Everything that’s good about Essex Outdoor Living PAGE
PAGE Food
26
15
PAGE
12 Male grooming
PAGE
OFFER FOR MADE IN ESSEX READERS
3rd off of a Back & Shoulder Wax 3rd off a Massage Menace Male Grooming
38
FREE
PAGE Sport Fashion Sunshine yellow
16
Wartime discovery trails Take pictures on World War Two heritage walks in Essex and enter a competition
FRIDAY 10 APRIL 2015
ISSUE 025
Cudmore Grove in East Mersea
L
OOKING for outdoor activities now the warmer weather has finally arrived – why not take in some of the many heritage trails in Essex. Six scenic trails, taking in views along the stunning Essex coast and countryside, have been put together for walkers, tourists and school children to explore as a part of the World War Two Heritage Project. Take the kids out to walk the trails and discover the surprising sites and
stories about Essex’s Second World War past – and if you take photos on your walk you could win a prize by uploading them to the Facebook site at https://www.facebook.com/arts.essex1 Four photos will be chosen and the winning photographers will each win a copy of the book published by the WWII Heritage Project: The Occupied Coast, Living in the Shadow of the Atlantic Wall. Anyone can enter the competition which will be open throughout April.
All the photographer needs to do is identify the name of the trail on which the photo was taken when uploading it. The six trails are: Bowers Gifford; Cudmore Grove, East Mersea; Fobbing; Ford End/ Hartford; Saffron Walden and Walton-on-the-Naze WWII trails. Essex as a county has a rich wartime heritage, and the county council has been recording sites since the early 1990s. More than 3,000 defence sites were built in Essex during World War Two
Dr.Winifred van Rensburg
and around 750 still survive, some in surprisingly good condition. They are strung across the county, many half-hidden in hedgerows, woods and fields, guarding quiet country lanes, beaches and open marshes. All the trails are on footpaths, roadsides or publically-accessible land. Information boards, leaflets and, for Smartphone users, an app provides interpretation and historical detail. For more information, go to worldwar2heritage.com/en/routes.