D
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Thanks for posting fisherman, a very interesting watch.
If they were travelling in a pair, why didn't they do as suggested earlier in the thread and simply lash together or make some beams to create a powered catamaran.
I can't see the point in going in company so that they can watch each other turn turtle.
About twenty-odd years ago I worked with a chap from the Birmingham area who took several across - having bought and renovated them he could sell them for much more in France - but he and his brother generally took them in pairs. They'd run two down to somewhere near the mouth of the Thames along with a couple of pre-cut/drilled steel beams, then on a a quiet/slight seas day, simply bolt them together like catamaran and motor across to I think Boulogne; I gather that whilst the motoring wasn't difficult, it did need an experienced hand on both narrow boat's helms/throttle to make it go smoothly.
Got to be better than, possibly, sinking. I don't know the Wash but surely it can blow up too quickly for a slow narrowboat to gain shelter?
Small yachts tend to have keels and ballast and a hull form suitable for the weather.
I don't think I would be risking a narrow boat in open water. But then I don't have one, so don't know what they are capable of.
Flat bottom and beam/length = x 8 or more. It's a canoe.
See also this view from the other boat posted on the ECF a couple of weeks ago ?I wouldn't
I understand they used to cross the N Sea, but two lashed together.
it was frustrating, in comparison to some of the great canals in Europe, like the one's across Sweden or Russia to Finland that opens up large inland waters to sailing.
But we don’t have any large inland waters in the UK. The reason we don’t have canals like continental Europe is that we’re an island, not a land-mass. Instead of the large cargo vessels of the Rhine and Danube, we had a substantial coasting fleet. Don’t build a canal through the middle, just go round the outside.
Pete
Clearly a case of "great minds".In my archive somewhere I've a leatherbound presentation document of a project to be put to several of the old canal companies boards of something I think was called The Big Cross.
Basically it was to form a cross of larger canals to take much larger vessels with it's centre in Brum.
How did it heave to? Well enough to allow you to go inside to make a cup of tea?I have a friend whose father used to build narrowboats from Wigan and who regularly took his narrowboat across to the Isle of Man.
There have been a couple of plans for canals from the Solway to the Tyne (barge and ship) but neither got far, in large part because the Solways is so shallow for so far that monumental amounts of dredging would be required. There was a canal to Carlisle, but it didn't last long.There was a plan for a canal from Mounts bay to Hayle, to avoid Lands End, didn't get far.
Hayle was an important industrial port
Hayle Estuary - Wikipedia
A word of caution to new canal enthusiasts ... beware of placing to much reliance and / or credence on the numerous proposals for canals large and small from the days of canal mania
Much like the railways a few decades later, everybody who was anybody wanted a canal. Many of the abortive proposals were impractical, some indeed were totally impractical. And many more were never going to be financially viable
The fact that Joe Bloggs, egged on by the Earl of Somewhere and backed, initially at least, by the local industrial bigwigs, proposed a canal from A to B in 18 something or other doesn't mean it was a practical or sensible suggestion then nor would it be so today