The Slimbridge Wildfowl and Wetlands Reserve is home to a large number of Nene (Hawaiian geese) which were saved from extinction by researchers there, and then successfully reintroduced to their homeland. If you go visit, you can feed them!
Further information can be found on the following websites: