Stoke Bruerne - Google Streetview style
Thursday 11th March 2010
Braunston Tunnel should be opening today and Zulu was supposed to be on the move tomorrow but I just heard that yet another stoppage has been extended, this time Buckby Locks, which will not now be open until mid-day on Monday, so although we can get through Braunston Tunnel as of today (can anyone confirm that it did actually reopen today as scheduled) then the furthest I can get this weekend is the other end of Braunston Tunnel so its simply not worth moving from Braunston. I imagine a lot of boats will be trying to get through and they will all end up at Norton Junction 4 miles from Braunston, where mooring will not be easy.
I had hoped to reach Stoke Bruerne by Saturday and then Milton Keynes area by Sunday so I can leave Zulu for one last stopover before we get a home run to Uxbridge.
So today I will have to do with a virtual tour of Stoke Bruerne, thanks to Google StreetView which has just been extended to cover virtually everywhere in the country - even rural lanes can now be viewed - and there’s bound to be some other excellent canal scenes. Here’s the one I just found showing Stoke Bruerne!
The world has become even smaller as a result of this amazing technology.
Click to link to this location in Google Streetview.
I may even get to see this for real, on Zulu, in a week or two’s time but not next weekend - its holiday time again!
Links
Today I have at long last updated my rather poor list of other canal blogs, from 3 to 165 give or take a few.
So if I have in any way missed your own site, or made any sort of error with your own link, don’t hesitate to get in touch and I will fix it immediately.
The list order is chronological but due to the number of entries, it may take a few seconds to settle down while loading.
The long way home
Monday 8th March 2010
There’s still no bus service from Braunston on a Sunday so I had to wait until Monday morning before heading home. It didn’t help a lot when I woke after 7am, as I was intending to get the 07:34 bus to Rugby and then train home. But at what price?
(Another train fare rant coming on….)
Rugby to Newbury single, via London £73.50!! or not via London (ie through Banbury) £43.50.
BUT split the ticket into two singles,
Rugby to Banbury : £18.50 peak, £13.60 off peak after 10.00
Banbury to Newbury: £14.90 all day.
Total £33.40 or £28.50 peak or off peak. A saving of at least £10.10 or £15.00 after 10:00, once again to travel in the same seat on the same train.
Instead I took the 07:42 to Banbury which arrived late at Daventry and missed the connection, turning a 90 minute trip into 150 minutes. From Daventry the bus was quite fun as it was empty to start with, but weaving in and out of the villages on the way more and more people got on, all of whom seemed to know at least half of the other passengers. Definitely a local bus in every sense. The total fare was less than a fiver, and I already had an unused train ticket home from Banbury, so that was an even better saving. But due to connections, it took almost 6 hours door to door whereas by car its an hour and a bit.
I did enjoy the journey today, but if I was doing this regularly I would expect public transport to be better than this otherwise I would definitely take the car.
Fosse Locks to Braunston
Sunday 7th March 2010
Another cold start to the day. This time minus 9.5 and enough to freeze the canal yet again. I certainly broke some miles of ice today!
Not much to say about the journey though, as it all went like clockwork. I started very early and arrived at Long Itchington about 9am, just in time to see a mass exodus of boats, all heading the other way, until we caught up with two boats going up the Stockton locks ahead of us.
At Calcutt the canal became so busy I had to think twice about whether this was March or mid Summer but under a deep blue sky and temperature barely into the plusses, Braunston was in sight by 4pm.
I spent the rest of the afternoon fixing things which had gone wrong yesterday.
I think I have a fair excuse for being tired tonight, after clocking up another 13 miles and 20 locks. But another milestone in the journey, and here at Braunston 4 days before the canal reopens at the tunnel.
Tom O’the Wood to Fosse Locks. Water everywhere!
Saturday 6th March 2010
Zulu started first time this morning. That is the good news.
The rest of the day has been very watery indeed. I needed an early start to get through Hatton so 6:30 am it was. Beautiful chilly morning with a lovely blue sky.
Wateryness Number 1.
By the time I got to Shrewley tunnel it was raining. Boo!
Wateryness Number 2.
Shrewley tunnel is a bit drippy at the moment! One went right down my neck - thank goodness for hoodies.
Wateryness Number 3.
The automatic bilge pump just went off twice in 3 minutes. Are we sinking? How on earth is that?! Oh I see. The stern gland just opened up to the world. Nothing that a couple of spanners couldn’t sort out, along with a good dose of grease, but hey - it was dry as a bone last night so how did that happen! At least the rain stopped and it was really nice after breakfast time.
Wateryness Number 4.
After an impromptu stop to tighten the stern gland I then jumped off at Hatton Station to pick up today’s assistant and dogs. Ooops why is the back of the boat so low in the water? Crikey it really is, but the engine bilges are dry as a bone….. with dread I lifted the carpet and found the cabin bilge right up to the floorboards. Cue the wet and dry vac - for 3 hours as we went down Hatton locks I was preoccupied with removing about 150 gallons of water from the bilges and watching with relief as Zulu settled back to normal draught. We were only down an inch or so, but that could equate to half a ton.
What caused this - yes our old friend the domestic water system had leaked the entire contents of the water tank - 150 gallons - into the bilges (again). The good news is not sinking, but looking at the old water tank there was a lot of water under it. I couldn’t understand why it had leaked though. I have emptied it every time I left the boat all winter, and it was OK last week. Why!
Wateryness No 5.
There’s plenty of water at Hatton - pouring over the gates as we went down. I wouldn’t normally have mentioned this but it gives me another watery point to log!
Wateryness No 6.
Dog number 2 fell in (for the third time in as many weeks). At least he got out under his own steam!
Wateryness No 7.
I stopped at Cape Locks to try to fill the water tank again, and this time packed paper towels all over the place to try to find the leak. It seemed to fill OK but towels under the tank were very wet indeed. It kind of comfirmed worst fears that the tank really was leaking as opposed to a pipe or join.
Wateryness No 8.
Checked the water pump and it was leaking too. Damn it. This could be part of the cause of the leak but it didn’t look too bad. Out with the PTFE tape and remake the joints and all seems ok again.
Wateryness No 9.
Quick thinking as we passed “Do It All” in Leamington Spa. Get a garden water bowser as a temporary water tank. They even had them in green to match Zulus colour scheme. I spent another 20 quid on various bits which may or may not come in useful when fitting it.
Wateryness No 10.
Dog number 2 took fright at the wet and dry vac and jumped into his water bowl catapulting it all over the lounge carpet. What’s another couple of pints between friends though?
Wateryness No 11.
While investigating the best way to connect new temporary water bowser to the water system, bypassing the water tank guess what. I discovered that the water tank filling pipe was no longer attached to the water tank. Elation! Last night I had spent an hour filling the bilges while only a small amount of water had gone into the tank by pure luck. So with a bit more luck I never had a water leak at all and the tank is OK. All I need is a new jubilee clip to stick the inlet pipe back onto the tank where it belongs and we will be back to normal.
Wateryness Number 12.
Tonight I can’t be bothered to remove all the panels to get access to the water tank filler, so with a tap near our moorings I have filled the new bowser anyway. At least I will get some use out of it then!
So apart from that its been a great day! No really - it has! The only regret is not stopping for a pint at the Cape, at Warwick, but something always keeps me going on without stopping till I am past Leamington Spa too. Which is what I have done tonight, arriving at Fosse Locks where strangely and most unwelcome, Fosse Bottom Lock had a boat moored on the bottom lock landing and the top too. Folks - when someone is single handed, which I have been since my Hatton assistant departed in preference for football over lock wheeling, they actually need to use the lock landings and it really doesn’t help when you peer out of the curtains incase I touch your paintwork or otherwise give you cause to complain.
So I think the word of the day, apart from wateryness which I think I have invented, is exhaustedness. Which I have also just invented. Fosse locks aren’t a good place to moor, as the main moorings are long term, but theres several spaces so here we are. We will be gone by the time anyone wakes.
I kind of think Zulu has had her revenge during the last two days. Everything is back to relative normality tonight. We are warm and dry, watching tv with lovely charged batteries, and blogging away with an amazingly strong 3G signal in what is a most unexpected location. At least something is going well today!!
Today? 12.5 miles and 26 locks. 1 tunnel. 12 waterynesses, 150 gallons of hoovering… and the rest is history.
Flat batteries at Lapworth
Friday 5th March 2010
Ah well it had to happen sooner or later. After 10 days at Lapworth Zulu has consumed every last bit of battery power and I really can’t work out why, as the isolator was off leaving only the bilge pump to drain them. The starter battery is also isolated from the cabin batteries when the engine is off. There was such a resounding silence when I turned the key that I actually thought someone may have taken the batteries, but they are all there intact.
Then a little towpath magic happened. Several people stopped to offer their advice, most useful being “see him over there… go and ask him to borrow his genny”. And so I did. And 10 minutes later a lovely 2Kw generator was topping up the starter battery. Thanks very much mate - that was very generous to let me walk off with your generator in your wheelbarrow.
I phoned River and Canal Rescue a bit late in the day, but their engineer did offer to come out even though it was going to be after 8pm. I was pleased to be able to call them back before the guy set off, in the knowledge that I was probably going to be able to start the engine myself before he got here.
One hour later I risked turning the key and Zulu fired up instantly. So instead of leaving at 5pm and being at Hatton top lock by dark, I left at 7pm and am only at Tom O’The Wood moorings tonight, filling the water tank at the convenient tap and blogging by candlelight while the engine is still squeezing or hopefully pouring some charge back into the batteries. The cabin battery bank was down to 4.5 volts - the technical people amongst you will realise this is not a good thing as not only does it make the lights very very dim indeed, but it also enters that grey area where they may not ever be charged properly again. I do hope this isn’t the start of battery troubles.
The day started well through, after a very heavy frost and minus 5.5C at 7am this morning. I took the train to Lapworth and discovered that the single fare would be £42.00 whereas splitting the ticket into two halves, from Newbury to Banbury would be £14.80 and from Banbury to Lapworth would be £9.80. A saving of £17.40. But then my Network Railcard saved another £1.80 despite the minimum fare on a weekday of £13.00. And the ticket lady said … save another 20p by getting a return to Lapworth from £9.60.
Therefore I paid £22.60 for exactly the same seats on exactly the same trains instead of £42.00. There is something seriously wrong with the system when a return ticket is less than a single, and two tickets are almost half the price of one. What can we do to get a fair fare structure!
So tonight its an early night.
Total progress today. 1 mile.
They all count, as long as they are in the right direction.
Hatton here I come!
I have recently been praising the power of blogging as a means of on the spot reporting, and thanks to another blogger I can rest easy that Zulu is still safely moored at Kingswood Junction having seen her photographed by John on Epiphany on Monday morning. “On the left, a fellow bloggers boat” - that’s Zulu!
British Waterways have now confirmed that the over-running stoppage at Braunston Tunnel will be completed by 11th March and so there is now nothing stopping us from making some good progress. So Hatton locks will soon be behind us and with a bit of luck this weekend I will be able to reach somewhere in the Braunston area, or possibly Long Itchington. Within one boat’s length of our current mooring I will finally be on the Grand Union Canal, but there is still a long way to go!
Meanwhile I did say that there is one flight I don’t like doing single handed - yes Hatton! After 3 months of narrow locks, Hatton locks are going to seem even more enormous and as there’s 21 of them all in a row, it is a lot safer and much more efficient to have another pair of hands.
So for the second time in this journey I am offering an endless supply of coffee, bacon rolls and something stronger if required in exchange for some enthusiastic lock wheeling. Whether you fancy a day’s exercise, would like to know more about the canals or just love doing locks for the sake of it, please dont be shy in coming forward to volunteer your services! It will probably be Saturday 6th morning if anyone really is interested. I would appreciate the help!
Take no notice. What stoppages?
Last week we came down the 19 frozen and snow covered Lapworth locks from Birmingham and I meant to mention the notice pinned to the balance beams of lock 20, the bottom lock of the flight if arriving from the Grand Union. I knew it to be untrue, having just arrived from the other direction but what would I be expected to do if I had just arrived to go up the flight? Maybe walk 2 miles to the top, to verify it is possible to get through - as once committed to the flight there is no turning place until well after the top lock. Maybe I should just assume it is OK in the absence of a lock and chain? Or maybe check Waterscape.com to find out whether there is really a stoppage?
Yes that’s what I did earlier in the trip. No point in phoning British Waterways these days, as the stock answer is “have you checked Waterscape.com?” I didn’t realise it at the time but by searching for stoppages on the Stratford Canal and CHANGING THE FROM DATE I had broken the search system, which then returned a long list of incorrect stoppages! I couldn’t understand why boats had been arriving in Birmingham while I was seeing a long list of Lapworth stoppages for January to March. And then the penny dropped. The search results were showing me 2009 stoppages - I just hadn’t noticed the year until now! I tried it again at Lapworth and got exactly the same incorrect results.
Today after complaining to British Waterways about this, I notice that the search results have been corrected, and indeed there is no way to search for 2009 stoppages deliberately so last week’s results can only have been the result of an error rather than finger trouble.
So back to the plot, the notice on the bottom gates of the flight is now totally inexplicable. I wonder if it refers to the flight going down towards Stratford, which is indeed closed, although you wouldn’t be going up through lock 20 if taking that route.
So once again, no information would be so much better than half a story - if Waterscape.com didn’t exist and if someone had removed the notice from the lock when lock 19 was repaired ahead of schedule 2 weeks ago, then nobody would be any the wiser. But as it stands BW are continuing to make demands of the user without having the systems to back them up themselves. There is no excuse for returning old data from a website query, other than dodgy programming and lack of testing and the incorrect notice could have been removed by someone from the local BW Offices the day the locks reopened. Its all of 200 yards from the lock to their front door. They could do with typing practice too by the looks of it - even their own phone number has been mis-typed! It should of course be 01827 252000. I suggest we should all call them tomorrow.
Meanwhile theres no cruising log this weekend. Looking at the rain, and the forecast for even more, I have decided not to move Zulu today but hopefully the weather will improve this week.
Viking Warrior - was that Zulu’s long lost sister?
In the 1980s Zulu Warrior belonged to the Royal Navy as one of two narrowboats based at Uxbridge on the Grand Union. They were basically hire boats, available for Navy personnel attached to the nearby “Stone Frigate” HMS Warrior, otherwise known as Northwood HQ near Rickmansworth. The staff at Uxbridge Boat Centre still remember having Zulu based there.
Amongst the paperwork which I inherited are the old hire boat inventory, handling manual and some of the log books. I never found the actual “brochure” for hiring Zulu, but I do have a glossy A4 leaflet with the details of the other boat, purpose built for the job in 1975, as opposed to Zulu’s history as a former hire boat.
This sparkling new all steel boat was called Viking Warrior, and was apparently 50ft with 8 berths. From the faded photos it isn’t clear whether Viking was a cruiser or trad stern and I have no other information about her. Searching Jim Shead’s boat listing for Viking Warrior came up with only one GRP boat which couldn’t possibly be the original, so for the last two years I have assumed that she no longer exists.
This weekend look what I found, on its mooring just above Bridge 28 at Lapworth on the Stratford on Avon Canal. Viking Warrior, all very shiny, and a traditional stern but remarkably similar bows and window pattern to the photo in my brochure. Could this really be the long lost partner for Zulu? Searching Jim Shead’s boat list by the index number comes up with Viking Warrier (sic) which of course is why I couldn’t find her in my original search, and the index number 60553 could well be from the 1980s but isn’t exactly datable as it is from the era where all existing boats were handed a sequential number regardless of their actual age. The length is given at 45 feet, but there again Zulu was sold to me as 7 feet longer than she is in the real world.
UPDATED 24-FEB-10
I hope to do some more research so if you know anything about these two boats it would be really great to hear from you. I would especially like to see old photographs of Zulu. Meanwhile I have been reminded (Thanks Brian - see comments) about an article Royal Navy Narrowboats on Grannybuttons.com published shortly after I bought Zulu - indeed published because I bought Zulu. There is already a wealth of detail about Viking Warrior contributed by Noel Durkin, and mentions Dick Pryce-Jones as being in charge of the naval narrowboat project and apparently still has his own narrowboat, nb Juniper, at Upware. So if either of you read this, or anyone else with more information, I would love to hear from you.
Although Zulu and Viking have long since been decomissioned from the Navy, there are still at least two Royal Navy narrowboats, so you never know who you may meet in the next bridge hole. The most recent, the Warneford VC, was added in March 2009 as covered by http://www.hmforces.co.uk/news/articles/608-royal-navy-launches-new-vessel-a-narrowboat and will be based at Hilperton on the K&A and I believe at least one more, the Emma is based in the Midlands. These boats are, like Zulu, used for recreational and occasional team building exercises.
Lapworth top to Lapworth bottom
Sunday 21st February 2010
I looked out at 7am just in time to see the tail end of a snowstorm which had added at least another two inches of fresh snow overnight but at least this meant the temperature was on the rise after hitting minus 5.5 during the night.
I therefore got my lie-in and got up again after 9 when a lot of the fresh snow had already melted. At about 10am I optimistically set off into the ice, which although thawing, was still almost enough to stop us dead in our tracks. In fact it did several times, but taking another run at it broke through. Too late to think about the paintwork now though. Without the thaw in the brilliant morning sunshine there would have been no way on earth I could have continued the journey, but I was keen not to become stranded in a lock flight.
Lapworth locks were quite hard work single handed, as they have no tail landing, which means opening the gates then using the ladder to get back on the boat, which isn’t too bad as the locks aren’t deep. In the snow however it meant taking everything half speed, as well as walking on to open the next lock and then back to close the previous one, trebling the distance walked at each lock and not being able to leave the boat unattended while going down due to the ice. Its funny how some pounds and some locks were ice free, whereas other locks were frozen solid.
Worth noting for anyone who hasn’t broken ice to get into a lock, the ice fragments have a nasty habit of jamming vertically between the brickwork and the boat, so when this happens there is even more work to do, making sure the boat isn’t hanging as it drops down the lock. Smashing ice with a heavy shaft is also quite satisfying.
By the time I got to the bottom of the flight, 15 locks later, I was ready for a late lunch, which I ate in the sun wearing only a tee shirt and jeans after shedding a layer of clothing every hour on the way down! The area around Kingswood Basin and its complex canal junction is a lovely location, very popular with dog walkers, and I can well understand why mooring vacancies here always attract a lot of interest, even though there are locks galore in every direction!
So Zulu is now moored just beyond the visitor moorings, close enough to walk to Lapworth station.
Thanks again to Matilda Rose blog, who reminded me that the Lapworth flight was no longer closed due to the early completion of the Lock 19 stoppage. Looking at the fresh snow alongside each lock, I think I was the only boat to follow you all week.
Today I have done 2 miles and 15 locks which took just under 4 hours, ending up within a boat’s length of the Grand Union. Finally almost on the right canal but there’s still a long way to Uxbridge! No point in rushing though, as Braunston and Buckby still have stoppages which could well be delayed until Easter due to the weather.








![p1070184 Viking Warrie]](http://www.zulu-warrior.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/p1070184-500x375.jpg)


