

On Sunday morning, I went to Putney, as it was somewhere I hadn’t mudlarked before. I tried going down the Brewhouse Slipway, but it was too muddy. I then found the steps next to Putney Bridge, which were also muddy, but there was a handrail to hold onto for the top steps at least, so I made my way down slowly. The foreshore was covered in silt, as the tide must have started receding before the Uber boats started running again.
I made my way around the mud and the streams of water, and got to the river’s edge. I heard bagpipes being played. It was Remembrance Sunday, so I suspected they were coming from the church just above.
Other people on the foreshore included a person metal detecting, and a person who told me that it was muddy the way they came, and I told them that I’d found a Bovril jar.
At one point I was stood between the river and a large stream bit, as if I was on an island, and even though I knew the tide times and knew the water was still going out, I wasn’t sure I felt that safe, so turned around.
I didn’t take home:
1. A pink iPhone, smashed up, no screen, underneath Putney Bridge.
2. Hindu offerings, a collection of them washed up together.


I walked underneath the bridge and then came across some gates that had warning signs that said lights flash and that there could be sewer outfalls without warning. I walked quickly past, lights were not flashing.
Things I found:
1. A plastic frog head. I think it was a real animal to start with, so was glad to find it wasn’t!
2. A bracelet, perhaps?
3. Glass that says “blis” on it. Probably Chablis, but I like to imagine I found "bliss"
4. Glass that was part of an R White’s bottle.


More things:
1. A Bovril jar! Very excited by this one. It’s not one of the oldest types of Bovril jars as it doesn’t have a long neck, but it does have “oz” on it, so it’s certainly not recent.
2. Barrett & Elers bottle fragment
The “B&” were visible on this fragment, but the symbol on it is more of the giveaway - it’s of a vulcanite bottle stopper! The company was registered in 1897 and Henry Barrett invented this type of bottle stopper in 1872.
An advert from 1883:
https://boroughphotos.org/lambeth/advert-barrett-elers-london/–
3. Solo bottle fragment
On the bottom of the bottle it says “Property of Solo B”. The Solo Bottling Company were based at 10 Whitcher Place, NW1. Using 1940s - 1960s OS Maps, it says “Mineral Water Bottling Works” at this address. Whitcher Place does still exist but where this building was located is now UCL student halls.
From a listing of a 1954 receipt on eBay, I've found that Solo Bottling Company were linked to Solo Orchards, who made orange juice and other drinks.
There are various adverts from Solo Orchards, such as “ah! oh! SOLO” from 1948, and eBay also has a beer mat for sparkling orange listed.
Solo Orchards were taken over by Idris in 1960.
So the bottle I found could have contained sparkling orange from Solo Orchards, and is likely to be from the 1940s or 1950s.
1954 receipt:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/1677965983991948 advert:
https://flic.kr/p/2fFCAWUSparkling orange beer mat:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/306036568891--
After that, I continued along the river, through Wandsworth Park, and past Church Draw Dock (another place to mudlark) and a heron, and onwards, over Battersea Bridge, and past the sphinx benches, and then over Vauxhall Bridge, and I stopped my walk there. I walked about 11 miles that day.
(You need a permit to search or mudlark on the Thames foreshore.)