Yearly Archives: 2018

spring has sprung

old no. 38

spring has sprung

Spring has sprung
The grass is riz
I wonder where
The birdies is?

Ah yes, spring is here down by old bridge number 38. After a bit of a false start that is. No sooner had the weatherman told us on March the first that, ‘today is the metrological start of spring,’ what did we get? The Beast from the East howling in and then storm Emma icing up our southern regions. Winter drawers on then.

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food, glorious food

life afloat

food, glorious food

Hi, Jane Pennington, retired Nurse, boater and food fanatic here, today I’m chatting about a subject that I love …food!

You know, I love food. I could not be further from a ‘Eat to Live’ philosophy, I am firmly in the ‘Live to Eat’ camp. I love thinking about food, shopping for it, planning meals, cooking and best of all eating it. The thought that food is merely fuel represents a total anathema to me!

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wet from the inside out

dawncraft chronicles

wet from the inside out

signs of damp inside Dawn TreaderPHOTO: Signs of water damage on the hardboard – dripping on my bunk, if I wasn’t in it at the time I would be convinced the windows were leaking.

When I first bought my Dawncraft it had no insulation at all but was covered in navy blue office carpet – parts of it still are and some even worse brown carpet on bunk sides - two bits of which still exist years later. The reason for this was to stop the dreaded condensation. This issue never really occurred to me as I had more than enough leaks from vents, windows and anything else connected to the outside world to worry about a little damp from condensing water vapour. However, over the last few seasons I have noticed it getting steadily worse and my desire to stay warm may be the problem.

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sovereign lady

simply linda - telling tales from the towpath

sovereign lady

You may recall last time I told a tale from the towpath, I spoke about ‘Sovereign Lady’ – a very special boat that I hope to see afloat by next summer. She will be a beauty. I will make sure of that. And she will be very special, of that I am determined. Folk will look and admire, but most importantly, they will see how very much loved she is – not only by those who operate her; those who holiday aboard her; and those who tell her story, but also by those who pass her both ashore and afloat. Which brings me now to share with you a very sad tale…..a very, very sad tale.

As the weather has got better, more and more boaters have been out and about. Some have been working hard to ‘spruce up’ their pride-and-joys ready for a lovely long season swanning about on the waterways. Others have been tenderly repairing the havoc and damage cause by the long hard winter we’ve just left. But as I cruise along the cut, I can’t help but notice the horribly high number of boats that look as though they’ve seen no such tender loving care since the day they were first bought!

I won’t name and shame, but some canals seem to have an unusually high number of boats looking battered and bruised. Many show clear signs of long term neglect, not just a few months or even a year or two. Chipped and dirty, where once there was pristine paintwork; well blackened bottoms; and proudly portrayed signs of ownership. These craft were once as regal in stature as ‘Sovereign Lady’ is in name. They shone with brasses; gleamed with polishes; and carried their owners carefully along the cut. Now they languish in despair and disrepair - unloved; uncared about; and undoubtedly unhappy.

I’m sure you can all think of a few examples you’ve seen on your travels. It is beyond me why people pay so much money – for in their day these beautiful vessels would not have been cheap – to acquire the boats, only to leave them to go to wreck and ruin. I’m not talking just elderly craft either. Boats of only a few years age can be seen showing signs of neglect. It’s sad, so very sad.

boat stripped of paint

Fortunately, the time for renaissance has come. Less wasteful persons are seeing the potential of these neglected souls and beginning to breathe new life into their hearts. Renovation and restoration projects abound and I have every confidence these saviours of saddened superstructures will love their soon-to-be beautiful boats as much as I cherish - the as yet unbuilt – Sovereign Lady (has anyone noticed I keep mentioning Sovereign Lady?)

Perusing the internet recently I came across a Facebook site – Narrowboat and Cruiser Projects – which has been set up by ‘restoration enthusiasts’. Jeff Round (admin.) has recently taken care and control of a narrowboat, which is much in need of some TLC. He aims to bring this elderly lady back to her former glory in the coming months…or it may be years, depending on how things go!

Adam Brown’s ‘Dream Catcher’ is also a recent acquisition. She needs a good bath and the funghi removing from her GPR superstructure, so he tells me and then she’ll be gleaming and dazzling Gongoozlers again. I understand that work on her interior is progressing satisfactorily and Adam is counting the days until he can cruise her with the pride she deserves. Both ‘Dream Catcher’ and Jeff’s boat have been sadly neglected in recent years, but both are now looking forward to long and loving relationships with the respective new ‘man’ in their lives.

My ‘girls’ are spoilt in comparison with Jeff and Adam’s recent acquisitions. They have ‘new clothes’ on a regular basis and are scrupulously cleaned by their ‘man servant’ (aka RYA Inland Waterways Instructor, Paul Wilson) before and after every outing they have, but it wasn’t always the case. When we ‘adopted’ them a couple of years ago, both were beginning to look tired and worn. Replacement engines, new leisure batteries, central heating burners, radiators to name but a few of the parts that have been replaced – and our Dolly Mixture is only just coming into her fifth year!

‘Sovereign Lady’ (just in case you think I’ve forgotten her…) will have absolute TLC from day one. She is going to be a very special boat with a very special role in the wider community. Soon everyone will hear about her, because I have a plan……

signs of spring

old no. 38

signs of spring

As mentioned in the last edition of ‘Canals Online’ magazine, spring has well and truly sprung and is now in full swing down by old bridge number 38.

‘How do you know,’ I hear you cry.

Well I’ll tell you a few of the tricks us old timers living down by the cut use in defining the passing of the seasons.

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it was cheap

dawncraft chronicles

it was cheap

When I bought my Dawncraft 25 it had to fit three strict criteria: available immediately, local and come with a mooring. The rest I thought an intelligent man like myself could sort out. The money was duly handed over and I stood on a flexing roof the proud owner of a 1973 icon of boating history.

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bridge on the staffs and worcs

old no. 38

bridge on the staffs and worcs

Oh that looks nice. Cup of tea and a biscuit. Pull a chair over here, put your feet up and relax while you catch up with this edition of Canals Online.

Welcome to the first of what I hope will be many meanderings along and around the ‘cut’ as we call it here in The Black Country. We’ll delve into something here, poke about a bit there and lift a few rocks to see what scurries out.

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beef stew (pressure cooking)

cookery chat with david & sandra biddle

4: beef stew

June and July have been incredibly warm this year, in fact it has been roasting and almost unbearable to sleep on the boat, never mind cook!

Earlier we chatted about BBQ’s and the love of our Cobb. But, to be honest salads and BBQ’s after a while can become very boring and tiresome in our opinion. Sandra also finds cleaning up after a BBQ harder than instructing me to wash a few pots on board!

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the river severn to gloucester quays

pictures worth a thousand words

the river severn to gloucester quays

Much of our leisurely travelling time has been undertaken early in the year, due to trading commitments since the spring of 2014. Last April, returning from a month in New Zealand, we chose to venture southwards to explore at Gloucester Quays - and experience what the Gloucester Sharpness Canal had to offer. Those were in themselves a joy to visit. An additional, unexpected thrill, was the picturesque and fascinating sunken ships on the banks of the River Severn, able to be extremely easily accessed from the Canal.

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