• Vicky 'n' Will's Travels
  • Vicky 'n' Will's Travels

Rainboat

Life continuously cruising the canals and rivers of England and Wales. Leer más
  • Snareston Tunnel, Southern Portal

    1 de febrero de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 5 °C

    Ashby Canal Association has been advertising today's stretch of canal between Shakerstone and Snareston as one of the most beautiful in the country. Despite the bleakness imposed by winter, the scenery was uplifting. It was a breath of fresh air to see the green fields and bare woodlands slip by and to hear the Spring struck sparrows and tits singing their hearts out in the hedgerows.

    We stopped just shy of the south portal of Snarestone tunnel and Will hopped off to visit The Globe pub nearby for a bite and a pint, picking up some groceries on the way back.

    Meanwhile, Vicky was settling the furries in when she noticed Mr Whiskers wasn't wearing his tracker collar. Opening the Pit Pat app, the little dog icon was 2.5 miles away in the field beside last night's mooring 😥 The towpath was too muddy to take the bike back to find it and too far for either of us to walk. We'd planned to stay here a few nights but instead decided to move on the following day and turn at Snarestone Wharf, the last winding point on the Ashby. We'd then crusie all the way back to Shakerstone and try to find the tracker. Life would certainly be a lot simpler without the furries! (But the love they give back is more than worth it 🥰).
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  • The top of the Ashby & Shakerstone again

    2 de febrero de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 5 °C

    We woke at the South Portal of Snarestone Tunnel to a fishing competition who's participants seemed to go on for miles. Mindful that we needed to get back to Shakerstone to find Whiskers' tracker we set off sharpish.

    Thankfully the sky was blue and there was even some warmth in the sunshine. Snarestone Tunnel is only 228m long but there is no towpath through, so Vicky took the dogs inside Rainboat and gave them peanut butter on their Licky Mats. Thankfully Tiger was too engrossed in this treat to get scared and we emerged from the North Portal just as they were finishing up.

    Ashby Canal was originally 31 miles long but the northern section between Snarestone and Ashby-de-la-Zouch was built through the Leicestershire Coal Field. Subsidence gradually destroyed this nine mile stretch, reducing the navigable length to 22 miles. The last possible turning point for boats as long as Rainboat is Snarestone Wharf; the headquarters of the Ashby Canal Association. Here we found a small chandlery and brick a brack stall as well as restored canal artefacts and information on the association's fundraising and restoration work. Boats less than 50ft long can continue northwards from Snarestone and turn just after Bridge 62, before Gilwiskaw Brook Aqueduct. There is an IWA Silver Propeller site here but we would have had to reverse Rainboat a considerable distance, in blustery conditions, with boats moored on either side. In other circumstances we may have waited for a calm day but we needed to get back to find Whiskers' tracker before the battery ran out. Instead we filled with water, emptied our bins, bought an 'Ashby Canal' brass plaque from the chandlery and a coffee mug from the brick a brack stall before winding and retracing our steps to Shakerstone.

    The Pit Pat app showed the tracker in a field through a Blackthron hedge, brambles and Dog Rose and over a 2m wide drainage ditch. We walked up and down to see if there was an easier route but eventually Vicky took the sickle and gang plank, hacked her way through the the thorny undergrowth and over the water. The cat owner we'd met the last time we were here saw it as an opportunity for adventure so followed on behind. When we were within a metre of the icon on the map he spotted Whiskers' collar - yay! It really does work well! A relieved Vicky returned with it in hand and spent most of the rest of the day in bed 😴

    On our last visit the Victorian Tea Rooms at the Battlefield Line Heritage Railway Station been recommended. Despite the trains not running at this time of year it opens on Wednesdays and weekends so Will went along for a cheese cob on Saturday. The two rooms were full of families and couples and there was a real buzz in the air. Vicky had recovered enough by Sunday afternoon to return with him. There was nothing vegan but she enjoyed a pot of mint tea in a china cup and saucer while Will had a delicious slab of Victoria Sponge in front of a roaring log fire. It was near closing time and we were the only customers but it gave us a chance to look around. The walls and windowsills were packed with Victorian memorabilia, from photos of the Queen to tea tins and childrens toys. The owner happily chatted away to us and was obviously a real labour of love (possibly verging on obsession) that brought joy to him and those visiting who visited. We'd definitely recommend a visit.
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  • Market Bosworth

    4 de febrero de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ 🌧 9 °C

    A quick stopover at Market Bosworth on our journey back towards the Coventry Canal. We made sure to stay on the other side of the main road bridge to avoid the muddiest stretch of towpath.

  • Ashby Boat Co. Stoke Golding

    5 de febrero de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 5 °C

    We hadn't been able to have a proper supermarket shop for weeks so knowing we'd be passing the canalside car park at Sutton Wharf, we ordered a ridiculous amount of food to be delivered there from Sainsburys, with a little note to the driver that we were on a boat. We made good time and 10 minutes after mooring up, the driver called Vicky to check exactly where we were. What a relief!

    With sub zero nights forecast we wanted to make sure we were moored somewhere good in case we were iced in. We were also running low on diesel so after picking up the shopping we carried on to just before the Ashby Boat Company near Stoke Golding and the wonderful Spinneybank Farm Shop.

    As it happened there was only a thin layer of ice on the water the following morning but we were glad to be there anyway. Will made several trips to the George and Dragon for their delicious Scotch Eggs and Sausage Rolls, not to mention their long list of draught ales! We'd held off on the fruit and veg from Sainsburys so we could shop at Spinneybank for these, their own meat and naughty cherry flapjacks 😋 Not surprisingly we ended up staying a few more days than planned!

    We set off on Tuesday and filled the diesel tank at Ashby Boat Company, where the owner had previously done us a favour by picking us up a stove fan from Lidl.
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  • Hinkley

    11 de febrero de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 4 °C

    We're looking forward to meeting up with Vicky's brother Al and our friend Tom next week on the Coventry Canal so are keeping up a decent pace to get there.

    After filling up with diesel at Ashby Boat Company we made our way to Hinkley moorings and Will made his way to the Lime Kilns pub where the bar tender remembered him!

    We only stayed for one night. The Ashby has been blissfully quiet and scenic but the towpaths have been consistently claggy with mud and the channel silted up so much that it regularly scrapes Rainboat's hull. It's been a wonderful break from the urban environs of the West Midlands but we are looking forward to getting back to civilisation for a while.
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  • Nuneaton

    12 de febrero de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 5 °C

    Today we said farewell to the Ashby Canal and turned right onto the Coventry at Marston Junction.

    Mooring up at Nuneaton within a few hundred metres of a fishing shop (what coincidence!) was like stepping back into the land of the living from an idyllic rural retreat. The land of the living had more than a dozen piles of dog poo strewn amongst the grass outside Rainboat's length. 🤢 But, it did have a Chinese / Cantonese takeaway with a 5⭐️hygiene rating 3 minutes walk away (we chose this for tea over the 3⭐️ Fish and Chip shop 2 doors down).

    We gratefully restocked our cupboards at the Lidl and small Sainsburys 10 minutes away and the dogs were overjoyed at the dry hardpack towpath for walkies.

    The next day we heard the familiar 'doink' of a heavy object being tosssed repeatedly into the cut. The magnet fisher was really friendly and got chatting to us, asking if we knew what the large safety pin shaped piece of metal he'd just plucked from the water was. It happened to be a tool for tethering boats to piling that lines the canal, he'd found another and insisted we take them. He'd found two bikes as well, one he was going to sell to his mate as scrap for a few pennies but the other was in good condition so he was going to do it up for his son. He returned the following day with some other bits and bobs he thought might be useful to us (his Mum had been getting on his back about moving them out of the garage).

    The following morning as a couple of motorbikes were roaring along the towpath vibrating Rainboat's hull we decided it was time to move on.
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  • Meeting Al at Atherstone

    16 de febrero de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 4 °C

    We arrived in Atherstone really looking forward to seeing Al.
    Al arrived in Atherstone the following day really looking forward to seeing... Mr Whsikers 😹 He's had a soft spot for him ever since they first met at the farm over 3 years ago but this would be the first time Al would see him in his 'furever' home.

    Our first mooring was a little muddy and had very poor signal, so we cruised a further hundred metres or so and tied up near the old red brick, Britannia Works Mill, whose metal framed, single glazed window panes are mostly cracked or missing. It's a Grade II historic building and was the last of Atherstone's hat makers to close in 1999. Rumour has it that Tommy Cooper's famous red fez was made here!

    Leo and Tiger Lilly could feel our excitement at Al's imminent arrival. Leo was bouncing off the walls so we took them out and met Al just off the towpath, where he was obliged to dole out copious cuddles. After walking the dogs in the nearby park and fussing the cats back at the boat, Al and Will headed out for lunch at Maid of the Mill; a pub adjacent to the old factory. Here locals told them about the ongoing trouble with vandalism at the factory and the building collapsing. It has permission to be turned into assisted living apartments but work is slow and Storm Darragh had blown part of a wall into the street before Christmas. There's a petition for it to be demolished completely and quickly.

    Al had booked a room at The Red Lion pub, so after a wander round town he checked in, before returning to Rainboat for a meat pie from the local butchers and an evening of whisky tasting 😋🥃

    The following day Al got a windlass placed in his hand and set to work on 5 of the 11 Atherstone Locks. He and Will paired up on the bank, while Vicky steered Rainboat with the dogs. It's so much faster working as a team of 3!

    We moored near The Kings Head and the boys rewarded themselves with a late afternoon meal at the pub. Here they met Tom, who had been able to detour via Atherstone for a few hours while driving south for work.

    Al and Will had a few more whiskys onboard that evening. Whiskers enjoyed his company so much that he needed to be locked inside when it came time for Al to leave, after following him along the towpath in the dark 🤭

    We spent a few more hours just relaxing in Rainboat the following morning before Al needed to leave. He'd been really understanding about Vicky's lack of energy and it had been great to spend time with him. Will especially enjoyed having a drinking buddy! 🍻
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  • Tom at Atherstone

    21 de febrero de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ 🌬 14 °C

    Less than 24 hours after Al left, Tom returned. This time he was on his way home after a few days working away, so had a little more time to spare. He made it along the towpath for a pot of tea on Rainboat before we all went for lunch at The King's Head. Tom loves to travel and is planning a big trip to Canada. The time sped past chatting about this, politics, the NHS, life on Rainboat and a bit of banter. We love that Tom detours via Rainboat when commuting long distance and look forward to the next time our paths cross.

    The following day brought with it sunshine and a Saturday market in the little town square. We stocked up at a zero waste/refill stall and treated ourselves to a stilton pork pie, kit kat cookies, artisnal wine and locally made cheeses. On the way back we visited a small hippy shop in whose window Will and Al had previously spotted a green velvet dress they thought Vicky would like. They were right; she tried it on and fell in love. It turned out to be an expensive day but as well as being a pleasure, buying from small independent businesses is the best way to support the places we pass through and we'd really enjoyed our stay in Atherstone.
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  • Polesworth and Pooley Country Park

    25 de febrero de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ⛅ 9 °C

    Moving on from Atherstone,.Will worked Rainboat through four locks to reach Polesworth moorings. We'd stopped here for lunch at The Bull before Christmas but time had been tight and we'd stayed further down the line. Vicky wasn't keen on the pub as some of the locals had been antagonisticly jokey, but now she was just glad to have somewhere to tie up and rest.

    The sun shone every day of our stay and so did the location this second time round. Polesworth had a fish and chip shop and a small convenience store within walking distance as well as The Bull, which Will lunched at a couple of times. Spring flowers were in the early stages of bloom while green buds were breaking out on spindly tree branches. A few narrow paths linked the towpath to a trail alongside the River Tame, running parallel to our waterway. We were able to take Leo and Tiger on a few circular walks, breaking up the predictability of the 'there and back' routes we usually do. Polesworth provided us with a very relaxing and enjoyable stay. We're glad we gave it a second chance.
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  • Glascote Top Lock

    2 de marzo de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☀️ 10 °C

    A short journey took us from Polesworth to just before Glascote Top Lock, a little way from Tamworth town centre. We'd stayed here in November waiting for an engineer to fix our Eberspacher heating. We spent just the one night this time as the weather was good for cruising the next day.Leer más

  • Tamworth

    3 de marzo de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    Beyond the two Glascote locks it was a clear run to Fazeley Junction, where we turned right and filled with water. There used to be a rubbish disposal point here but it has been removed. Although many boat folk are quite environmentally conscientious there's a risk that the removal of too many of these facilities will lead to a rise in fly tipping. There is only so much room onboard.

    Fazeley Junction marked the start of new waters as we continued north west on part of the Birmingham Fazeley Canal we'd not yet explored. We stopped at
    a spot near Tamworth's retail parks, giving us the chance to pick up some shopping, including clippers we'd ordered for Tiger. She doesn't enjoy being groomed or clipped and the cheap pair we'd got originally kept snagging on her thick, tight curls. After a lot of research Vicky bought a good quality pair that are designed for thick coats and will hopefully make the experience less stressful for us both.

    We stayed almost a week at this mooring. The sun continued to shine, there was good access to a range of large shops and the chance to walk in a farm field that seemed to have been left to its own devices this year.

    Near the end of our stay we were returning from a dog walk when we spotted a guy on Rainboat's stern. Vicky called out to him and he casually stepped off and walked in the opposite direction. We ran after him but he disappeared up a side track with a little box of Will's fishing equipment. We'd had the bike chained under the seat, which he may have been eying up so we were just glad to have disturbed him when we did. We know we are taking a risk leaving things outside on the boat but overall we've had very little touble. All the same, Will put the bike inside and cleared away all remaining fishing paraphernalia (something Vicky was secretly pleased at 🤫). Handily there was a fishing shop in Tamworth town where he was able to replace his lost items. Tamworth is decent area and we reckon this one guy was just chancing his luck.
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  • The Tame Otter, Hopwas

    8 de marzo de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

    On our travels we'd seen a narrowboat called The Tame Otter and now we were moored near the pub. It had been recommended to Will by the owner of the fishing shop in Tamworth so we were keen to visit. Leaving the dogs with licky mats we walked the short distance for lunch. It was so warm that we took our drinks outside, joining most of the other patrons in the beer garden. The bar tender had recommended we order via the website which we did. The menu was a notch above typical pub grub but our meals took a long time to arrive and when they did Will's swordfish and prawn dish was missing its peas and Vicky's salad was missing pomegranate seeds. Nobody came to check on us and we only realised towards the end so we knocked them down a star on our review rather than complaining.

    Over the canal from the Tame Otter was the Red Lion and its beer garden. Both were heaving before long but there was a large group of men accross the water who were really rowdy. A few had their tops of and a couple hollered at some older teenage girls walking the towpath to get their 't**s out for the lads' 🤬 We were under the impression that the world had moved on from from the 90s but apparently not!

    What looked like a grown up extended family group were walking accross the bridge connecting the two pubs wearing blue football shirts. These hooligans all started chanting 'who the fuck, who the fuck, who the fuck do you think you are!'. The family continued accross to the Lion but soon returned to the Otter, with one supporting another with an arm under his armpits. A couple of police arrived not long after to talk to them before going and speaking to the men, who stayed on in the garden but quitened down at least a little.

    Other than this ruckus, our stay was pretty peaceful. We sat out enjoying the warm days, Vicky weeding the roof planters while Will fished. Even Abby did a bit of sunbathing!
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  • Huddlesford

    10–25 mar. 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    Somewhere along our journey the canal changed from the Birmingham and Fazeley to the Coventry, but there was no obvious marker to say where.

    We moored at a wonderfully rural location. Grass fields spread away from the water and a tall hedge of mixed native species ran alongside the towpath, occasionally punctuated by mature oaks. We could see a farm over the canal and hear trains in the middle distance running along the line to Lichfield. A couple of bridges away was The Plough; the heart of a wealthy hamlet called Huddlesford.

    We visited the pub for lunch on Tuesday. It was pretty busy but we were seated in the dining room which lacked much of the atmosphere evident in the main area. When our meals finally arrived they were ok but far from hot. Will fed back to the waitress when they came to collect our plates and we left, a little disappointed.

    On Thursday Vicky took a taxi from the pub car park to Lichfield Trent Valley train station. The taxi was over 10 minutes late, the train 15 minutes late and her train from Tamworth to Newcastle 25 minutes late but there were no cancellations, for which she was grateful. When she arrived at her Dad and Sarah's house she opened a letter that had arrived that morning. The gynaecology appointment she'd travelled up for the next day was postponed by 1 week. 😭 However, the rest of her stay went well, with a crafting class, another medical appointment, haircut, an early Mothers Day lunch with Sarah and Ali and some relaxing quality time with the family.

    Meanwhile, back on Rainboat, Will hadn't seen Mr Whiskers since the day Vicky left. Nor could he be found when she returned. He hadn't been wearing his tracker because the hedges were so thick we thought he'd only lose it again. This was a big mistake. We extended our stay beyond the maximum 14 days allowed, tramping the towpaths calling his name and shaking his Dreamies jar. We shook out the cat bedding, left sardines outside and scattered sawdust from his litter tray under the hedge. We talked to boaters, residents and the farm. We flooded Facebook with 'missing' posters on cat and canal based groups, updated his microchip details to 'lost' and put his details into an online database the RSPCA uses to check any pets found. Vicky contacted the police, two local vets and the closest marina. We put up laminated posters near where we were moored, posted them through the doors of the 9 houses in Huddlesford and asked a tarmac business, The Plough and Kings Orchard Marina to display them.

    The weather was wonderful, the location was beautiful and peaceful, we watched flowers coming in to bloom and leaf buds emerging from the tips of tree branches. Will cycled to nearby Whittington and Lichfield for shopping and pub lunches and we gave The Plough another go. To our delight, the food was excellent quality and hot this time (perhaps due to the presence of a very friendly and highly efficient older woman who seemed to be in charge).

    We did all this but Whiskers' absence was always with us. Each bang on the stern had us hoping it was him coming home. We'd look for his eyes reflecting red in the torchlight when we took the dogs out at night.

    In the end we had to leave. We were eeking out the last of the water in the tank and our two week permitted stay was up. Whiskers is microchipped and had a collar with Vicky's mobile number sewed into it. We feel we did all we could to get him back. We just hope that he chose to go wandering and will come back to civilisation at some point like he did at High Acton Farm.
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  • Fradley Junction

    26–27 mar. 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☀️ 15 °C

    Reluctantly we left Huddlesford and with it, the hope that Whiskers would return to Rainboat by his own means. We've done everything we can think of to increase the chances we'll be contacted if he is found.

    It was a relief to fill with water at Kings Orchard Marina and we topped up with diesel too. More than a fortnight ago Will had ordered items to service Rainboat's engine from here (oil and air filters etc). He'd checked in several times in between then and now but they still weren't in stock, which was disappointing. With our water tank full it was a relief to set the washing machine going as soon as we got underway.

    The sun was shining as we cruised and it was an absolute pleasure to see the progress of Spring in the flora along our green corridor. The birds twittered over the sound of the engine, flitting between the tops of trees to display themselves at their best.

    We hoped as we approached Fradley Junction that there would be a mooring spot available, otherwise we'd need to tackle a swing bridge, the turning and two locks before the next available spot. Luck was on our side and despite there being a large number of boats there were still plenty of spaces.

    Fradley Junction is where the Coventry meets the Trent and Mersey Canal. The Swan sits on the T of the junction and customers can watch the boats coming and going along both canals. Will nipped in for a veggie burger and pint and dropped off the first of many bags of rubbish at the refuse point on the way - hallelujah! While our water supply had been dwindling our bins had been overflowing. Vicky hung the washing outside and went to rest.

    Leo was over the moon to have somewhere new to explore so Vicky's nap didn't last as long as she'd have liked. He can be very insistent when he puts his mind to it!

    We only stayed one night because we wanted to reach Stone in a couple of weeks where we'd arranged to meet Vicky's stepmum and Dad.
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  • Handsacre, Trent and Mersey Canal

    27–29 mar. 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    We began today's cruise by topping up at the water point before Fradley Junction and getting the washing machine going again. Will took the remainder of the bins before walking ahead and opening the small swing bridge for Vicky to drive through. At the junction one boat was already turning in from the left and another appeared from the right just as Vicky was edging Rainboat's bow into the channel. We wouldn't like to tackle this turning in peak season!

    We headed west towards Stoke on Trent, waiting for the boat ahead of us to exit the lock before we could enter. There were a further two locks after this, then the terrain flattened out. We passed walkers and cyclists enjoying the sunshine on the wide chalky towpath. The land around us remained pastoral, interspersed by stretches of deciduous woodland.

    We've been very worried about Tiger recently because her episodes of Paroxysmal Dyskinesia (Movement Disorder), which normally occur once a month, have been clustering and even happening twice on a couple of days. Historically many dogs have been misdiagnosed with idiopathic epilepsy (as Tiger was) and as a result veterinary medicine has not progressed far in finding a treatment. Vicky had engaged research mode and read everything she could find, from the results of scientific trials to anecdotal advice on Facebook. Stress is one trigger and Tiger gets stressed while travelling. To help with this we've tried giving her a Tryptophan based relaxing treat. It seems to be helping her nerves. The sun relaxed her on today's cruise too.

    It was a shock to the system pulling up in the suburban town of Handsacre. We hadn't seen this many people in weeks! Will had an over priced but under parr cheese and onion cob at the nearby Crown, before picking up groceries and visiting the fishing shop.

    Back on Rainboat he was fishing from the stern when a boat cruised by with one of Whiskers posters in the window. People really have been kind and helpful when we've talked to them about him.

    One advantage of being in an urban area is being close to takeaways like Michael's Fish Bar. Vicky often has a salad wrap or pitta but Michael's has a falafel kebab which was a lot nicer! 5 stars Michael!
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  • Rugeley

    29–30 mar. 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    This Spring sunshine is a real treat to travel in. We cruised through Armitage and past a factory making toilets. From here we plunged into Armitage tunnel whose walls were carved out of bedrock. Tiger Lilly, who got lots of praise, comfort and treats, coped better than expected with this. We've been giving her a Tryptophan based daily calming tablet to try and stop her movement disorder episodes and it seems to be helping.

    We moored in Rugeley between a row of brown brick terraces and the grounds of a factory. It may not have been the most picturesque of settings but it was very close to several large supermarkets. Will made numerous trips to these and one to Kev's Pets to get Tiger Lilly some gluten free kibble. Apparently gluten is a trigger in many cases of movement disorder so we're going to keep her gluten free from now on.

    Vicky made it out with Will and the dogs to drop off some items at the Farplace animal charity shop. Rugeley had a number of charity shops as well as quite a few small businesses. Even so the town centre did look a bit downtrodden. Leo and Tiger were given lots of fuss and treats at Farplace, with Leo leaping from his bag on to the counter to pose for a photo the volunteer wanted to take of him. It made his day!
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  • Tixall Wide

    31 de marzo de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    We're on our way up the Trent and Mersey Canal to meet Vicky's Dad and Stepmum at Stone, but we took a little detour onto the Staffs and Worcester Canal to moor at Tixall Wide.

    The good weather seems to be bringing all the boaters out on to the water. For the first time in many months we found ourselves in a queue for a lock, with 3 boats ahead of us! Luckily there was space to moor and wait. Will lent a hand at the lock, chatting to the other boat folk, including vloggers Julie and Martin on Rhapsody in Blue. Vicky stayed with the boat, letting the dogs have a pootle up and down the towpath.

    Once through, we cruised for a while then pulled up for a bite to eat, letting thr rush pass us by before the next lock. We sat on the stern while a pair of Treecreepers chased one another around a wide oak trunk, a Jay hopped from branch to branch on the opposite bank and a grey squirrel took time for a drink and quick wash on the narrow sandy shore. Spring really is a great time to be on a boat!

    From here it wasn't far to Haywood Junction and on to Tixall Wide. This broad stretch of water lies within sight of the impressive Tixall Hall Gatehouse. The hall itself was demolished in 1927 but rumour has it that Thomas Clifford, the owner at the time the canal was built, gave permission for it to pass through his land only on the condition that it was made to look like a lake, so as not to spoil the view! Another possible explanation is that the canal was routed via an already existing lake to make the job of construction easier.

    Whatever it's origin story, the broad stretch of water is very picturesque and very popular with boaters. There was only one space left by the time we arrived, but Will executed an impressive 180° turn and guided Rainboat straight in to it.

    That evening we saw 6 buzzards flying together and later on, a large murder of crowds circling up a thermal like a helix. Canadian and Greylag Geese loved the expanse of water and the wide band of reeds bordering the far bank. They would fly away to forage during the day and return with a ruckus as the sun dipped, flapping their wings, spraying water as their webbed feet splashed down and honking loudly as they reestablished their positions.

    Will cycled to Haywood Junction most days, lunching at the Clifford Arms, and shopping at the farm and refill shop there. Beside the towpath we spotted a wooden plaque engraved with the names of boaters and boats who had been locked down here during the early days of Covid. There was also a touching memory garden with small plaques dedicated to two Basset Hounds who had loved staying here on their boat 🥰
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  • Weston

    4–6 abr. 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 10 °C

    Leaving Tixhall Wide we returned to Haywood Junction and tied up at the water point. While Rainboat's water tank was filling, Will went to the Anglo Welsh chandlery and bought items he'd need to service her engine. It had been over 3 weeks since we'd ordered them from Kings Orchard Marina and they still hadn't arrived. Anglo Welsh is a Canaline engine specialist so had the oil filters etc in stock.

    The cruise included 2 locks which Tiger seems to be coping with a lot better thanks to the tryptophan based calming tablets. The official moorings at Weston were close to a sewage plant so we moored a little way beyond them, in view of a picturesque church steeple. Leaves on the branches of a large sycamore were budding overhead and the air was alive with birdsong and honks of geese from a large pond just out of view. We even heard the cries of a Red Kite flying high above us.
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  • Art and eating out at Stone

    9 de abril de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☀️ 10 °C

    The land around the canal is flat and the large houses have sprawling gardens. We're still enjoying glorious Spring sunshine, making views of young lambs and nesting birds picture perfect.

    Stone is very popular with boaters and there wasn't much room to moor. A kind person saw us looking for a space and moved their boat back so we could squeeze in front of them. They were on a hire boat with their grown kids and grandkids. This time of year there is often a lot of grumbling from some livaboards about the canals being too busy and the behaviour of hire boaters who speed or crash in to things. It is less peaceful than winter and a few hire boaters aren't considerate or careful but overall, seeing the joy that boating brings to so many people only enhances life on the canals for us.

    These warmer months also see boat traders proffering their wares. Will found The Oatcake Boat cooking Staffordshire oatcakes. He had one filled with cheese and brought back one with vegan cheese for Vicky. It was good to try but she wasn't too impressed. Something we were both impressed by were the paintings and drawings for sale from Arts Aboard Aloysius. Sue paints canal scenes, pet portraits and wildlife among other things on slate, and mirrors. She also creates watercolour, pastel and pencil art on paper. We really enjoyed chatting to her about her work and came away with a slate depicting the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct and a stag on a mirror.

    The following day Vicky's Dad and stepmum arrived in their new motorhome. Parking was very difficult for them so Dad took the van out of town while Will ate at The Star and Sarah took Vicky for a pre birthday lunch at Bear on Stone highstreet. There were lots of interesting dishes and drinks to try and it was great to be treated and spend time with Sarah.

    Will brought the dogs to meet Sarah and Vicky on the towpath on their way back and lots of furry cuddles ensued. Sarah, who is used to her two working breed Labradors had forgotten how teeny our two terrors are. After swinging by Rainboat to say hello to Abby, Sarah was picked by Dad and they went to find their campsite.
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  • A birthday cruise through Stone

    9 de abril de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☀️ 11 °C

    It was Vicky's 43rd birthday! We rose and had a special breakfast of eggy bread followed by a few pressies. We set off planning to meet Dad and Sarah at the water point a few hundred metres up the canal but Stone is terrible for parking so they pulled up temporarily at the leisure centre and we ferried the items that we'd had delivered to them, as well as birthday presents and cake to Rainboat. Dad then joined us while Sarah took the dogs to find parking for the van. Will walked ahead to work the locks while Vicky and Dad took the boat. Dad and Sarah's narrowboat Drifter is an older, traditional style that's about 10ft shorter. Dad noted a surprising number of differences between them when steering.

    Sarah eventually found a small canalside field to park in and joined us after a few locks. She'd scouted out a good place to moor near the van. After they'd settled Lenny and Elsie back inside, Dad and Sarah joined us for a buffet lunch, cake and pressies onboard. It made such a difference to have them there celebrating with us and Vicky was on a real high all day 🥰 She wasn't even too cross when we discovered Leo had somehow scoffed a quarter of her birthday cake. He was waddling for the next three days but otherwise suffered no ill effects. Little monkey! 🙊
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  • Barlaston

    12 de abril de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    After a few days basking in the sunshine at the top end of Stone, we toodled up the canal to the village of Barlaston. Pulling in, we moored outside The Plume of Feathers. Exploding out of the stern gate, as he tends to do when we stop, Leo made a beeline for the tables on the pub car park. They were packed with people enjoying a sunny easter holiday weekend. Soon both Leo and Tiger lucked out, finding a middle aged woman with dog treats she 'needed to get rid of'!. Naturally every time the dogs stepped outside from then on, they were drawn to the tables. After a few days we shuffled a hundred metres or so up the towpath to stop them scrounging; the little tykes.

    Will ate lunch at The Plume of Feathers and discovered it had been run by Niel Morrisey from Men Behaving Badly. It was less than a fortnight since he'd relinquished the lease in order to find somewhere he could own. The pub had shut for a few days to remove all the Morrisey memorabilia. It seemed he'd been a good landlord because whenever we passed there were always people drinking.

    On Wednesday morning Vicky met her Dad and Sarah outside the OneStop and hitched a ride back up to Rowlands Gill for some blood tests. It was so much nicer to travel with them as opposed to taking the train. Thanks folks!

    She returned on Good Friday. The train from Derby to Stoke was packed with rowdy football fans. Sarah had once again made sure she had a packed lunch- falafels, crudites and a hummus dip. The gobbiest of the fans standing near her table picked up on this and wanted to know what she was eating. She prepared for an onslaught of bird seed and lettuce 'jokes'. They asked whether she was a potter, which she later discovered was a nickname for Stoke City fans and she said no, she was a boater, at which the gobby guy got really animated, saying he had a neighbour who had a boat and that he loved watching Canal Boat Diaries with Robbie Cumming, as well as Countryfile! What a turnaround 😂
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  • By the fishing ponds, outskirts of Stoke

    20 de abril de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ⛅ 13 °C

    From Barlaston we progressed towards Stoke on Trent. The canal passed by the Wedgwood factory and we saw signs for Trentham Gardens. Dad and Sarah had toured Wedgwood visitor centre the previous week. It would have been good to visit both venues but Vicky isn't well enough to walk that distance at the moment.

    We tied up to shiny new mooring rings near an out of town logistics warehouse. Trees on the offside surrounded a series of fishing lakes. There was access via the footbridge just behind us. We and the dogs really enjoyed taking a round route for once and there were surprisingly few people there considering it was Easter Sunday. They may have given up and gone home, as the fishers we spoke to said they weren't having any luck. The peaceful environment suited us and we even caught sight of a kingfisher; always a treat!
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  • Hanley Cemetery, Stoke on Trent

    22 de abril de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

    On the approach to Stoke-on-Trent we ascended two deep locks and were hemmed in on both sides by industrial buildings and brick walls covered in tags and grafitti doodles. A few old factory buildings had been tastefully refurbished into office/apartment blocks and towpath signs pointed to the Bet365 arena and other attractions.

    Our mooring spot was between railway sidings, from which we heard the clickety clack of train wheels and on the offside, the green expanse of Hanley Cemetery. We got the feeling the area was a bit rough and Will had it confirmed by a passing cyclist who warned him to take all his fishing gear inside if he was leaving the boat and overnight as he'd be likely to get it nicked. We took his advice and there were no problems.
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  • Etruria Junction, Caldon Canal

    23 de abril de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

    Today we ascended 50 feet over the course of 3 locks and turned right off the Trent and Mersey Canal onto the Caldon Canal arm. This junction is called Etruria Junction and has good services, allowing us to dispose of rubbish, fill with water and use their shower.

    There had been signs pointing towards Etruria for some time. Josiah Wedgwood named the area after the Italian region in 1769 when he opened the 4th Wedgwood pottery factory here. The factory has since relocated to Barlaston, but regeneration of the area began in the 1980s with the Stoke-on-Trent Garden Festival. The former bone and flint mill that we moored beside now houses the Etruria Industrial Museum. It only opens on Fridays but luckily we were around and Will payed a visit.

    Etruria was home to a sizeable flock of Canadian Geese who had grazed and fertilized the grass opposite so that it was covered in a carpet of Daisies. Unfortunately two people with a strimmer and mower removed these on the second day we were there and the geese seemed to like to wake at 3am every morning, loudly welcoming the dawning of each new day with loud honks until they quietened down around 6am!

    We'd taken our canoe, Little Green off Rainboat's roof and attached her tow rope to the stern because of low bridges. When Will was out fishing one day he was approached by a local who asked if he'd consider selling her. We'd had her nearly 20 years and she was pretty beaten up but still good to paddle. We'd been thinking of replacing her with a shorter, lighter boat that would be easier to lift and take up less room. The guy already had a couple of sit on canoes but wanted one that he could take his staffy dog paddling in so we agreed on the sale and he returned with a trolley. She's given us a lot of happy memories and we hope she goes on to give this man and his dog many more!
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  • Emma Bridgewater factory, Stoke

    27 de abril de 2025, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 19 °C

    We cruised right through the middle of the a sprawling Hanley Park soon after setting off. It had fancy wrought iron bridges, formal flower gardens and a bandstand as well as grassed games pitches, tarmacked childrens' play facilities and multi use games areas. It was a sunny Sunday and there were loads of people enjoying it.

    We didn't travel far as Vicky was still waiting for her prescription to be ready at a nearby chemist. Shiny new silver mooring rings were available right opposite a brick factory with a good section of towpath, so we tied up here before we even realised it was the one and only Emma Bridgewater factory! She's one of Vicky's favourite ceramic artists. There was a Lidl just 5 minutes away and ten minutes away was an Ableworld. Since Vicky's health got worse at xmas she's felt as if she has been missing out on seeing and doing so much. She is part of a Facebook group for people with ME and some of these have mobility scooters, wheelchairs or powerchairs to help them get out so we went to have a look at what Ableworld had in their showroom. She tried a scooter and a couple of chairs and we checked their folded measurements to see if they'd fit under the dinette where the e bike that was stolen had been stored. It was a tough decision because she doesn't want to see herself as someone who needs a chair and she doesn't want others to think she's a fraud for using one while she's able to stand and walk. In the end we decided to buy a Spirit Carbon powerchair. It is 15kg without the battery and really easy to use and lift.

    In the coming days she used it to shop at Lidl, pick up her prescription and make a short visit to Stoke city centre. We tried to book a tour of the Emma Bridgewater factory but it was booked up 3 weeks in advance so we visited the factory shop instead. Vicky couldn't have done any one of these things without pushing herself over the limit but with the chair she was able to do them all. It really lifted her mood so we reckon it was a good decision.
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