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Kez

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Posts posted by Kez

  1. That one, and the one's joining to the Rochadale; which although aren't under the administration of Peel Holdings, can adversly affect the Bridgwater if they are damaged during ice.

     

    Too much water being sent down would be a nightmare for repairs beacause of flooding, and the possibility of that brand new cyclist towpath being washed away :rolleyes:

  2. I don't know if this is relavent; when I spoke to a friend up there, they've been led to beleive that the canal is under complete obervation and many of the locks closed awaiting checks for ice damage.

    Neither of us have heard of the canal being shut down though

  3. I don't know what everyone else has, but Linnet bears a good luck charm of my dad's design.

    Because he's in the merchant navy, he was brought up with the seagoing traditions and superstitions. When my parents got Linnet they wanted to bring her from the Lancaster canal onto the main line, and to do this they had to go out into the open sea ('cause this was long before the Ribble link). Before they attempted this; he adapted a good-luck charm that some of the old ships had and made Linnet a rope horse-tail to keep her safe.

     

    37 years on, and after 3 open sea trips, it's still doing it's job and she still wears a horse-tail whenever she moves :)

     

    100_1760.jpg

  4. Its certainly a boat which should have been looked at before any serious bid was placed.

     

    With that I most wholeheartedly agree :) It wasn't a sensible move leaping in like this.

     

    As it was, the opportunity didn't arise for me to see the boat in person and so I've taken a gamble with advice and support from friends and family.

    I'm usually given trial by fire ;)

     

    (edited for numpty spelling)

  5. Congratulations.....

     

    Looks more than a bit interesting, but my knowledge of BCN boats not good enough to fully identify it.

     

    Have you been able to work out it's origins or age, please ?

     

     

    Erm; no, in a word. Not got that far yet I'm afraid. :P

     

    We think she's one of the 1890 Bantock station boats, but that's all off of her photos.

    Details of the newest member of Linnets fleet will, no doubt, appear on here when we find them

     

    TBH I haven't actually seen the boat in person :wub: it just seemed like a good idea at the time...

  6. Ok I'll bite. What is wrong with hanging the stern line on the tiller pin please?

     

    I've yet to hear a coherent explanation!

     

    Mike

     

    I always got told that it's dangerous because of (variously) the chance of it slipping off the tiller and getting sucked round the prop, slipping off the tiller and tripping someone up, slipping and catching round the tiller so the boat becomes unsteerable and raising the chance of it being useless in an emergancy because it'd catch on the pin if you needed the rope in a hurry; as well as the usual not how it's done, doesn't look right etc etc

     

    From my own personal point of view, it's because of one man on the GU.

    (Longish story coming up, look away now if you get bored easily :rolleyes: )

     

    I was steering the old working boat Aldgate on the stretch after Braunston tunnel, and had slowed her down to a crawl (as much as Aldgate does crawl) to pass the moored boats. We came past one boat that was obviously just tying up and it had the stern line hung off the tiller pin. The owner looked at Aldgate and gave me a funny look but I didn't think anything of it until about an hour later, when Aldgate had been tied up at Norton Junction and I had wandered to the pub and sat outside.

    The guy off the boat we had passed came up to me, and asked why I hadn't "set up that barge in the proper and traditional manner". I said "I'm sorry; the boat's not mine to 'set up', but I can pass on messages to the owner. What do you think Aldgate is missing?"

     

    To which he came back with:

    "You weren't storing your rear string {stern line} properly. It should be in a shunk {hank I think he meant} around the tilly stick {tiller pin}"

     

    Because it took me about a week to work out what he was trying to say, I gave hime a blank look and he continued:

    "In the old days, the people working long barges {narrowboats} like Aldgate kept the strings around the stick so they could get to them easily. That's why these types of barge have tilly sticks instead of the tube {tiller bar} being welded straight to the tiller. You are letting down your barge by not keeping up the tradition"

     

    By now I was completly lost and had most of the pub watching us, so I said that I couldn't visualise what he was describing and could he give me an example of a boat that showed what he meant

    "Mine of course you stupid girl! You passed me today as I was parking my barge! You came speeding past me instead of stopping while I parked"

     

    Penny dropped as to what he was describing, and I told him firstly I didn't appreciate being called 'stupid girl' and that he was talking a load of bollocks about the ropes around the tiller pin.

    He started getting ruder and more insulting at this point (the sort of thing that the mods would swoop in and remove if I typed it :P ) so I finished my coke, ignoring him, and walked away.

     

    I've never seen ropes around the pin in a friendly light since :D

  7. How did I cross the aqueduct? Tiller strings on, hiding in the cabin with my eyes closed, trying to blank out the horrendous scraping noises, telling me that I was about to plummet to my death.

     

    That bad is it? :D

     

    Granted, standing beside the tiller isn't the smartest move to make in anycase, but what is the more-than-standard hazard that this man is putting himself at?

     

    I admit though, that if I'd have seen him I'd have said something. Probably along the lines of "Oi! Pillock-features! Get in the hatches, you twonk!"

    but that's because it's like nails down a chalk board to me to see people beside the tiller instead of infront of it

    :rolleyes:

  8. When my parents first got Linnet the first thing to go was the name "Th'only" :rolleyes: closely followed by the gangplank that the previous owners had painted 'Welcome aboard' on.

    Passers by used to see it and step on the boat for a looksy; the surplus of GPR cruisers combined with the lack of other narrowboats on the Lancaster at the time made Linnet somewhat of a tourist attraction...

    They kept her lucky horseshoe though, and her purple flowers (plastic). Linnet's still got them

  9. I've only ever seen a picture of his castles in colour once, in an article in Waterways World, which i cut out and put somewhere safe.

    Now I need to see the colour version again, but I cant find it. Does anyone on here have a picture of Percy Foster's castles that they can put up on here?

    Theres a black and white version of the castle in Tom Chaplins's book Narrowboats (or something like that), but I need a colour version to work off :rolleyes:

  10. Off the top of my head, theres:

     

    Shackerstone Festival - 4/5 September

    Angel Canal Festival - 5 September

     

    Rugby Waterways Festival - 11/12 September

    Black Country Boating Festival - 11/12 September

    Slough Canal Festival - 11/12 September

     

    Tipton Canal Festival - 18/19 September

     

    Stoke Bruerne Village at War - 1/2/3 October

     

    BCNS Bonfire Do - 6 November

  11. Linnet nearly got taken down by an inconsiderate arse on a canal boat club boat yesterday.

    Idiot came screaming round a blind bend, spotted Linnet, aimed for her (throwing her to the side), then had the gall to call me a stupid cow and say to his two sons that 'women shouldnt be steering boats'

    I was too busy trying to stop 25 tonnes of enraged timber boat from sitting on the hire boat or getting stuck on the bank to reply to him.

     

    I hope a rabid squirrel steals that bloody hat he was wearing :lol:

  12. You're both right really; there were companies that hired out horses to boatmen and there were boatmen who owned their own horse. As a general rule, a number one would own his own horse and avoid hiring at all costs because of lack of money and not knowing the horse.

    Carrying companies had their own horses and (size of the company dependant) stables, farriers and sometimes farms (to provide feed for the horses)

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