Jump to content

Further sections of canal reopen following recent rainfall


Ray T

Featured Posts

CRT press release

1 October 2018

 

Further sections of canal reopen following recent rainfall

 

The Canal & River Trust has announced that further lock flights and sections of canal in the North of England are able to reopen following recent rainfall.

 

Heavy rainfall in September has replenished canal pounds and led to some refill of reservoirs enabling sections to be reopened to boats.

 

Locks on the Leeds & Liverpool Canal between Gargrave and Wigan Top Lock have now been reopened. It follows the reopening of the eastern section of the canal earlier in September meaning that boaters will now be able to use the canal between the top of Wigan Flight and Leeds.

 

Locks at Barrowford (locks 45-51), Greenberfield (locks 42-44), Bank Newton (locks 36-41), and Gargrave (lock 30) will operate within restricted opening times (between 10am and 4pm each day) to protect reservoir levels and enable pounds to recover ready for the following days boating.

 

The canal at Wigan will reopen once works to repair locks 73 and 81 are completed. The flight is expected to be available for use over the October half term holidays, which is a popular time for many boaters. With works being brought forward from the winter maintenance programme the canal between Wigan Flight and Liverpool will be available to use throughout the winter.

 

The Peak Forest and Macclesfield canals are set to open on 6th October once works at Lock 11 are completed. Locks will be open each day between 8am and 1pm for the first week and then, subject to water resources, will reopen as soon as possible afterwards.

 

Elsewhere the Huddersfield Narrow, Caldon and Rochdale canals are all fully open – although the latter is still being closed overnight at Hebden Bridge to preserve water.

 

Further south, where the limited rainfall has not significantly improved reservoir holdings, the Trust is restricting opening times in a number of places. The precautionary measures will see locks at Watford (locks 1-7) and Foxton on the Leicester Line (locks 8-17) open between 10am and 4pm and Buckby on the Grand Union Canal (locks 8-11) open between 8am and 5pm.  These follow earlier restrictions in place at Napton, Marston Doles (both 10am – 4.30pm) and Claydon (10am – 4pm) on the Oxford Canal.

 

Jon Horsfall, head of customer service support at the Canal & River Trust said; “It’s fantastic that the recent rainfall has enabled us to reopen further sections of canal for boaters to enjoy. The storms in September have by no means resolved the drought situation entirely but they have improved water holdings enough for boats to get back on the move in many places.

 

“It gives boaters time to enjoy some cruising ahead of the winter. We’d like to thank all the boaters and businesses on those sections of canal affected for the understanding and patience they’ve shown over the summer.

 

“We are still seeing some challenging conditions on parts of the network in the south where rainfall has been lighter and so not significantly boosted reservoir holdings. That’s why we’re introducing some sensible precautions on the Oxford Canal and Grand Union – including the Leicester Line - to make the best possible use of our water resources and enable boats to get to where they need to be.”

 

To get further detail on opening times go to www.canalrivertrust.org.uk/notices.

 

-ENDS-

 

For further media requests please contact: Stephen Hardy on 07920 077190 or email stephen.hardy@canalrivertrust.org.uk

 

Edited by Ray T
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some fake news going on there I suggest:

 

"The Peak Forest and Macclesfield canals are set to open on 6th October once works at Lock 11 are completed. Locks will be open each day between 8am and 1pm for the first week and then, subject to water resources, will reopen as soon as possible afterwards."

 

If we are talking about lock 11 at Marple, local intelligence reports that no physical work has been done on the lock  since it was closed  due to  it becoming too narrow for narrowboats  at the beginning of August. The C&RT stoppages list Marple being closed until March 2019.

The lower Peak Forest , i.e. below Marple and the Ashton canal  top level are currently kept 6-8 inches below normal water level because of leakage in Dukinfield, which makes the Lower Peak Forest practically  unusable for anything bigger than a canoe, it's badly in need of dredging anyway. To sum up: the Peak Forest Canal , from Dukinfield Junction  to Bugsworth will NOT  be open as a through route any time soon  and at an educated  guess not till the middle of 2019 if we're lucky. 

If C&RT mean another Lock 11 (Bosley?) they should make that clear but the above  comment still stands.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.