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gatekrash

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Posts posted by gatekrash

  1. You can also use the rugby club across the road, they're happy for berthers to use the bar. Their breakfasts are cheap!  Plus they run an annual music festival in August and give people in the marina free entry.

     

    There's always bridge 35 at the top of Hanbury for diesel, or if you're coming the other way then Crafted also does diesel. 

     

    Sometimes on a Saturday morning / Sunday afternoon Hanbury locks can have a bit of a queue with boats off the marina, we usually plan to leave Friday evening if we're off just for a weekend trip.

  2. 21 hours ago, mrpaulo said:

    Hi,

     

    Following a few holiday's a few years ago we have just come back to cruise the Birmingham mini-ring from Wootton Wawen via the Grand Union and back down from the top of the Stratford. About 10 years ago we spent a week pootling on the Kennet and Avon from Bath where it was not just busy with moored boats, but we regularly passed other boats, or met them at locks.

     

    We were aware that the Kennet and Avon could get busy, we thought we would head to the midlands, but considering we were travelling the first week of the Easter break, making use of the bank holiday, we barely encountered any other boats on the whole trip. 

     

    Working our way into Birmingham also brought a lot of attention from builders and passers-by watching us work the Ashton and Farmers Bridge locks, taking photos and some kids stopping to watch and ask how it worked - which of course we obliged.

     

    Our question really is why it was so quiet? Are less people hiring (cost of living maybe, or after covid cheap package holidays abroad are more enticing), or was it going into Birmingham? 
     

    Genuinely interested in people's thoughts?

     

    Thanks

    Paul

    We were in Brum over the same period, and did a quick run around the Black Country ring over a few days before we went back down to Droitwich. Brum was quiet at both ends of the period we were out. Quiet at every mooring we stopped at, space on the VMs at all the 'honey spot ' locations. As others have said, Easter was early this year, the weather was a bit pants. 

     

    Busiest day was coming down Tardebigge when all the ABC boats from Worcester were on the way up, but I reckon that only amounted to about 10-12 boats over 2 days. 

     

    Most of the Black Prince boats were still in at Stoke Prior. I chatted to the staff whilst we were hovering waiting for the lock and they said they had very few boats out or booked so far this year.

    • Greenie 1
  3. Well that was interesting. Coming through by the holiday Inn or premier Inn or whatever it is, the wind blows you 90 degrees across the canal towards the hotel, then just as you correct it an almighty bounce back off the building sends you straight across towards the moored boats. Fortunately the guy off the fudge boat warned us as we passed so we were ready for it. And getting around salvage turn into the white horses was tricky too. 

    • Horror 1
  4. 1 hour ago, robtheplod said:

    we met the most frustrated woman vlokkie at Tyrley locks, who was shouting instructions to me whilst i was near the previous lock then moaning nobody listens to her as shes a woman... she told all this to my wife who could only just hear her stood across the same lock.... the future doesn't look good for her anger management!

    We came across her last year. She gave me a load of abuse for waiting above the next to bottom lock for a boat to come through, I was following the instruction that was stapled to the lock beam that said set 1 lock ahead or wait to avoid having to pass in the pound with a big shelf, this was the same advice the CRT bod had given us the last time. She started shouting that it was a load of rubbish and that they didn't know anything ! Clearly she hasn't mellowed!!

     

    We saw you had managed to get tucked away in the corner yesterday, looked like a sheltered spot. We're moving down towards Alvechurch today, assuming we can get the boat off the bank in the gale...

  5. 5 minutes ago, beerbeerbeerbeerbeer said:


    Good to catch you the other day. Brum’s still quiet. They’ve saved you a space. 

    👍. Yeah, we'll probably be back on Saturday night if you're still hiding somewhere. Short day tomorrow, probably only going down to Coven, then a long run in to Tipton on Friday, off to Mad O'Rourkes for a faggot pie, then back to Brum Saturday. Mighty go via Titford if the weather's Ok.

     

     

    11 minutes ago, Lady M said:

    Isn't there a stoppage on the Stourbridge?

    Yep you're right, forgot about that, I'd mentally logged it as being open after the winter stoppage and forgot they'd extended it.

  6. We're at Penkridge on the way back home, probably going back via Tipton and the old main line.

     

    Top end of the Severn is on yellows, falling and although there's rain in the forecast it's not looking torrential, so I reckon you'll be ok. 

     

    If you head down the S&W and it goes back on to reds you can always turn left up through Stourton and through Delph, the Stourbridge is a really nice canal anyway.

  7. 6 minutes ago, BEngo said:

     

    Brasso is carp.

     

     

    Unless you have several ancient tins (circa 1970's) which I found when we were clearing out my mum's house and which she used to use to polish her Victorian brass door step. It's the dogs danglies and probably contains loads of now banned chemicals which actually work. It's still got that smell I remember from my youth.

     

    Like a lot of products though I agree that  modern brasso does indeed seem to suck.

  8. And here is the reason he got hung up, from Rich on Roach who was moored below him....

     

     

    Further info on the boat that sank in Gregory's top lock.  He is now tied up below the lock and drying out.  He had gutted the boat prior to a refit (so not much damage inside) but is now trying to get the engine working.  A local said it had caught up on a sunken motorbike, but then we stopped to buy coal from Rich on fuel boat Roach who had been moored below when it happened.  He said it had been overplated and the chine was now much wider than it should have been, so his boat was effectively over 7' wide.  Gregory's top is apparently the narrowest lock on the W&B so he got stuck.  He went home to sleep till CRT came back in the morning, but as Rich explained, the canal weirs through these locks (ie no bywash) so his boat was functioning as a gate ... till the water came over the stern and into the boat.  He looked quite cheerful though down his engine hole!

     

     

     

    • Greenie 3
  9. One of the guys off our marina passed him earlier that afternoon before it happened and says he definitely didn't have his fenders down, he stopped to chat to him for a while.

     

    The fb posts from earlier on say they tried to flush out from the top. 

  10. On 23/03/2024 at 12:29, robtheplod said:

    Well we're a week away and I'm keeping a close eye on the Severn water levels. At present its not closed but give caution (yellow). 

     

    Looking at this week's forecast I reckon it'll be back on reds by the end of the week.

     

    At least they've finished the dredging on the Droitwich now, so if the Severn is passable you've got a couple of options for the last bit.

    • Sad 1
  11. We've got a piece of 3mm twinwall polycarbonate sheet (they sell them in sheets as replacement for greenhouse glass) cut to the size of the wooden frame. We attach it to the hatch with a small rubber sucker which has a string and a toggle attached (like the adjuster toggle on the bottom of a coat), the string is passed through a hole in the middle of the polycarbonate so that the sucker is one side and the toggle the other.

    To fit it we just pull the string through the toggle to the max length, stick the sucker to the hatch then pull the string through the toggle to tighten the sheet up to the hatch.

    Simple, and it stops nearly all the condensation. Without it we need a bucket under the thing !

     

    • Greenie 1
  12. 11 hours ago, rusty69 said:

    Equal quantities of Burnwell and Newburn here. Both will stay in for 24 hours, but both produce much more ash than they did 3 years ago. 

    We've used Newburn at home for a few years, works really well on our stove which is fitted into a very large unlined stone chimbley and quite fussy about solid fuel.

     

    I've noticed that this year's tonne of Newburn we've bought is different from last year, the briquettes are softer and aren't burning out fully to ash, plus they're needing a lot more depth to get the burn right.

     

    I guess there are so many variables when they make this stuff that it's only to be expected that reach batch is slightly different.

  13. 5 minutes ago, Alan de Enfield said:

     

    Shows how long ago since I was involved with the Army Youth Team teaching survival.

     

    I've still got a plastic box full of the stoves and tablets - JIC.

    It was about 6 or 7 years ago they switched over I think. The new stuff has some advantages, you can light it with a spark, it's a whole lot cleaner, but it doesn't seem to put out as much heat as hexi did.

    Keep that hexi sealed, the last lot I stored loose in their wax packets in the shed had done the whole sweating thing. Still lit fine though. The rest is in sealed plastic bags and still looks ok.

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