Way back in 2021, I ventured to Fort Hoo in the River Medway via an inflatable canoe as detailed in my report below. It was an incredibly photogenic place, although the adventure became more memorable for missing the high tide by a matter of half an hour and having to wait until dark to return, which made for a somewhat trecherous expedition having to eat blackberries and marsh plants to keep the calories going! Ever since then, I've wanted to tick off the second Medway fort, but we'd decided canoe probably wasn't the wisest way and would have to one day hopefully arrange a better means of transport.
Report - - Hoo Fort, River Medway - September 2021
Fast forward to 2023 and we're fortunate enough to know @Gaggle of gays armed with a trusty RIB. So the trip was arranged and @KismetJ and I headed out to the Medway once more to complete the mission. I'd also had my eye on the Kingsnorth cranes for some time, so the plan was to do both. The wind speed was moderate so it wouldn't be the smoothest ride, although as I'm told it can be a lot worse.
We loaded up the boat with our kit, cameras securely in dry bags. After giving the boat a manual start it was thankfully set to go and off we headed, taking a ride through Rochester along the river. This was certainly a lot faster than using a canoe. After passing several points of interest from another perspective, including the Soviet sub, we eventually neared Darnet island after passing Fort Hoo conquered on our previous eventful expedition.
Setting up the RIB at Cuxton Marina
Report - - Hoo Fort, River Medway - September 2021
Fast forward to 2023 and we're fortunate enough to know @Gaggle of gays armed with a trusty RIB. So the trip was arranged and @KismetJ and I headed out to the Medway once more to complete the mission. I'd also had my eye on the Kingsnorth cranes for some time, so the plan was to do both. The wind speed was moderate so it wouldn't be the smoothest ride, although as I'm told it can be a lot worse.
We loaded up the boat with our kit, cameras securely in dry bags. After giving the boat a manual start it was thankfully set to go and off we headed, taking a ride through Rochester along the river. This was certainly a lot faster than using a canoe. After passing several points of interest from another perspective, including the Soviet sub, we eventually neared Darnet island after passing Fort Hoo conquered on our previous eventful expedition.
Setting up the RIB at Cuxton Marina
FORT DARNET
Built alongside Fort Hoo, Fort Darnet was constructed between 1870 and 1872 following the 1859 Royal Commission which began the controversial nation-wide Palmerston forts defence scheme. The forts are circular and consist of two floors; magazines and barracks below for up to 100 men, and an 11-gun deck above (8x 8-inch and 3x 7-inch RMLs), in the form of an outer ring around a central staircase column. The forts were originally intended to have another gun deck ontop, although this was scaled back due to subsidence and excessive costs. Never used in conflict, the forts were decomissioned before WW1, although Darnet saw minor alteration in WW2 as an observation post with a pillbox built on its roof.
Arriving near the island, we navigated around several WW2-era ferro-concrete barges used as they often are as breakwaters. We got paddled the boat close to shore and hopped out, anchoring up on the small beach. Being a small island, we were soon confronted with the facade of the impressive fort and were in. There's something very peaceful about being at the Medway forts, completely encircled in a lost ruin cut off from civilisation, joined only by the nature that grows within. Given that the bottom level is heavily flooded, we could only explore the gun deck. We didn't stop for long given that it was the first stop on our trip, so I rattled off a few shots and we were done in 20 minutes.
Merged panorama of the fort exterior
This gun emplacement was strangely walled off. @Gaggle of gays suggested it may have been a WW2 alteration during the fort's time as an observation
post to prevent the silhouette of personnel being spotted from the outside. Now it's used as an informal toilet.
The pillbox ontop was one of the few changes to the fort during WW2. The flag mount
is also visible here, not seen on Fort Hoo. Otherwise the two forts are very similar.
Eyeing up the potential to follow.
TBC...
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