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Showing content with the highest reputation on 22/06/20 in all areas

  1. Of the house, not the boat. This is in Arts and Crafts not because it's Art, but because the dog is crafty - she got her modelling fee.
    8 points
  2. What we do is to pull a loop of rope through the eye-splice, then put the loop we've just made over the bollard on the stern, and then give it a sharp tug before throwing the rope onto the lock-landing for someone to loop over the bollard there. works for us.
    4 points
  3. Berrichon Sirdar again, in the lower chamber at Le Guetin. Also the tractor, on which I have no further information, except that the group of Dutch and Belgian mariniers around were gnashing their teeth at the way the staircase was adminstered (uphill travellers would not not allowed to progress the following morning, even when there were no downhill boats left, because that was not their specified time of day) Peter Zivy, who started Saint Line, had previously based his fleet of six on the Marne, but moved to Baye on the Nivernais having discovered the canal and been appalled that it was up for closure. He spent a good deal of money in doing so and subsquently moved to Englnad, but by then others were getting established. Prominent amongst them was Michael Street, who became the first hire boat operator on the Midi (encountering concerted hostility from the French tax authorities, to whom anything new must be suspect. Michael did win through in the end, but the process exhausted him;he subsequently sold out to Guinness, who weredeciding on "leisure" at the time).
    3 points
  4. More on the berrichons. In 1968 I travelled with a group of friends on a hire cruiser from Saint Line on the Nivernais. Even then, this was the only hire company in France, and by being based at Baye, on the summit, and lobbying hard, it thereby saved the Nivernais from closure. On an ambitious circuit we passed, at Marseilles-les-Aubigny, the blocked-off entrance to the Canal de Berry, with several of its tradional craft moored out in the main canal. Then, at Le Guetin, there had been a stoppage of some kind, and in thequeue, was the berrichon Sirdar, the family on board certainly eating under an awning at the stern, though possibly sleeping somewhere underneath. The mule/horse combination that towed the vessel was stabled centrally on board, that being the regulation (the animals were not allowed to graze on shore either, though some surely did). I shall post a couple of further photos on a following entry, asap.
    3 points
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  6. Its the bit on the end of its leg. Or if you want to be clever :
    3 points
  7. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  8. As a professional boat signwriter and decorator, I recycle and re-use white spirit constantly. Left overnight in small tins, the pigment sinks to the bottom and the amber coloured spirit is ready to go again once decanted off, perfectly adequate for washing brushes and wiping palettes etc.
    3 points
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  12. The simplest things that anglers can do to be helpful to boaters are to be visible (to boats, even if not to fish!), and to acknowledge your approach in some way. Then both parties know that the rod will be lifted out of the way at the last minute, and perhaps a few friendly words exchanged. It avoids the uncertainty that can lead to horns / emergency slowing down / lines being caught etc.
    2 points
  13. I thought he was going through his Dame Edna phase and was expecting the next avatar change to be to a muppet carrying a bunch of gladioli...
    2 points
  14. A chap I used to moor next to got one, after about the 3rd time he rang me to bring a hammer and chisel to help open his door, worked well until he used the spare emergency key and didn't replace it
    2 points
  15. 'Cause some bright spark (who cant be mentioned but their name starts with Jen i* *** ) couldnt see the black mask so didnt get the joke with my strap line. Thought I better change it so it was a bit more visible.
    2 points
  16. The Peniche in Athy’s photo looks like it should be a automotor so it suggest that it is being towed into a tunnel. So not the St Quentin or Marne Rhin as these have electric tugs. The summit tunnel on the Marne Saone canal has a towpath which I believe was used by tractors but I have in my mind that the entrance canal was narrow for some distance.
    2 points
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  20. No, the voltage drop will be significantly less because the current will be significantly less (I = W/E). But yes, whatever voltage drop there is will be a much smaller percentage of panel voltage.
    1 point
  21. I saw you all coming through Fragnes when you were on the way to St Jean. The operation of the bow rudder was impressive. When Charles saw me I was persuaded to buy a T shirt, I took some photos but can’t find them. Last saw Aster in the basin at St Jean under a sort of poly tunnel in 2018 quite a lot of new timber had been fitted.
    1 point
  22. Yes, I fitted a simple gauge 20 years ago (after telling SWMBO that yes I was sure there was enough water for her to have a shower, but no there wasn't enough to let her rinse the soap off) and it works impeccably. A length of 3 core flex, with one of its wires cut a few inches short, pokes into the tank via a small (resealed) hole in the filler pipe so that it goes 3/4 of the way down. Then a simple circuit consisting of just one CMOS logic chip senses which bits of wire are covered by the water and drives a bi-colour LED. Green means more than half full, Yellow means a quarter to a half, Red means less than a quarter. Total cost, less than 50p
    1 point
  23. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  24. You are aware that they take "misery pills" to get them in the right frame of mind for fishing aren't you? ? Generally I find, as others have, that slowing down, followed by a polite "hello" results in a short conversation. In 47 years boating I have only had incident with a fisherman. That was on the Leigh Branch about 25 years ago, when a teenage fisherboy fired a catapult full of maggots at the stern of my boat after I had passed him. My mate quickly grabbed a mooring pin and leapt onto the bank, brandishing it at the boy. The teenager ran off leaving his fishing gear behind. When my mate got back on the boat, he said he was tempted to throw his fishing gear into the cut, but resisted it.
    1 point
  25. Canaline 43 ample and an easy fit for a BMC 1.5D, just need spacers under the engine mounts, almost everything else is in the same place. TD'
    1 point
  26. That's a massive step up from a BMC 1.5. I think you can expect to look forward to water cooling problems
    1 point
  27. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  28. Ahhh as I can't see strap lines it still makes no sense
    1 point
  29. I just use stixall now. Clean the area and the fittings with a bit of white spirit to degrease first and clean off any excess with the same cloth afterwards. I'd use some of those thin latex gloves too because you've only got to look at these sealants and it's all over your hands.
    1 point
  30. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  31. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  32. Computer will not let me attach two pics for some reason. I sent this pic a couple of years ago but it is relevant now. This is the stern of the Berrichon with its barely understandable shaft and prop arrangement. I think this boat is run by a group of enthusiasts. A google search will throw up more info on these boats.
    1 point
  33. Crikey, that can't have been an easy door to paint with all that foliage hanging in your way!
    1 point
  34. In my limited experience of wide open bits of water its awfully easy to be somewhere where you didn't think you were - and that's in daylight. Entering harbours at night and looking for a little flashing buoy the size of a Christmas tree light against a lit up town is just awful. (Satellites and things weren't invented the last time I had the slightest responsibility for navigating a sailing boat)
    1 point
  35. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  36. I have always larks footed the eyesplice around the bollard. Pull it tight horizontally first, and it never slips off under a vertical pull. I do the same with the bow rope around the T stud stem. No need to pull the entire length of rope through the eye - you can just turn the eye inside out to create the loop (easier to demonstrate than to describe) which you then drop over the bollard and pull tight. It's easy to slacken off the larks foot when you want to remove the rope from the bollard, which is more than can be said for an eye which is a tight fit over the top of the bollard, especially if your fingers are cold and wet. And the larks foot can be done with any size of eye splice - which is helpful as I can never get an eyesplice to come out the exact length intended. I never know how people manage to get tight eye splices around thimbles - mine have always been loose.
    1 point
  37. I've left it to settle, so the pigment ends up at the bottom, then skimmed off the clear spirit at the top. Good enough for the first pass at brush cleaning. Final clean in fresh. Running it through filter paper would be the quick way to remove pigment particles. The various oils and solvents in the paint will still be dissolved in the white spirit. There is always fractional distillation, but running a still might attract the attention of HMRC! Jen
    1 point
  38. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  39. Or, if this is too complicated, grind a 'flat' on the top of the bollard and then weld a short length of 12mm bar to the top to for a "T"
    1 point
  40. Sikaflex 291 is the one you'll see punted for marine stuff. You'll only need a tube but someone who needs a lot could consider Puraflex 40, about half the price and made by Sika.
    1 point
  41. no i did not see that post .it stand to reason tho .recreational craft direct ,and all other legal stuff will be in place .i may be a lot of things wotever . ignorant is not one of them lol .also this project will have P.I if you struggle to read what i say simple dont bother reading it ,and dont bother commenting
    1 point
  42. Eye splice on the rope, pull a loop through the eye splice and drop the loop over the bollard, pull tight. Will not come off. I thought everyone did it this way. Just putting an eye splice over is asking for it to come off and leave you on your back. TD' Col beat me to it!
    1 point
  43. We like it. Although we’re keen gardiners in a small way, we’ve not managed to compost our, erm, product sufficiently. Problem being, we don’t live aboard or cruise for extended periods. So we just leave our no 2s in the rear compartment until nearly full then find a quiet facility to empty into. It’s pretty inoffensive but naturally not everyone’s cup of tea, but it’s only 2 or 3 times a year, we’re CC but on board a week or 10 days at a time max. If it’s been warm and 2 weeks since anyone on board, the first stir or two raises a whiff, but otherwise virtually no smell. Wee bucket is no problem, just don’t forget about it every day or two. Compared to finding pump out or tip in during what’s often a short visit, it suits us. Everyone to their own
    1 point
  44. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  45. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  46. Now this is going to open up a can of worms
    1 point
  47. Search for Magpads and Aluminium U channel on eBay.
    1 point
  48. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  49. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
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