logo
Road closures for international walking event

Road closures for international walking event

Yahoo09-05-2025

Details of road closures have been confirmed for a 44th annual international walking event.
The Waendel Walk, which is organised by Wellingborough Town Council and takes place in Northamptonshire, helps raise money for cancer charities and is the only British fixture on the Internaional Marching League calendar.
Both amateur and professional walkers from 35 countries are expected to take part in a range of events from 9-11 May.
Specific road closures include Main Road between Wollaston and Grendon and Irchester Road between Irchester and Farndish on Saturday.
Hardwick Road, The Slips, and Harrowden Lane will also be closed on Sunday to ensure the safety of participants.
Wellingborough Town Council said it had appointed a "professional traffic management company" to implement and oversee the closures.
During the closures only residents and their visitors - and those requiring access to businesses within the affected areas - will be permitted entry.
This year's Waendel Walk will feature more than a dozen different walks through Northamptonshire countryside with distances ranging from 5km (3.1 miles) to 42km (26 miles).
Wellingborough Town Council said the event - which is supported by a team of about 50 volunteers - provides "physical, mental, emotional and spiritual wellbeing" in a "unique part of the world" and helped put the county "on the map".
Follow Northamptonshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Waendel Walk
International Marching League

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

London's ‘Little America' Is No More. What's Taking Its Place?
London's ‘Little America' Is No More. What's Taking Its Place?

New York Times

time40 minutes ago

  • New York Times

London's ‘Little America' Is No More. What's Taking Its Place?

From the Eagle Bar on the top floor of the new Chancery Rosewood Hotel in Mayfair, the views across London are unobstructed, save for a gilded aluminum eagle, its wings spread wide, which crowns the midcentury modern building that once housed the United States Embassy to the United Kingdom. The Americans pulled up stakes in 2018, relocating the embassy to a giant fortified cube on the south bank of the Thames. They left behind the eagle, along with a collection of monuments and memorials in the adjoining Grosvenor Square — relics of what was once an American citadel in its ancestral land. John Adams lived on the square. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower had his wartime office there. A statue of Franklin D. Roosevelt gazes across the patchy lawn. Diplomats threw star-spangled election night parties, while hopeful travelers lined up outside for visas. During the Vietnam War, protesters clashed with police under the trees. Now, Grosvenor Square is being recast for a post-American age. The Chancery plans to open to guests in early September, its Persian Gulf owners having converted the Brutalist landmark, designed by Eero Saarinen, into a Rosewood luxury hotel, with junior suites starting at 1,400 pounds (nearly $1,900) a night. The square, which lies in front of the hotel and has a different owner, is closing this week for a 13-month refurbishment. The project will add lush plantings that celebrate biodiversity and link the six-acre expanse, which has fallen into a state of neglect, more closely to its 18th-century Georgian roots. The owner, Grosvenor Property, insists it is preserving the legacy of a place once known as 'Little America.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

This Is How Long Travelers Hold Their Bowels and Bladder While Traveling, Survey Finds
This Is How Long Travelers Hold Their Bowels and Bladder While Traveling, Survey Finds

Travel + Leisure

time13 hours ago

  • Travel + Leisure

This Is How Long Travelers Hold Their Bowels and Bladder While Traveling, Survey Finds

There are a lot of things that can throw off your digestion while traveling. From the airplane ride itself to eating new foods in your destination that are far from your typical meals, it's no surprise when our tummies get a little upset. The key thing to know here is that it's nothing to be embarrassed about. In fact, a new QS Supplies survey shows that 51 percent of travelers experience "digestive changes" while traveling. But that's not the wildest stat it found. In March, the online bathroom warehouse brand, released the findings of its Toilet Troubles While Traveling Study, which surveyed more than 1,000 UK and American travelers to learn the "unfiltered truth about what really happens when nature calls on the go." The most critical piece of information this survey found is that if you're a traveler it's important to try to overcome any fear of public toilets, which is a real diagnosable disorder known as parcopresis, or "shy bowel syndrome," which the IBD News Daily explains, is "the inability to defecate in public." It noted that while the American Psychiatric Association doesn't officially recognize parcopresis, it does consider paruesis (aka shy bladder syndrome) a social anxiety disorder. Paruesis impacts up to 16.4 percent of people. The reason it's critical to address this before traveling is because the QS Supplies survey found that the average traveler will hold their bladder and bowels for 83 minutes if they are traveling instead of using an unfamiliar toilet. It also noted that "one in five travelers hold it for more than two hours before using an unfamiliar toilet." The survey stated that 89 percent of respondents said they hold it over "cleanliness concerns," followed by 60 percent citing "bad smells" and 53 percent citing "no toilet paper or soap." "Brits tend to hold it longer than Americans, waiting 90 minutes on average before using an unfamiliar toilet while traveling, compared to 79 minutes for Americans," the team shared in the findings. "This hesitation extends to the air as well, where opinions on in-flight etiquette vary. More than half of travelers (52 percent) believed people should never fart on an airplane and should hold it in, with Americans (54 percent) more likely than Brits (47 percent) to agree." Again, can't stress enough, science says to please just pass the gas. You can hurt yourself holding it in. Still, the respondents to the QS Supplies survey certainly had feelings about other people's stomach issues. Nearly 1 in 5 respondents (19 percent) said that passengers with "particularly smelly farts should be removed from a flight, while 29 percent of travelers said they should be "reimbursed for sitting next to someone who farts, with Americans (33 percent) more likely than Brits (24 percent) to feel entitled to a refund." This, despite the fact that 40 percent of respondents also stated they have experienced a bathroom emergency while traveling. So yes, digestive drama on the road is more common than you think and remember: we're all human and none of this has to be as embarrassing or scary as it seems. Just maybe don't skip the pre-boarding bathroom break if you've got the chance.

Talking points as England continue World Cup qualifying campaign against Andorra
Talking points as England continue World Cup qualifying campaign against Andorra

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Talking points as England continue World Cup qualifying campaign against Andorra

England continue their World Cup qualifying campaign with an away match against Andorra on Saturday, played in Barcelona. Here, the PA news agency takes a look at the talking points ahead of the game. Destination USA Thomas Tuchel visited the Spanish Grand Prix at the weekend but is taking this match seriously (Bradley Collyer/PA) Victories over Albania and Latvia in Thomas Tuchel's first two games in charge in March set England on the right path to North America next summer and they currently top Group K after two games, though their biggest rivals Serbia are yet to kick-off their campaign. However, a victory over the minnows in Barcelona will put Tuchel's men one step closer to the World Cup ahead of September's toughest game of the group in Serbia. The German is not taking the game lightly, naming his strongest possible squad, including players who are going to the Club World Cup later this month. Brothers in arms Trevoh Chalobah earned his maiden call-up to the senior squad after an impressive season for Chelsea and he has his sights on history. If he is able to get on the pitch against Andorra – or Senegal in next Tuesday's friendly – he will follow in his brother Nathaniel's shoes by representing England, making the Chalobahs the 21st set of brothers to play for England. Only two of them have been post-war, Bobby and Jack Charlton and Phil and Gary Neville, while Trevoh will be hoping his international career lasts longer than the six minutes 54 seconds Nathaniel managed in his one and only appearance in 2018. The heat is on England are already preparing for the extreme temperatures they are expected to face in next summer's World Cup and they have spent the week training in the 27-degree heat of Spain rather than at St George's Park. The players have been doing acclimitisation testing this week, consisting of cycling in sauna-like temperatures, and taking scientific tests on their core body temperature and reaction to heat. They will get some in-game experience of it against Andorra as well, with temperatures expected to be in the mid-20s when the match kicks off on Saturday tea-time. Ivan the great Most people thought Ivan Toney had sacrificed his England career when he made a money-spinning move to Saudia Arabia last summer, but Thomas Tuchel has brought him back into the squad. The striker scored 23 goals in 30 Saudi Pro League appearances for Al-Ahli, helping the side to win the AFC Champions League Elite competition. With Ollie Watkins also back in the squad after injury, captain Harry Kane has some competition in attack. Down Andorra out? England won 5-0 against Andorra last time they met (Nick Potts/PA) This match is not a question of whether England will win, but how many goals will they score. Andorra are well down the FIFA rankings, in 173rd and below Papa New Guinea and St Vincent and the Grenadines, and have only ever won four World Cup qualifiers – two of them against San Marino. England have a healthy record against them, winning all of their six previous meetings to an aggregate of 25-0 and should strengthen that.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store