Salty John
Well-Known Member
How do you compare the pleasure of seeing the flash of a kingfisher with that of being circled by a fulmar? I hope we can all enjoy both equally.
Perfectly put.
How do you compare the pleasure of seeing the flash of a kingfisher with that of being circled by a fulmar? I hope we can all enjoy both equally.
the best thing is when you turn the darned engine off at the end of the day
I can stick canals for about four days....
then I am dreaming about sailing, the gentle chucle of water around a bow, the beauty of sea-birds in flight, the pull of the tide, the peaceful anchorages
A very pleasant and un-threatening form of boating.View attachment 31260View attachment 31261
What breed is Minnie John?
She's a ComPac 19, built in Florida and, as far as I know, the only one in UK. She is 7' on the beam and draft is around 2.5' - this just 'fits' our inland waterway system so a couple of years ago I took the rig off and put her on the Lancaster Canal. I'm intending to explore the canals, of which there are about 3,000 miles in England, when I get the time.
I thought that might be the case, I have seen them in Small Craft Adviser, always thought they looked a sensible small yacht.She's a ComPac 19, built in Florida and, as far as I know, the only one in UK. She is 7' on the beam and draft is around 2.5' - this just 'fits' our inland waterway system so a couple of years ago I took the rig off and put her on the Lancaster Canal. I'm intending to explore the canals, of which there are about 3,000 miles in England, when I get the time.
sailing on the canals
the "hardy Corinthians" of the Humber Yawl Club did a lot of canal sailing
it is lovely and quiet and takes very little drive to get the boat going
but you do need an easy drop mast
bung an ent rig on your boat
D
A very pleasant and un-threatening form of boating.View attachment 31260View attachment 31261
I was on that section of canal this week. If you go over 2 knots people shout at you. Not much of a race. You can walk faster on the towpath.I'm doing my first canal trip in September, Bradford on Avon to Bath and back in four days with twenty blokes on two barges. It's my nephew in law's stag do and his dad and I are planning on being the skippers, anyone ever raced barges before?
Some water gypsies constantly move to avoid mooring costs.I was looking at buying a narrow boat to live on. Was amazed at the cost of moorings - seemed to be on the same scale as the Solent with the risk in some areas that you would not be allowed access to your boat in times of flooding. So by the time you add up maintenance, mooring etc there wasn't any benefit
Hand and Dagger?