
Day's Lock Weir Entrance
Address is taken from a point 357 yards away.

Clifton Lock | 3 miles, 3¼ furlongs | |
Clifton Lock Weir Exit No 2 | 3 miles, 2½ furlongs | |
Moorings above Clifton Hampden Bridge | 3 miles, ¼ furlongs | |
Clifton Hampden Bridge | 2 miles, 6 furlongs | |
Moorings above Day's Lock | ½ furlongs | |
Day's Lock Weir Entrance | ||
Day's Lock | 1½ furlongs | |
Day's Lock Weir Exit | 1¾ furlongs | |
Little Wittenham Bridge | 2¼ furlongs | |
Little Wittenham Cut | 3 furlongs | |
Thames - Thame Junction | 1 mile, ¼ furlongs |
Amenities nearby at Moorings above Day's Lock
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Nearest water point
In the direction of Teddington Lock Weir Exit
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In the direction of Teddington Lock Weir Exit
In the direction of Osney Bridge
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In the direction of Teddington Lock Weir Exit
In the direction of Osney Bridge
Nearest place to turn
In the direction of Teddington Lock Weir Exit
In the direction of Osney Bridge
Nearest self-operated pump-out
In the direction of Teddington Lock Weir Exit
In the direction of Osney Bridge
Nearest boatyard pump-out
In the direction of Osney Bridge
Wikipedia has a page about Day's Lock Weir Entrance
A day is approximately the period during which the Earth completes one rotation around its axis, which takes around 24 hours. A solar day is the length of time which elapses between the Sun reaching its highest point in the sky two consecutive times. Days on other planets are defined similarly and vary in length due to differing rotation periods, that of Mars being slightly longer and sometimes called a sol.
The unit of measurement "day" (symbol d) is defined as 86,400 SI seconds. The second is designated the SI base unit of time. Previously, it was defined in terms of the orbital motion of the Earth in the year 1900, but since 1967 the second and so the day are defined by atomic electron transition. A civil day is usually 24 hours, plus or minus a possible leap second in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), and occasionally plus or minus an hour in those locations that change from or to daylight saving time.
Day can be defined as each of the twenty-four-hour periods, reckoned from one midnight to the next, into which a week, month, or year is divided, and corresponding to a rotation of the earth on its axis. However, its use depends on its context; for example, when people say 'day and night', 'day' will have a different meaning: the interval of light between two successive nights, the time between sunrise and sunset; the time of light between one night and the next. For clarity when meaning 'day' in that sense, the word "daytime" may be used instead, though context and phrasing often makes the meaning clear. The word day may also refer to a day of the week or to a calendar date, as in answer to the question, "On which day?" The life patterns (circadian rhythms) of humans and many other species are related to Earth's solar day and the day-night cycle.