Days well spent are those with friends
Albert Schweitzer
What can be pleasanter on a spring day than a leisurely walk with a friend, bookended with coffee and lunch? A week or so I had exactly that pleasure, meeting up with blogging friend Margaret (of From Pyrenees to Pennines in Camden for a walk by the Regents Canal.
The Regents Canal links the Grand Union Canal in Paddington with the Thames in east London, via the Limehouse Basin. It is 8.6 miles (13.8 kilometres) long and like most canals has a towpath. These towpaths were originally used by horses to pull barges but today are popular places for walking, jogging and cycling (where wide enough).
We started our walk in Camden Town where many of the shops have colourful frontages.



The Regents Canal
We had a coffee by the canal, relishing the fact that it was warm enough to sit outside. Then we started to follow the canal in an easterly direction. On the way we passed lots of street art (or should that be canal art?), interesting buildings and some narrowboats. The latter are mostly permanently moored here, providing more affordable accommodation (I won’t say cheap) in this pricey part of town.





‘Canal’ art


Towpath walkers, narrowboat and rope
St Pancras Gardens
We left the towpath at Camley Street to visit two favourite spots of mine. The first, St Pancras Gardens, is the churchyard of St Pancras Old Church and is a peaceful spot despite lying right next to the mainline train route into St Pancras Station. The church itself is Victorian, but thought by some to stand on a site founded in 314 AD by Romans camped nearby. We popped our heads into the church but a rather large walking tour group had arrived just before us and were seated listening to their guide, so we didn’t linger.
The Hardy Tree
Instead we had a mooch around the gardens. I wanted to show Margaret two sights in particular, although one is rather a non-sight these days. Until a couple of years ago the churchyard was home to an ash tree known as the Hardy Tree.
The story goes that when the Midland Railway Company began building its new station (St Pancras) during the 1860s, the line ran through this churchyard. Numerous graves had to be dug up and moved. The job of clearing the churchyard fell to architect Arthur Blomfield who assigned the job to his assistant, a young Thomas Hardy. Yes, the same one who went on to write Far from the Madding Crowd, The Mayor of Casterbridge, Tess of the d’Urbervilles and other classics. Hardy stacked rows of the headstones around the trunk of an ash tree. Or, in other versions of the story, he stacked them, then planted a tree in the centre.
There are two problems with this tale, much as I would love to believe it. Firstly, the tree probably arrived several decades after the work undertaken by Arthur Blomfield and his young assistant. Photos of St Pancras churchyard from 1926 show the piled gravestones without the tree. And secondly, the tree fell during a storm in December 2022.
Actually, I have a third problem in recounting this tale. I took no photos while there with Margaret as I knew I had several from a previous visit when the tree was still there. But can I find those photos? No, I can’t! So here’s a link to an article about the tree’s demise in my favourite online publication about all things London, the Londonist, with a photo of the gravestones taken when the tree still stood in their midst: https://londonist.com/london/latest-news/the-hardy-tree-of-st-pancras-has-fallen.
Famous graves
Several famous people are buried in the churchyard. They include Mary Wollstonecraft, an early feminist, advocate for women’s rights and the mother of author Mary Shelley. Admirers of her work often leave little tributes here; not the conventional flowers but small pebbles, shells, acorns and more.


Grave of Mary Wollstonecraft
Another interesting tomb is that of the architect Sir John Soane. He designed it himself for his wife Eliza and was later buried here alongside her. I don’t have a photo of the entire tomb (I have a bad habit of only photographing details rather than capturing the full picture!) But if you have a look at the photo here you can see why it is said to have inspired the design of the traditional red telephone boxes in the UK.

Camley Street Nature Park
On the other side of Camley Street, and the other side of the tracks, is Camley Street Nature Park. This small nature reserve is a true haven, squeezed between the canal the railway tracks. The site was once a coal drop for the railways into nearby King’s Cross Railway Station. After demolition in the 1960s it was colonised by nature. The London Wildlife Trust ran a campaign to save the site from development and created the reserve with donations and lottery funding. Today there is a remarkable variety of habitats squeezed into this small space, including woodland, grassland and wetland (with ponds, reedbed and marshy areas).
We had a stroll around but, on this occasion, didn’t spot a lot of wildlife apart from a couple of coots. However on other visits I’ve seen plenty of butterflies, bees and even frogs!




Granary Square
We crossed the canal by the footbridge next to the nature park which brought us to Coal Drop Yards, another development on a former coal yard site, but very different; this one is devoted to the much more usual urban pastime of shopping. We skipped that and passed through to Granary Square. This large open space is yet another modern transformation of a previously industrial canal-side site. Along its northern edge are several restaurants housed in the former warehouse, the Granary Building. In the centre are seating areas, over 1,000 choreographed fountains and art displays. And on the southern edge is a terrace sloping down to the canal where you can sit and enjoy the view over a take-away coffee or ice cream from nearby outlets.


In Granary Square
This is one of my favourite areas for eating out in London, so I was pleased to be able to introduce Margaret to a restaurant I’ve enjoyed in the past, Caravan. We sat over a selection of tapas for some time, chatting so much that I forgot to take any photos of the food or restaurant. It was a great reminder that while it is lovely to make so many friends around the world through blogging, nothing quite beats a face-to-face meeting!
You’ll have seen some of these photos already in my March round-up, but the story of this Monday Walk would be incomplete without them. All were taken in March 2026.
45 Comments
wetanddustyroads
I agree with Albert Schweitzer – and how wonderful that you get to spend a day with one of your blogging friends. It looks like a colourful outing (meaning both the art and hair colours 😊).
Sarah Wilkie
It was colourful in places, yes, and a lovely day out!
Image Earth Travel
An eclectic mix and the colourful wigs (?) in the Towpath walkers photo are cool. I would love to do this walk.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Nilla, I’m sure you’d enjoy the walk and find plenty to photograph, as we did 😀 I’m pretty sure that’s their natural hair, dyed, rather than wigs!
Image Earth Travel
Wow, so cololurful, but then my 2023 pink and 2024 deep purple wigs I wore to Glastonbury while volunteering are out there… 🙂
rkrontheroad
The reflection in the first image is like a song… Each of those people sitting in front of a poem seems to take on that sentiment.
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks so much Ruth 😊 Margaret and I were both struck by the juxtapositions of people and words!
leightontravels
I was drawn to this as Sladja and I did our first Grand Union / Regent’s Canal walk last spring, spending pretty much the entire day by the water. I also enjoyed reading about St Pancras Gardens, one of my favourite London churchyards. My main reason for visiting was to try and track down and recreate a few Beatles shots from their 1968 ‘Mad Day Out’ photo session. Like you, we enjoyed tracking down some of the famous graves, including Mary Wollstonecraft. Love your captures of Camley Street Nature Park, which I’ve now popped on our to-do list for the next time we’re back.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you very much Leighton 🙂 Camley Street Nature Park is very small, you won’t need more than 10/15 minutes to see it all, unless you linger for refreshments which I do recommend – a pretty canal-side setting, good coffee, and your money supports the work of the trust in keeping it open and looking so lovely!
ThingsHelenLoves
Sounds like a wonderful day, in both place and company.
Sarah Wilkie
It was a lovely day – thank you Helen 🙂
Rose
This is a wonderfully heart-warming story of (blogger) friends meeting, exploring, talking, and strolling. It’s always a joy to meet people who feel like long-time friends. 😊 It was fun to compare the photos you both took…
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks so much Rose 😊 It was great spending time with Margaret. We’ve met up a few times now and hope to do so again later in the year when I’ll be in her neck of the woods.
I. J. Khanewala
Lovely. Interesting to see the differences between the two takes on the same walk
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you 😊 Interesting for us too!
Anna
London in spring sunshine is a glorious thing indeed!
Sarah Wilkie
It is indeed – and today we have 25 degrees (though it won’t last!)
the eternal traveller
Meeting up with online friends is definitely one of the best things about blogging. I have made several dear friends because of my blog. And what an interesting walk. I fully understand being too busy chatting to take photos too. 🙂
Sarah Wilkie
Many thanks Carol 😊 Yes, I’ve made several new friends through blogging – it’s a bonus I didn’t expect when I started!
the eternal traveller
We’ve even been on holidays with friends we’ve made through blogging! Three times with Marsha and Vince, so much fun.
Egídio
How fun to have this walk with Margaret! Your photos are nice.
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks Egidio, it was a great day out 🙂
Suzanne
It is lovely to meet bloggers in person and I have always seen bloggers as penpals. Your images are more detailed (as in close ups) than Margaret’s. An interesting aspect of London which always gives the visiting walker something new with each visit.
Sarah Wilkie
Many thanks Suzanne 😊 I think I focused on details more because this wasn’t a new area to me, as it was to Margaret. I agree about blogging friends being rather like penpals.
Jim Earlam
Lovely read Sarah, graveyards, especially London Graveyards can be so interesting 😀
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Jim 🙂 Yes, there’s usually plenty to see, and photograph, in a graveyard.
Anne Sandler
Beautiful walk and especially nice that you and Margaret we able to get together.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Anne – we had a great time together 🙂
Anabel @ The Glasgow Gallivanter
I read this then went off to visit Margaret’s account to see how they differ – not much! You both seem to have been captivated by the same things. It sounds like a lovely day.
Sarah Wilkie
It was indeed a lovely day – both the spring weather which was perfect for a walk, and spending time with Margaret 🙂
restlessjo
A wonderful Easter, though I’m usually with family. I’m sure it’ll make it onto the blog, when I’ve finished rhapsodising about Terceira xx
Sarah Wilkie
I look forward to hearing about it 😘
Monkey's Tale
Sounds like a really nice, long walk. I just read Margaret’s, interesting to see the similarities and differences in the pictures. Maggie
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Maggie 🙂 We tried to avoid taking exactly the same photos, knowing we’d end up sharing them on our blogs, but it was inevitable that the same things would often attract both of us!
Monkey's Tale
But it was interesting to see how you each chose to crop them too.
Sarah Wilkie
Yes, we found that interesting too 😀
grandmisadventures
I love the assortment of street art- so bright and fun
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks Meg 🙂 Yes, it brightens the urban setting of the canal no end!
margaret21
A great account of a lovely day together Sarah. So glad that blogging gave us the chance for our paths to cross. Here’s my version: https://margaret21.com/2026/04/07/two-bloggers-take-a-london-stroll/
Sarah Wilkie
Likewise 😀 I’ll have a look at your version of course – it’s always interesting to see two different takes on the same outing! And I look forward to hopefully meeting up again in August.
margaret21
Let me have dates when you can and I’ll be sure to keep some time free.
Sarah Wilkie
Will email soon 🙂
margaret21
👍
restlessjo
I’m so glad you chose to do this part of the canal, Sarah, because I’m much more familiar with the part going out past the zoo from Camden Town. I’ve noted the restaurant and should I ever get the chance to meet Margaret or yourself it sounds very promising. Many thanks to you and I hope you had a lovely Easter xx
Sarah Wilkie
A lovely Easter weekend Jo, and the weather even cooperated ☀️ I hope yours was good too? I actually know this stretch of the canal better than the one you mention – in fact I’ve been thinking since we did this walk that I should go in the opposite direction next time! I had a great time with Margaret and would love to be able to do similar with you should the chance arise 🙂 I still regret missing you in Tavira a few years ago 🙁