Captain Coochie
Well-Known Member
£946.68 a year for a mid river mooring . It used to be quite cheap when i bought Cuchilo , cheap enough not to worry anyway but nearly 1k a year for a chain on the river bed 
the National Trust took it back over a year ago they have doubled the price. They have ripped out and replaced the old decaying mooring trot and provided new but will NOT allow the fitting of mooring rings as before so ropes can easily be slipped up and off the round poles along the edge by the local yobs who think it is funny to set my boat adrift.
Clive., Do they still sell those rubber snubbers. You pass your mooring line through leaving a slack area with the snubber taking the tension. Then if there is any wash the rubber just expands to take up the force.
Hey True Blue, you clearly know the stretch I moor on, and also know my mate Vince who to my mind is a bit of a star and I'm really sorry he left and retired although Illeta Col is still going well. We do still keep in touch though.
Vince was an absolute saint, nothing to much trouble; unlocked Cartbridge wharf for me and a giant crane at short notice, and relocked it later at dead of night. He made the Wey bearable for me. I hope he's still around somewhere. A real river person
You found a cheaper mooring? Can I ask where please as I'm considering moving off. Actually, to be honest, this is probably my nearest bit of water to keep the boat where I can pop down from Sandhurst in around 25 mins to do a bit of work if I have to and I love the quiet and peaceful bits of the wider river sections where we often anchor fore and aft for a weekend and just chill out.
I was comparing prices at Pyrford Marina where we spent 4 happy years until the "caravan people" bought in. So my prices were based on the last year that we were there
I don't rail on about narrow boats particularly, but they do displace an awful lot of water on the move and as you say often come very close aboard in passing. Otherwise, like me, they often just moor up and stay still the whole weekend enjoying the tranquillity.
I take your point, but the Wey Navigation was built for broad beam barges, and they kept the channel to a reasonable profile. Changing times reduced it to a cruiser way until NBs were discovered as "weekend residences". However, by that time all the online mooring infrastructure was installed - which is just not suitable for LTTT passing traffic. Blame NT not NBs (in general)
This is how I'm moored at present and is what the Trust now object to:
Boy, oh Boy, oh Boy, that green stuff (in your pics) is positively luxurious compared to what was there when we left. It was planked, no posts, and most of the planking was missing. A good case for Elf 'n Safety.
CliveS
I see a possible solution. Could you pass a chain from your boat round the piling underneath the deck of the pontoon and back onboard, where you lock it off ?
If the chain is inside a length of plastic pipe, no chafing !
CliveShep, that's not Vince and Big Dave that you're talking about, is it?