RichmondRound

The borough at its fullest

There is a moment in June when Richmond upon Thames stops apologising for itself. The hedges are dense. The trees meet overhead. Every garden, public and private, seems to have found its proper size.

This is when the borough earns its reputation. Not in spring, when everything is tentative, but now, when the green has weight and the roses have opened across front gardens from Ham to Whitton. The scent carries over walls. You catch it walking past.

The parks are at their best too. Bushy Park’s chestnuts have settled into their full canopy. The Thames Path is shaded for long stretches. Even the smaller spaces, the pocket parks and the churchyards, feel generous.

It will not last. By August, the grass will be tired and the borders will need tidying. But right now, everything is exactly as full as it should be. The borough is showing off, quietly, in the way it does best.

This is the moment to notice.

Have you spotted a corner of the borough looking particularly fine this week?

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A July day that stays with you

There are those rare July days that print themselves into memory. The sort where the heat settles early and the shade under the trees feels like a gift. You might remember one from a summer afternoon in Richmond Park, the grass burnt gold, the air thick with warmth. Or along the towpath at Petersham, where […]

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Long light, slow pace: summer evenings in the borough

The light hangs on past nine now. You walk home from the station and the day still feels unfinished, suspended. The pavements hold their warmth. Front gardens blur into soft focus as the sun drops. This is the borough at its most forgiving. People linger outside pubs along the river. Joggers pass at a gentler […]

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The strawberries are in

The strawberries have arrived at the greengrocers along the high streets. Not the woody, airfreighted ones that turn up in February. The real ones. The ones that smell like something before you bite into them. You know summer has started when the first British strawberries appear in those green cardboard punnets. They bruise if you […]

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The sound of summer: fields fill with cheering voices

The sports days have begun. Across the borough, playing fields that sat quiet through winter now hum with the particular energy of children running, parents cheering, teachers timing races with clipboards and stopwatches. You see it at Marble Hill Park, on the open stretches behind the schools in Hampton, across the green spaces in Whitton. […]

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The midsummer evening that went on forever

You know the one. Late June, when the sun refuses to set and the sky holds blue until nearly ten. The air is still warm at half past nine. You’re in a garden somewhere in Richmond, or maybe walking the towpath near Petersham, and time feels suspended. The roses are at their best now. Heavy […]

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The Bench

A different conversation about Richmond, every day.