Drought consequences for boaters

534l4rk

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How does the drought affect you now?
At present there are no drought-related restrictions to boating on the Thames. Recent rainfall has increased flows in the River Thames, though this is likely to be relatively short-lived unless there is further rain.

Thames Water’s hosepipe ban means that you may not use a hosepipe to wash a leisure boat. You may only use our water points to fill up your boat’s water tanks; not to wash your boat.

Please continue to use water wisely. The south east is still in drought. One month’s significant rainfall after an extended dry period is not enough to greatly alter the situation. Groundwater levels are still well below average, and are not likely to recover until winter.

Last month, the Thames catchment received 255 per cent of the rainfall that we would normally expect in April. But March was exceptionally dry, and the Thames catchment only received 38 per cent of its long-term average rainfall for the month. River flows were more typical of late summer.
Potential impacts for boating
Falling water levels trigger actions for us to maintain river levels for boating. In order, these are:

a ban on the use of hoses/sprinklers at lock sites - implemented April 2012
voluntary delays to lock passage – not yet implemented
elevation of water levels above target – not yet implemented
‘sealing’ of weir sluices (depending on water levels) – not yet implemented (although works to minimise leakage in weirs and locks are under way)
If the drought worsens and flows on the Thames decline, further potential actions are:

out-of-hours power switched off at powered locks
lock passage restricted to once every half hour
locks closed out of hours
The water levels may vary along the river and the measures will be implemented accordingly. Each lock keeper will be able to tell you the situation at their lock. Out of hours, please refer to the lock notice board.

For more information
For updates on the drought position on the Thames, please visit our website at www.environment-agency.gov.uk/thamesdrought.
 
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Thames water...what a bl00dy shower.

They never seem to extract the water when there's plenty of it, only when there's not enough. :rolleyes:

Ho hum...:confused:
 
So all that flood water
where has that gone then
STOP PREACHING & save water from running into the Sea

OP wasn't preaching - his post is the content of a notice issued by the EA yesterday as a Drought Update for boaters on the non tidal Thames.

Not sure how you can stop the water running down the river and out to sea - the ground is too hard to absorb it which is why it is running off into the river. Shut down the weirs to stop it running downstream and there would be major flooding.

The water companies wanted to build new reservoirs - esp big ones at Abingdon but the NIMBY brigade put paid to that - see HERE
Agreed theres lots of other actions that could and should be taken to conserve water supplies.

The water needs to penetrate into the ground and restore the levels in the aquifers - BBC Story today
 
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Simple solution -

Dig a series of blurry great holes at suitable sites along our rivers, leading down to the aquifer thingys.
Seal them off with a valve.

when the rivers are running, open the valves and let the water run down to where ever.

Dunno why the haven't done it before....

OR
build more reservoirs like wot we had before they drilled holes in the ground to take it out in the first place.
 
We are all very quick to apportion blame to "the authorities" for not doing enough to plan for the sorts of problems we are experiencing with water at the moment. Boatone as usual has provided a measured and thoughtful response to this issue, but we also need to look at our own consumption and how that has changed oVer the years.

30 years ago I lived in a flat with one kitchen with a sink and a washing machine and one bathroom. 30 years later I have a house with a bathroom, shower room, downstairs cloakroom, utility room with a sink and dishwasher, kitchen with a sink and an outside tap. I also have a boat with three sinks fed from a tank which I fill from a hose and two toilets flushed with water drawn from the river.

I try not to think how much my water consumption has increased over that time, but I don't think I am unusual. The only area where my liquid consumption has reduced is with my alcohol intake. 30 years ago it was mostly beer in sometimes frightenly large quantities. Now it is wine which has much less volume.

As for the suggestion that the water should be prevented from running out to sea, well blimey, how will that work. Perhaps the country be tilted from east to west so that the Thames runs the other way
 
Water the most valuable resource on the planet.

The water companies wanted to build new reservoirs - esp big ones at Abingdon but the NIMBY brigade put paid to that - see HERE



Its not just there either,major water storage plans have been thwarted down here in Kent over the last 20-30 years or so,possibly by the very people who use the greatest and most probably unmetered amounts of water.
 
The water companies wanted to build new reservoirs - esp big ones at Abingdon but the NIMBY brigade put paid to that - see HERE



Its not just there either,major water storage plans have been thwarted down here in Kent over the last 20-30 years or so,possibly by the very people who use the greatest and most probably unmetered amounts of water.

Exactly my point, Fred, Thames Water won't fill what reservoirs they have when the River's running, they've closed down reservoirs up this end and the public won't let them build new ones anyway.

Bit of a bummer all round...
 
So I emailed Thames water to check whether safety boats owned and operated by registered charities were exempt from the ban and got this reply:

The Temporary Use Ban does not apply to public service vehicles (e.g. buses), or goods vehicles (e.g. lorries); or to boats used in the course of a business, they can still be washed with a hose. In consideration to this exemption we do ask for users to be aware of how much water they are using during this ban period.

So is that a yes or a no?
 
Dig a series of blurry great holes at suitable sites along our rivers, leading down to the aquifer thingys.
Seal them off with a valve.

when the rivers are running, open the valves and let the water run down to where ever.

Dunno why the haven't done it before.....

because it won't work? :)

I'm pretty certain now that people don't know what an aquifer is
 
So I emailed Thames water to check whether safety boats owned and operated by registered charities were exempt from the ban and got this reply:

So is that a yes or a no?

Yes: from a Health & Safety perspective you can, for instance, hose off/clean windows and hose down decks/walk areas that could, if not washed off, pose a trip or slip hazard.
 
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