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gatekrash

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Posts posted by gatekrash

  1. We often see 'Roach' in Brum.

     

    Looking at his Facebook page, he's in Gas Street on Sunday, heading for Alvechurch on Monday and then Tardebigge on Tuesday, so would fit right in with your plans.

     

    Search faceache for 'coal boat roach' and his timetable is on there.

  2. 49 minutes ago, Rob-M said:

    I always used a figure of 8 when rock climbing, either tied with a loop and clipped in a karabiner or a single 8 tied, end fed through the harness and then follow round the 8 to complete the knot.

    We use rethreaded figure 8s for setting up anchor points around the bottom of trees or urban anchors etc, in exactly the same way.

     

    47 minutes ago, Jerra said:

    When I started back in the early 60s bowlines were the preferred knot then over the years it changed until it was virtually all figure of eights.

    I always tried not to "take swings" on a rock face, I found it generally hurt.

    I think the Coastguard moved away from bowlines when they did away with breeches buoys and rocket lines (mid 80s ish ?), and the cliff rescue side got more technical. It was certainly all on figure 8s when I started in the late 90s.

    One of the guys in our team is old enough to remember being lowered over a cliff on a piece of manilla with a single bowline around his waist and ten dockyard mateys holding on to the other end. Nowadays H&S and LOLER regs are so tight we can't go anywhere near a cliff without 2 lines attached and anchor points which are 'unquestionably safe'.

     

    • Greenie 1
  3. 1 hour ago, Jerra said:

    Not so.  Look at climbing.com

     

     Climbers use various knots to tie in, but the Trace-Eight is the easiest to learn and the least likely to untie itself. Unfortunately, it cinches up tight after a hard fall, making it difficult to untie. Consider this a small price to pay for security. Practice this knot until you can tie it, rain or shine, in the dark.

    Agreed  In that instance it's almost certainly being tied on a bight to provide a terminal eye at a rope end to allow attachment onto a line via krab rather than as a stopper knot.

     

    It's a standard knot we use every day on rope rescue systems. We tend to use blood knots for stoppers, not figure 8s. We also use alpine butterflies which allow a 3 way pull on a line and which can easily be tied anywhere along the length of the line.

     

    Can't say I use any of them on a canal. Round turn and 2 half hitches, yes, but they don't belong anywhere in our rope rescue work.

     

    • Greenie 1
  4. 1 hour ago, Captain Pegg said:

     

    I've moored overnight within the Tardebigge flight on a few occasions. What's selfish about that? 

    Nothing if you're ready to move relatively early in the morning before the flight gets busy, sh*t happens and sometimes you don't make it up or down before you need to stop, I get that. But blocking short pounds so that 2 boats can't pass just because you want your breakfast *is* selfish, and in breach of CRT's mooring obligations which state

     

    "Don’t moor In locks, lock approaches or in lock flights".

     

    Clearly the CRT lengthsman had the same view, hence his visit that morning to BP.

  5. We did our summer cruise a few weeks ago, Droitwich over to Gayton way via the GU and then around the Coventry to come back.

     

    In that time we experienced :

    A boat who we followed through Braunston tunnel who proceeded to start dropping down through the top lock by themselves, even though they knew we were right behind them, and then refused to wait to share the next lock even though we asked them to. They then turned the next lock against a boat coming up, even though he was just coming into the lock landing, and told him that they thought he was going down 'Backwards ?' was his reply.

     

    At Rugby there was another boat moored in the winding hole, despite there being space on the Armco 20 yards away. I asked him politely if he would like to move up so that he wasn't blocking it, his reply 'well is been ok so far'.

     

    At Tardebigge wharf, a Black Prince boat was moored at the end of the Anglo Welsh yard completely blocking the bridge. It was impossible to get through at all. They had apparently stopped for water even though they had only picked the boat up 2 hours before. Fortunately one of the Anglo Welsh guys was still on site and 'directed' them.

     

    The next day going down Tardebigge, we had 4 Black Prince boats moored at various places in the flight who had clearly spent the night there. The worst was a pair moored together in the curved pound above the reservoir. Their comment when they saw us coming was that they hoped we could get past (we did with a bounce off them and we are only 50 foot). I asked if they were going to move soon as the flight would be busy, 'no we are still having showers and haven't had breakfast yet'. Later we spoke to another Black Prince crew who were about to moor on a lock landing to have breakfast. They said that Black Prince had told them to do as many locks in the flight as they felt like and then moor up when they had done enough, so you can't blame the hirers. There is a CRT employed lengthsman at Tardebigge who was not pleased and was on his way to see BP to have words.

     

    At the bottom of the flight we had someone so desperate to turn a lock on us that he'd opened both bottom paddles despite the top gate being wide open as the boat in front of him who was coming up had left it open for us. 

     

    Yesterday we've done a short trip down to Worcester. Every single offside tail gate from Offerton down to Bilford had been left open, so someone clearly couldn't be bothered to walk back over the lock to close then and left it to be someone else's problem.

     

    I've also lost track of just how many paddles have been left open.

     

    We were only out for 3 weeks, what stuck in my mind was just how many things we'd seen in such a short time. I know it was peak season, so a lot of boats moving, but we've never come across so much 'couldn't give a toss' attitude before. And whilst a good proportion of the incidents were hirers so could be put down to ignorance, not all of it was.

     

     

  6. 3 hours ago, Wanderer Vagabond said:

    One anecdote from my working days was when a gent came into Brixham Police Station and insisted that he'd just come across a 'landmine' on the coast path near to Coleton Fishacre, As the expendable junior I got sent with him to have a look (no-one else fancied the hike). Now using a small measure of commonsense my view from the outset was that it was unlikely to be a genuine landmine since 1) I don't think any were planted on the coast path, if any were laid, they were probably going to be on the beaches and 2) it was pretty unlikely that it would have been undisturbed by someone treading on  in the 40 years since the end of the war and the mid 80's when I got sent to it.

     

    On arrival at the location with the aforementioned gent he showed me a rounded item half buried in the soil. Nearby was a length of discarded rope from a fishing net so I tied it around what could be seen of the item and then from some distance away yanked it out of the ground. What emerged was a rounded base without the ring supports similar to this photo.......

     

    ........so all it was in reality was an old paraffin camping stove. I could see why he thought it was a landmine though.

    We often get called to all sorts of random stuff - fire extinguishers, starter motors, fridge compressors are very common. Once they've been sat in the sea for a while and turned rusty then they can often look "sinister".

     

    However one of my favourite jobs was to this one...

     

    47024632_1156808067828165_1920074316611846144_n.jpg.e23adf89a6e4272d5ee5d61d20f17f52.jpg

     

    At the old naval gunnery school at HMS Cambridge (now a National Trust site). When EOD turned up they were suitably confused, as it's a 4.7 inch Armour Piercing shell, and was never used on that site, so shouldn't have been there. they reckoned it was probably a training aid that someone had rolled over the cliff as a means of "easy disposal" when the site was being decommissioned.

  7. 2 hours ago, Naughty Cal said:

    Loads of blackberries here. The hedgerows are heaving.

     

    Had a bumper crop of carrots and beetroot as well. Too much to know what to do with 😀

     

    Bumper crop bad winter so no doubt it will be the coldest winter on record to match the hottest summer on record 😕

    We're the same, the blackberries off the towpath last week were huge, we picked a massive amount of wild plums off a tree near Curdworth, and when we got home the beetroots on the allotment were huge.

     

    Roasted a pheasant for tea (frozen from earlier in the year) along with allotment potatoes, beetroot, french beans and squash. Blackberry, plum and windfall apple for afters.

    • Greenie 1
  8. 3 hours ago, BEngo said:

    Perspex is actually an acrylic.  Poly methyl methacrylate to be exact.  It is harder and clearer than polycarbonate (Lexan and the like) which is very tough ( so good for riot shields) but scratchable and a bit prone to going yellow.

     

      For windows an acrylic is OK.  With a bit of practice acrylic sheet can be cut like glass- score and break, but a pendulum action  jigsaw, fine blade, used gently, at slow speed on well supported material has always worked for me.  Use masking tape to mark out on and cut through.   Don't go mad, if the acrylic gets hot it melts and sticks to the blade. Disastrousess ensues. Leave the protective film on both sides for as long as possible. 

    I spoke to the Mrs who has 20 plus years experience working in the design and tech department of a very large school - she was the technician responsible for setting up all the students work and cutting acrylic and polycarb were part of her daily job.

     

    She agrees fully with this. Said that the kids would use a coping saw to work on the small projects and that even that, if worked too fast, would melt the edges.

     

    She had the luxury of all the machine shop tools - CNC, routers etc so when we came to make our internal clip in double glazed acrylic porthole windows we just sent the sheets in to the school and they were done on the laser cutter which gives an absolutely perfect edge. Her advice for something like boat windows would be to get a machine shop to cut it, because doing it by hand will be very slow and you can guarantee that you'll be just about at the end of the cut when it overheats and trashes the entire thing.

     

  9. 45 minutes ago, Wanderer Vagabond said:

     

    Such things alway remind me of the EOD (Explosive Ordinance Disposal) guys we occasionally had to call out, one of them had got himself a black T-shirt with the motto of," I'm an Ordinance Disposal Officer, if you see me running, do try to keep up" emblazoned across it:unsure:

    Reminds me of the one we got called to where an old WW2 air dropped mine (huge great big thing, like 3 25 gallon oil drums end on end) had been trawled up by a fishing boat and brought in. The EOD guy we called proceeded to dig out some of the explosive using a multi tool and then pulled out a lighter and was about to set fire to it. At which point he looked at us and suddenly said "if I were you it might be worth running behind that warehouse at this point' !

  10. 4 hours ago, Mike Hurley said:

    What, no more Cheese Posessed, beech nut chewing gum and shiny bog paper, disaster. The tin openers were always good, i still got some.

    Cheese possessed (lovely stuff it was) has been replaced by cheese spread in a pouch which is vile stuff and tastes of cheesy grease. 

     

    Lots of curries, spicy burritos and the like (in bags) these days. No chocolate bars either, and the boiled sweets have gone too.

    • Happy 1
    • Horror 1
  11. 2 hours ago, peterboat said:

    It's a forces thing, it comes in ration packs 

     

    Not any more it doesn't, and hasn't for many years now unfortunately.

     

    Everything's boil in the bag nowadays. All day breakfast in a bag, vegetarian all day breakfast in a bag. Chicken sausages and beans...in a bag.

     

    And to cater for the more modern youth of today's forces, we also now have several flavours of muesli in them too. Probably half of a box of 10 24 hour packs contain muesli !

    • Horror 1
  12. 2 working Farmers Bridge today, although one was technically a CRT employee but doing some locking. Couldn't fault either of them, we flew up the flight in an hour and a quarter.

     

    Unlike the very odd guy on lapworth a couple of weeks back who was having a very loud and clearly very important conversation on his mobile phone with his mate about broken toilets in his mess hut and was far too busy to bother doing anything productive. I started to worry when he finished his call and asked me what I thought was different about him whilst gesticulating at his chest (he wasn't wearing a life jacket). He then muttered something about leaking (presumably a lock and not his desire to use his broken loo) and we didn't see him again.

  13. 41 minutes ago, PeterScott said:

     

     

    On that yellow bag, it says currently undergoing repair. Hmmm. Not so's you would notice the currently.

     

    Indeed. Came up Curdworth this afternoon, 5 out of the 11 locks had paddles not functioning, complete with yellow bag saying the same, although someone had helpfully added a 'Not' after the 'currently' so at least it was accurate.

     

    With that in mind.

     

    Today 2022, Curdworth lock 6 to 5. Not sure how much longer the view will look like this, HS2 will be going right over the top where the fencing is. Last time we came through here there were bushes there.

     

    IMG_20220825_160210.jpg.09d9c27a826c5d01b318055fe87bb624.jpg

    And some ongoing work.

     

    IMG_20220825_160303.jpg.1edbeaf87fc4f59d3381e00402a0268b.jpg

     

     

  14. On 20/08/2022 at 12:08, Goliath said:

     

    And don’t mention the price of crisps!!

    What was wrong with a bag of Smiths? All gotta be hand cooked now with balsamic vinegar. 
    Potatoes “wanna be Smiths crisps”. 


     

    That's cos you need to be eating the pork scratchings instead, especially if you're in the black country. The last time we asked for some in the Lock at Wolverley it was 'soft, medium or hard sir?'. A bag of your hardest, preferably with some bristley bits still attached 😁

     

    We went to a 'chef and brewer' chain pub just outside Leamington last week, only for a beer and not to eat. I wasn't expecting anything special, but they  had beer on from the micro farm brewery at the bottom of the hill, 5% session IPA, absolutely lush.

    • Happy 1
  15. 10 hours ago, Stroudwater1 said:

    Yesterday Braunston tunnel early morning . A nice boat free transit, honey yellow light from both ends as we passed through . 

    In contrast friends passed 10 boats in the tunnel yesterday afternoon. The early bird catches no boats ?  🤣 

     

    97717D40-2A0C-4401-936E-A759F13FF0A5.jpeg

    We came through this morning and the lockie said we were the 14th boat up the flight. It wasn't even 10am, it was absolutely heaving today.

     

     

     

     

    Today 2022.

     

    Weedon Bec ordnance depot.

    IMG_20220821_194052.jpg.2155ab526aee5868d346becf5350026e.jpgIMG_20220821_193202.jpg.8be2a816f392b09eecca655c3148f6f1.jpg

    • Greenie 3
  16. On 20/08/2022 at 15:20, Goliath said:

     😃
    Woverley: The Lock Inn, Bank’s Amber and unpretentious bar/furnishings 👍 The Queens Head, modernised, drank Carling. 

    But wow what a peculiar village. Loved it. Walked up to the Church for views. No local shop 🤷‍♀️
     

     

    There is a local shop in Wolverley but it takes some finding. Up the hill then across the back of the playing field/park, walk a bit further up the residential road and there's a one-stop or Costco or similar. We ran out of milk and went on an expedition to find it.

     

    Glad you like that stretch. I think the bottom of the S&W is my favourite canal so far.

  17. 8 hours ago, Puffling said:

    "How long are you staying here?" asked the inhabitant of a house called River Dance from his balcony backing onto the towpath at Alvechurch (Worcester and Birmingham canal). I replied that probably just overnight, but in any case why the question?

    river-dance.jpg.86c86a11a6edb4432831d7673cc4390e.jpg

    Indicating his self-painted sign, Private Moorings, he mentioned that overnight would probably be acceptable, but not longer. I questioned under which authority the sign had been commissioned, and he muttered vaguely, "The Canal and Boats thing". "Did he own a boat? No. Had the Canal and River Trust sanctioned restricted mooring in front of his property? "There was an official sign but someone must have removed it."

    I suggested then that the so-called Private Moorings notice was simply his attempt to keep his balcony view clear of canal boaters. The exchange ended with him calling my position extreme and going back inside the house.

    The mooring is after Bridge 64. A little noisy from the motorway, but handy for access to the village shops and 'Tudor' chippy. There is Armco and space for about four boats before the turn and disused canal arm. I'd encourage any boaters in the area to moor outside River Dance and politely explain the position on mooring along Canal and River Trust property.

    How many other such self-declared signs have members encountered?

    Thank you. We pass that one several times a year and I've always said to the Mrs one of these days I'll make a point of mooring there. Glad I'm not the only one !

     

    We came past one marked up on the north Stratford opposite some garden gates last week as 'please don't moor here as it's very inconvenient'. Not sure why it was inconvenient. Too far from the pub maybe?

    • Greenie 1
  18. 8 minutes ago, Midnight said:

    Not me this time I'm in Stratford. A fellow boater just sent pics of a session in Trevor basin where there's not a lot of choice. Last year they (C&RT) where on the only visitor mooring in Wellingborough (EA water) loads of bank okay for fishing but too shallow to moor. 

    They did the same last year at Stafford, right on the visitor moorings by bridge 98 where everyone stops for Aldi. 

     

    The organiser had a right strop on because people kept picking up the moorings regardless of their fishing rods and he kept having to move along. I suggested he moved the other side of the bridge because the towpath there is concrete and you can't moor there but he refused and said nobody would be able to see them.

     

    We came back to the boat an hour later and he literally had about 5 yards of towpath left to use right by the bridge hole.

    • Greenie 1
    • Haha 1
  19. On 15/08/2022 at 15:15, frangar said:

    Rather makes a mockery of it just being a transit trip if they can stay overnight and just have a jolly. 

    We're moored on the N Oxford near bridge 100 and the mythical 'Miles Away' is on the move. Went past us 10 minutes ago. Not sure how far down he's going but it was heaving from Wigrams up to here so could be fun. We were glad to be stopped !

  20. 1 minute ago, Midnight said:

    By-washes running strong on the South Stratford

    North Stratford was several inches down on usual, but easily passable. We hit bottom quite a few times, but nothing too sticky. That said we have picked up more industrial plastic crap on the prop today than ever before, and that includes our many trips through Brum. Maybe it was all lurking on the bottom a few inches out of normal reach.

     

    Still persistently peeing down here. Hope I remembered to shut the Houdini hatch.

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