Management From the head of navigation at Cricklade to the start of the
tidal section at
Teddington Lock, the river is managed by the
Environment Agency, which has the twin responsibilities of managing the flow of water to control flooding and provide navigable water depths and also regulating and promoting navigation on the river. As a result, all the locks and weirs on the river, except the semi-tidal
Richmond Lock, are owned and operated by the Environment Agency. Richmond Lock is managed by the
Port of London Authority. Most of the Environment Agency's locks and weirs are staffed by a
lock keeper, who often lives in a house adjacent to the lock. The lock keeper's duties involve both operating the lock, and managing the river levels above the lock by adjusting the weir openings.
Locks Most locks are operated by their keepers between 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. from June to August, with progressively shorter hours as the hours of daylight reduce, and they are not operated during the lock-keeper's lunch hour between 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. During the summer months Assistant Lock Keepers and volunteers are employed to deal with the heavy traffic and avoid the lunch-time closure. However
Teddington Lock, which is the most downstream of the Environment Agency locks and separates the long
Kingston reach of the non-tidal river from
Hampton Court to the tideway, is staffed 24 hours a day. During winter, some locks will be closed for maintenance and the status has to be checked with the Environment Agency. The locks at the upper end of the river, from
St John's Lock to
King's Lock, are manually operated. All other locks on the Thames are hydraulically operated. All locks, except Teddington, can be operated by boat crews outside manning hours, using the adapted system of "public power", which allows boaters to use the hydraulic machinery at reduced power, except during the hours of darkness. Locks are popular visitor attractions, and many serve refreshments. Locks were often built adjacent to islands and therefore many are situated in remote locations, hard to find and can only be reached on foot. Many locks also have moorings that can be used overnight, and some include electric charging points for electric powered boats. All the locks have obvious access from the
Thames Path, except for
Whitchurch Lock which is within an island and only accessible by boat;
Cookham Lock requires a 1km diversion from the Thames Path; and Marlow Lock requires a short diversion.
Weirs The Environment Agency has the responsibility of managing the flow of water along the length of the river to prevent flooding on particular reaches and to maintain navigation depths. The volume and speed of water down the river is managed by adjusting the gates at each weir. Occasionally this can result in a fast stream rendering navigation more hazardous. These conditions are indicated by yellow or red warning boards on the lock gates and the status of all locks is published by the Agency. The Agency cannot legally stop navigation when the red boards are out, but continuing to travel is inadvisable and may invalidate a boater's insurance. Occasionally flooding is unavoidable, and the Agency issues Flood Warnings with three levels of severity - Flood Alert, Flood Warning, and Severe Flood Warning. In recent years the
Salmon Conservancy has been installing
fish ladders at weirs to allow
salmon to travel up river. Today some weirs are often used recreationally by
kayakers and
canoeists for activities such as
whitewater slalom and
playboating. Specifically,
Hambleden Weir and
Boulter's Weir have
EA sanctioned modifications made to them for such use.
Reaches The locks and weirs, in effect, break the river up into 44 lakes or lock reaches. Each lock controls the reach above it and thus identifies it. Each reach has its own character and points of interest. Many reaches host
regattas and other events and these are coordinated through a River User’s Group for the reach. The Environment Agency may close all or part of a reach for an event, but most regattas only require one side of the river which may then be closed off. When the boats were
horse drawn, a
towpath was needed on the bank side. This towpath has formed the basis for the
Thames Path which runs between the source and mouth of the river. The path runs between locks and is therefore often the main means of access on land. Where the towpath changes from one side of the river to the other ferries were once provided. These have now almost all disappeared and the Thames Path has to be diverted to the nearest bridge, often a considerable distance, to cope with this.
Foot crossings All of the Thames locks have walkways on top of the lock gates, so except at Whitchurch Lock one can cross to the lock island from the adjacent bank. Upstream of Wallingford, many locks also have walkways on top of the weir to cross the whole river. Downstream of Wallingford,
Caversham Lock and
Boulters Lock have footbridges nearby, and
Hambleden Lock has a walkway on top of the weir, but the other locks below Wallingford do not allow river crossing on foot. ==List of locks and weirs==