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Tiggs

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Posts posted by Tiggs

  1. Most of the red answers from GoodGurl I have to agree with.

     

    It really is best not to tell authorities and firms things that they don't need to know which might cause issues for you.

     

    But this one We would need to register our driving licences, passports and suchlike at her address no

     

    I would have thought the answer was yes for driving licences and passports.

  2. Finding surveyors and people who know about wooden boats may be a bit tricky - possible insurance issue???

     

    Tendency to distort over time - getting wider and not fitting in some locks - but should be OK at 6'10".

     

    May not want to lift it with a crane or pull it up a ramp - so would need to dry dock it always - certainly an issue with wooden top metal boats.

     

    But here's some more about this boat

     

    http://www.batesboatyard.co.uk/narrowboats.htm

     

    Amused by the comment in the add "modern metal does not flex" which is totally not true - you just have to specify the right type and grade.

     

    also

     

    http://wcbs.org.uk/?page_id=103

     

     

     

    If you like it get it surveyed and buy it (well make an offer) - provided you have the income to maintain it; looks a very nice boat to me.

    • Greenie 1
  3.  

    So in a nutshell were we right or wrong in what we did and if wrong is that specifically for the Bosley flight due to some anomaly or system wide. Thanks

     

    Yes, you were right.

     

    Some CRT people (and some volunteers) think they know all about boating but don't, they only know the BASIC rules which are really only for beginners - close all the gates and paddles on leaving a lock. There was certainly no problem with any Bosley locks where we were there a couple of weeks ago - except the usual complaint about them - no way to cross the top gates, so you have to walk around more than usual.

  4. May be more tricky to get on and off towpaths where you want to than a motorbike, many have narrow entrances near bridges. Motorbikes can be "pushed" oblong a towpath with the engine running in gear, so it looks as if you are not doing something illegal - and you probably are not. This might be more difficult with a quad bike. As for it I don't get what you mean - sure you can put it in a boat and tow it, if you own and license another boat, tor you can easily transport it on a tug style narrowboat, or a working boat, but the tricky bit is how to get it on and off.

  5. Did RCR have a hacksaw? I would have expected that an umbrella might be a horrible tangle, but not prove impossible to remove.

    Yes, surprising isn't it. I did see a post on here that said some Hudsons had only small weed hatches though.

    I would have thought a small(ish) bolt cutter and a selection of hacksaws would get off an umbrella since they are only hollow aluminium.

     

    Sorry I'm not close enough to come and try for you.

  6. If it were me I would not pay this surveyor, he clearly did not do a proper survey. I would not pay a surveyor until I got a copy of the survey and it looked credible. Did you check his qualifications? Usually a report is 3-5 pages with diagrams showing where the weakest point of the hull are and containing a recommendation of any fixing needed. A surveyor should have a least a small craft diploma from IIMS.

     

    Anyway, take the sludge out slowly and see what the hull is like below it; have a bilge pump ready.

    • Greenie 1
  7. I doubt it. That would have used the horse or wife to pull the boat around. I think the guff about using the wind is apocryphal. Obvious, common sense, but wrong!

    Have you ever done it? The wife and the horse would use the wind. It takes most effort when there is no wind.

  8. Old boaters have told me that it was named from using the wind to help your turn.

     

    And anyone who has turned a horseboat / butty a few times, and worked out how to use the wind no matter which way it is blowing, knows this.

  9. Drawning large sums (Over £10000) of cash from your account will attract the interest of Police.

     

    No, I think it's when you put more than £10,000 into a bank it attracts interest - not of the police though - just the bank needs proof that you got it from a legit source. This will be a problem for the seller - not the buyer.

  10. Assuming a private seller.

     

    (It often says on Ebay what payment method they prefer - this does not mean you have to do this - and the seller won't want to pay Paypal 5%!)

     

    If you want to take it immediately then I suspect the seller will only accept cash.

     

    If you are prepared to wait a little while I suggest that you look to see if your bank will provide a bankers draft from a branch local to the seller.

     

    A bankers draft or cheque cannot be cancelled so is as good as cash in this respect.

     

    If you find the boat does not meet the description then you can still refuse to buy it - or reduce your offer. In this case cash would work best too.

     

    Do you have a big friend to go with you with the cash?

     

    Ensure that the seller at least has paperwork to prove his/her ownership of the boat (as far as is possible). Get him/her to sign a receipt for the money and a confirmation that there is no other person or company with a claim to the boat, also get proof of his / her identity. You need to take a witness for this. Any hesitation and walk away.

     

     

    (you also need to check the boat is licensed for the waterway it is on and to obtain at least 3rd party insurance before you move it, and ensure it has a current boat safety cert)

     

    So basically, taking it away is not going to happen???

  11.  

    One could argue that you should have been right against the front gates/cill and holding it there on the engine. That way the inflow may have held you in position as it eddied back to the front of the lock.

     

     

    IMO this is the correct way to do it and I would (almost) always do it this way with a full length boat in a narrow lock, going up. As far as I am concerned this is what fenders are for - to be pressed up against the cill plates and the lock plates to prevent the boat moving. Even so, paddles should not be raised too quickly.

     

    The smaller Beta should be OK I think. You hardly ever need to use the full power anyway. (But maybe think about re-sale - would a buyer be put off asking the same questions given the table of power vs boat length in the other posts?)

  12. On the build so far (just my opinions):

     

    I would never build a boat with a vertical bow. When you crash into something hard you want to ride up it, not stop so suddenly you fall over.

     

    Bow thruster on a 27' long boat. I wouldn't have bothered.

     

    Did you put some circulating dividers in the skin tank?

     

    Black in not a good colour - too hot inside in summer.

     

    The question:

     

    Engineering bricks are best for ballast as Dave says. You can use paving slabs too, but heavy blue bricks allow you to move them about to balance up when you have fitted the boat out. Leave some traps in the floor to do this. Leave enough space to stack two. You then have a choice - no bricks, bricks flat, bricks on side, two bricks flat.

  13. It's a really good idea.

     

    Especially the drop the paddles one.

     

    Actually there are quite a lot of boating dangers that children should be educated about.

     

    If someone invented the self operated locks we use today, there is no way the H&S people would allow them.

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