
The level of the River Thames in Abingdon has been slowly rising over the last four or five days.

It has not flooded Rye Meadow completely, but has spread some way across and created pools.

On the cricket ground at Hales Meadow, pools are large enough to give reflections of the cricket pavilion. Instead of its former white exterior, the pavilion now has cladding. I’m not sure when that happened.

Nearby is the ground of Abingdon Town FC, said to be the 24th oldest football club in the world, according to footballhistory.org. The familiar sign by the ground looks overgrown, which makes me wonder what is the current state of play?
Long standing safety issue on footbridge

There are four separate reports on FixMyStreet relating to the deteriorating surface of the footbridge over the River Ock, which links the Ock Valley Walk to the rear entrance of Tower Close. Taken together, they point to a structure that has been unsafe for at least six months.

Reports dating back to August 2025 describe exposed boards, widening gaps and broken sections of decking on what is not only a footbridge but also part of a cycle route. By December, one walker reported their foot going through the bridge deck, noting that holes ‘regularly appear’ and describing the bridge as being in a ‘dire condition’. A further report later that month warned of a 20 cm square hole in the centre of the bridge, with the surrounding surface bouncing freely, suggesting that there was little or no support beneath. The repeated use of heavy-duty plastic coverings appears to have been a temporary measure, masking rather than resolving the underlying deterioration.

When I went over the bridge today, there was again an exposed hole in the deck, clearly visible, A foot could easily slip through the surface.
Yesterday, a concerned parent told me that this bridge is used by numerous schoolchildren every school day and asked me to put it on the blog. He said concerns have apparently been raised directly with district councillors but there has been no effective response.
I believed when I wrote this that the bridge was the responsibility of Vale of White Horse District Council (VWHDC) as it was the VWHDC end of the Ock Valley Walk. But I am told by the Tithe Farm and Ladygrove Newsletter that it is Oxfordshire County Council (OCC) and the local councillor, Neil Fawcett had been chasing the council on this on their behalf.
After the Snow Queen, What’s Happening Around Abingdon this week

The Abingdon Drama Club’s Snow Queen finished its run this evening. A fantastic production: by turns haunting and genuinely funny. If you missed it, you missed something special.
(Image credit: garethclark photography, with his Snow Queen picture superimposed and blurred over the theatre steps by me.)
But there’s plenty more happening in Abingdon.

The Giant Jumble Sale at Fitzharrys School takes place on Sunday 25 January. It’s a two-hour sale, with items priced to sell.

The next Agnostics Anonymous meeting, on Tuesday 27 January, will explore the interplay between drama, poetry, fiction and spiritual experience.

There’s been much recent talk of otter sightings around Abingdon. On Wednesday 28 January there will be a talk, The Otter in England, looking at our long history with otters, how we nearly lost them, how they returned, and what the future may hold.

Simon Mason in conversation with Eve Smith, this Thursday 29 January at Abingdon Library, is fully booked.

There are, however, a few places left for Nicki Thornton (formerly of Mostly Books), who after a successful run of younger reader novels now has a book for adults. She’ll be at Abingdon Library on Saturday 31 January.

Also at Abingdon Library, the sky in the Abingdon jigsaw – featured last week – is still outwitting some of the town’s best jigsaw solvers.
Nuclear Ban – five years on

At 12 noon on Thursday, the Abingdon Peace Group gathered in the Market Place to mark five years since the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons became international law, in January 2021.
Back in 2021, with Covid about, the group held a socially distanced event in a mostly deserted Market Place.

This week’s gathering echoed that earlier moment, but without the masks. Progress has been made since the treaty came into force. 74 nation states — more than half the countries of the world — have ratified it. The UK has not signed up.
Behind the treaty stands the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN). Its campaigning helped bring the treaty into being, and in 2017 ICAN’s work was recognised with the Nobel Peace Prize. More information is available at www.icanw.org.