Hidden treasure: Hartford Union Canal gives up its secrets |
As I stepped off the ladder and onto the exposed bed of the Hertford Union canal, heading towards what I hoped was a Victorian bottle, I sunk straight in above my knees and spent the next five minutes trying to dig myself out with a shovel.
Canal mud is treacherous, deceptively
solid-looking on the surface but giving way to thick sludge beneath. Shallow
water pooled in the center of the three-quarters of a mile (1.2km) long trench,
but sediment swirled with every step, making it hard to see anything.
Hidden treasure: Hertford Union Canal gives up its secrets |
Hidden treasure: Hertford Union Canal gives up its secrets |
This wasn't the only apparent evidence of a crime. There were safes, empty apart from mud. Volunteers also found a BB gun
and a sword, age, and provenance unknown.
She suggested that many tires lying on the
mud originally hung from the sides of boats to prevent scrapes when they pulled
in for mooring.
Some objects, like traffic cones, must have
been lobbed in by bored teenagers. Other items were chucked into the water in
anger.
As we battled through mud, a woman shouted
down to ask if we had seen her friend's bicycle: he had been in a traffic
dispute with the driver of a car who had thrown his bike off the bridge and
into the canal.
Hidden treasure: Hertford Union Canal gives up its secrets |
I don't know why there was a
collection of tiny ceramic polar bears, horses, and a gorilla beneath a bridge,
but I imagine an angry child hurling in his sibling's collection.
Litter was everywhere, beer cans and
plastic wrappers dropped by people who couldn't be bothered to find a bin.
The Hertford Union Canal was never a commercial success, but it runs alongside the busy Victoria Park and has seen working, wartime, and leisure activity for close to 200 years, as well as industry along its banks.
Hidden treasure: Hertford Union Canal gives up its secrets |
Perhaps some of the older objects have been
removed by dredging.
Heritage items, like the helmet and sword,
will be kept by the CRT and returned to the finder if they are found not
relevant to the canal's history.
The jumbled objects beneath the water may not be your average treasure, but they are clues to the everyday lives and emotions of the people who live above the surface.
BBC NEWS
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