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Dalcour Maclaren notice(s)

Posted on January 22, 2024January 23, 2024 by ecwlarcombe

Dear all – I have managed to have a conversation with a person about the notice posted near Wraysbury Station.  Hopefully Dalcour Maclaren will respond by email later today.  I think the notice is fiction and simply used to hide the primary purpose.

My guess is that the notice itself (although realistic) is not actually genuine in its stated purpose.  The notice is asking for landowners to make themselves known but that is not the objective.

I think the notice is drafted and posted in order to stimulate responses to the RTS NSIP DCO mandatory pre-application consultation.  Any such responses will then be recorded in order to demonstrate that the RTS consultation has been widely circulated and properly conducted.  A questionable – perhaps underhanded tactic?

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DATCHET

The name "Datchet" is thought to be Celtic in origin, and the last part may be related to cet ("wood"). In the Domesday Book it is called "Daceta".lla. Datchet is first mentioned between 990 and 994, when King Ethelred made small grants of land here.

HORTON

The village name "Horton" is a common one in England. It is Old English in origin and derives from the two words horu 'dirt' and tūn 'settlement, farm, estate', presumably meaning 'farm on muddy soil'.In the Domesday Book of 1086 it was recorded as Hortune.

WRAYSBURY

The village name was traditionally spelt Wyrardisbury; it is Anglo Saxon in origin and means 'Wïgrǣd's fort'. Its name is recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Wirecesberie and as Wiredesbur in 1195. The name is seen again as Wyrardesbury in 1422.

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