Gang plank length for canals

pcatterall

Well-Known Member
Joined
2 Aug 2004
Messages
5,507
Location
Home East Lancashire boat Spain
Visit site
33' boat drawing 4'6" What length of plank will reach most banks yet not be too big to store.
I'm thinking of a section of ally ladder with light ply sections to fit as required.
Ladder can tie to guard rail with plywood stored below.
Any experience(s) ??
 
On a hire boat on the Canal du Midi, we had one about 4 feet long which was fine (often we didn't need it at all). I don't know whether your draught might keep you further from the bank (but if it does, how are you going to get a line ashore?)

Pete
 
Scaffold plank and take a saw with you...

Blueboatman,

I'd agree !

With a 38 metre Peniche in Burgundy, - it only drew about 3 feet - we couldn't get close to the banks when progress was prevented by the Eclusiers' spectacularly long luch breaks, sometimes requiring moi ( much fitter then ) to climb up the mooring lines.

We also came up with a design for a gangplank about 16' long, suspended to cope with passing commercial barge wash and caravan style jockey wheels to run up & down the shore end.

On a yacht I'd probably take a scaffolding plank and give it to someone going the other way, when reaching the canal exit...
 
We used a two-section ladder with ply on one side. (useful to cut small toe-holes away from the centre)
It was used as a passarelle when stern/bows -to, to access the windmill/radar/aerials on the pole at the back, and to access the boat when out on the hard.
Now in UK we still have a two-section to use as spreader for lift-in/out and dry access.
Never needed one on a canal though, unless you're talking about the dirty plank outside the fenders used in locks - in which case almost anything found floating around will do.
 
Hehe, walking the plank takes on a new excitement after a good lunch!

Last (and only) time I went through a canal I acquired a set of Mini Tyres that had racked up considerable mileage already, back and forth....:)
 
With a 38 metre Peniche in Burgundy, - it only drew about 3 feet - we couldn't get close to the banks when progress was prevented by the Eclusiers' spectacularly long luch breaks, sometimes requiring moi ( much fitter then ) to climb up the mooring lines.

So how did the mooring lines get ashore in the first place? :confused:

Sounds like an Indian Rope Trick to climb up the mooring line in order to take it ashore and tie it up :D

Pete
 
So how did the mooring lines get ashore in the first place? :confused:

Sounds like an Indian Rope Trick to climb up the mooring line in order to take it ashore and tie it up :D

Pete

Pete,

apologies, I realised as I posted...

We'd dropped the passengers off at a lock, then moored the barge up with 1 metre long stakes driven into the ground...

The boat promptly drifted away, so I had to shin up the mooring line to start her up and drive her into the bankside while then *****ing around also setting up the gangplank...

In a much more potentially nasty incident at Chalon - Sur Soane ( in deep water alongside a stone wall with steps ) I was chatting with passengers when a chap - in his 80's & largely blind - came back to the boat and I just, by pure luck, saw him about to step on the gangplank after it had been dislodged by the wash of a passing tug, so yelled at him to hang about while I reset it; a failure on my part, I'd let myself get distracted, but a few seconds later it might have been a very different story...
 
Do make sure you've got yer big tent pegs to nail the boat to the bank. They're necessary on the Midi, anyway, dunno about elsewhere.

Pete
 
Top