The Naze Tower, Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex, 2024

I was attending a conference in Colchester and whilst it is a long drive from Birmingham to Colchester, I planned a visit to the seaside.  My aim was to complete a circular route starting at Walton-on-the-Naze, onto Frinton-on-Sea and then finally Clacton-on-Sea before heading back to Colchester.  My visit to the beach huts and the sea fronts of these towns forms the basis of another post.

The Naze Tower, Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex, 2024
A beautiful day
The Naze Tower, Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex, 2024
View towards Walton on the Naze

My drive from Birmingham was long and tiring and my first port of call was Walton upon Naze. I drove through the town looking for a place to park and carried on until I found myself at the Naze tower.  Here there was ample parking and a place to have lunch.   Stretching my legs after the long drive, I began to investigate the Naze tower.  The architecture is in the form of a pillar and the tower is a prominent structure on the headland overlooking the container terminal of Harwich.  I took several pictures and then went inside the tower climbing up to the observation platform.  

The Naze Tower, Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex, 2024
A window and the spiral staircase.
The Naze Tower, Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex, 2024
Art in the Tower

The structure has had many uses throughout the years and one of them was the installation of a radar dish during the Second World War.  The tower was first used to guide ships into the area acting as a landmark to the ports and river estuary.   There is a circular steel staircase that climbs through several floors.  Some of the floors are part of the tea room whilst others house museum items and then the upper floors act as an art gallery.  Each room is small and circular with a window overlooking the area.  Each floor contains curious museum objects or fascinating works of art as my pictures show. Some of the objects are very random but also fun to view.   Once I had reached the observation platform, there were views out towards the sea and the surrounding landscape.   The weather was glorious and there was not a cloud in the sky.  This was remarkable considering the rain that we have had in recent weeks.   Then it was back down the steel staircase and another chance to admire those items that I had seen on my way up.  I had a good lunch at the visitor centre after the climb.  I was glad that I had stumbled upon the Naze tower.  The future of the structure is a worrying one. Once the tower was a quarter of a mile inland, but now they estimate that it only has a lifespan possibly of 20 years until the sea claims the tower.  This would be a great shame and work is being done to stop the loss of the tower.

The Naze Tower, Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex, 2024
Contemplating the trip to the top.
The Naze Tower, Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex, 2024
The Naze Tower

Further reading about the Naze Tower

MonoVisions 2024, honorable mention, Black and White.

Black and white landscapes appear to be one of my specialities. I do not necessarily look for them but they seem to find me. I was very pleased to receive an honourable mention in the MonoVisions 2024 international photographic competition. This was a picture taken in Wychwood Wood which is local to me and surprisingly not a place that I have visited until recently. The tree trunks in the picture remind me of two people dancing. Whilst the trees are not able to shout, they can twist and turn. Full details of the competition and the honourable mention are on the web site. I was successful in the Monovisions landscape category in 2001 and 2003.

MonoVisions 2024, honorable mention, Black and White.
Twist and turn, Certificate Monovisions, 2024