Daydream believer
Well-known member
Open borders ??From this:
to this:
Where is the connection?
But i take your point & perhaps I should not be winding you up in this thread. Some other time perhaps.
Open borders ??From this:
to this:
Where is the connection?
Far too embarrassing to Oxford and Cambridge if they tried that.Perhaps they could turn it in to a championship and find the 2 best universities to race.
The best two universities do race.Perhaps they could turn it in to a championship and find the 2 best universities to race.
Not by a long way - the blues boats are seriously good by any standards. They would give most national boats a good run for their money,Far too embarrassing to Oxford and Cambridge if they tried that.
ROFLThe best two universities do race.
Yep, and that amendment to the bridge passage rule was published far too late for this year's Boat Race in any case.I just checked that as I was planning a trip down the Thames end of April. Hammersmith Bridge Vessel Transits
Vessels requiring to transit under Hammersmith Bridge can book a controlled transit, providing the following conditions are met:
So that's boat races and any leisure boating excluded.
- The transit is essential and necessary. The requirement cannot be delayed to a later date or conducted elsewhere.
Strikes me that it’s more entertaining than the Thames venue, much more intimate.It is a much better venue for a boat race
Straight canals are more godly?While much of the course is indeed dead straight (I think the Bishops of Ely straightened the river back before Henry VIII suppressed the monasteries), there are one or two bends at the end near Ely.
Hmm. From what I hear, Bath, Loughborough and a couple of the London Universities could walk over them. Are the blues boats still stuffed full of rather dim Americans taking dubious postgraduate courses? That meant an M.Stud. at Oxford, since it has no exam at the end.Not by a long way - the blues boats are seriously good by any standards. They would give most national boats a good run for their money,
No, more profitable! Prior to Henry VIII, the church owned vast tracts of land, and they were also pretty good at making said land pay! Straight rivers = better drainage in East Anglia.Straight canals are more godly?
I wonder where you heard that? Walking in a boat race is a clever trick but probably not allowed. Hard to compare with any other crews because they only really exist to do one race a yearHmm. From what I hear, Bath, Loughborough and a couple of the London Universities could walk over them. Are the blues boats still stuffed full of rather dim Americans taking dubious postgraduate courses? That meant an M.Stud. at Oxford, since it has no exam at the end.
Yes, there was a time when the Cambridge crew was mostly undergraduates and the Oxford one was mainly professionals. That was the underlying cause of the 1987 Oxford mutiny - the ringers thought they were above training with the students.It is not so much the case this year but there have been times when the blue boat has been made up almost entirely of (mostly foreign) internationals
Hydrologically dubious, at least unless you're prepared to dredge regularly. Helpful for barge traffic for sure.No, more profitable! Prior to Henry VIII, the church owned vast tracts of land, and they were also pretty good at making said land pay! Straight rivers = better drainage in East Anglia.
In the fens there is a slight fall of the land, so shortening the path the water takes speeds the flow - at least, that's how I heard it, from a friend who was a very senior member of the drainage boards. Shortening the river paths has been the aim of almost every drainage attempt in those parts. However, improving ship traffic in the Middle Ages would also have been a consideration.Hydrologically dubious, at least unless you're prepared to dredge regularly. Helpful for barge traffic for sure.
Cambridge won both races.Aw come on, who actually won the race ?
Missed it as was on safety for Seal Watch duties