Top Banner
www.waterways.org.uk SPRING 2012 | ISSUE 235 Meet John Dodwell waterways CRT Campaign Update The Magic of Fenland REMOTE WATERWAYS IN EASTERN ENGLAND IWA AT WORK News from the branches THE MOORING DEBATE On-line versus marina WRG NEEDS YOU! Volunteer in 2012 KEEPING OUR WATERWAYS ALIVE
51

IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

Mar 23, 2016

Download

Documents

IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

www.waterways.org.uk

SPRING 2012 | ISSUE 235

Meet John

Dodwell

waterwaysCRT Campaign

Update

The Magic of FenlandREMOTE WATERWAYS IN EASTERN ENGLAND

IWA AT WORKNews from the branches

THE MOORING DEBATEOn-line versus marina

WRG NEEDS YOU!Volunteer in 2012

KEEPING OUR WATERWAYS ALIVE

COVER.indd 1COVER.indd 1 20/1/12 2:04:15 pm20/1/12 2:04:15 pm

Page 2: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

A non-profit distributing company limited by guarantee (612245), Registered as a Charity (No. 212342)

Founded: 1946, Incorporated 1958Registered Office: Island House, Moor Road, Chesham, HP5 1WATel: 01494 783453E-mail: [email protected] site: www.waterways.org.ukChief Executive – Neil Edwards Company Secretary – Helen Elliott-Adams Campaign & Communications Manager – Jo Gilbertson� Nothing printed in Waterways may be construed as policy or an offi cial announcement unless stated, otherwise IWA accepts no liability for any matter in the magazine. Although every care is taken with advertising matters no responsibility whatsoever can be accepted for any matter advertised. Where a photo credit includes a note such as CC-BY-SA, the image is made available under that Creative Commons licence; full details at www.creativecommons.org

WATERWAYS EDITOR:Keith Goss Tel: 01283 742951E-mail: [email protected] EDITOR: Kerry HogstonADVERTISEMENT MANAGER:Ian Sharpe Tel: 01283 742977E-mail: [email protected] DESIGN: Jill Brown, Clare Salisbury

ADVERTISING PRODUCTION: Samantha LloydE-mail: [email protected] BOARD: Neil Edwards, Jo Gilbertson, Keith Goss, Clive Henderson, Peter Johns, Jim Shead REPROGRAPHICS: Waterways World Ltd, 151 Station Street, Burton-on-Trent, Staffordshire, DE14 1BG. Printed in England by Warners (Midlands) PLC, Bourne, Lincs� Articles may be reproduced provided permission is obtained and acknowledgement made. ISSN 0969-0654

COVER PICTUREPassing Fotheringhay church on the River Nene.KEITH GOSS

CONTENTSSpring 2012

AGENDAThe Column of the National Chairman

IWA AT WORKWhat’s been happening around the branches

CANAL & RIVER TRUST – A CAMPAIGN UPDATEThe Waterways Minister updates the Parliamentary Waterways Group

NEWSA round up of the main stories from IWA and beyond

FREIGHTCommercial carrying developments around the network

MEET THE TRUSTEESWe talk to John Dodwell about his hopes for the new Trust

THE MAGIC OF FENLANDExploring a unique network of waterways in eastern England

WRG NEEDS YOU!Where to volunteer in 2012

THE MOORING DEBATEOn-line versus marina

THE NEXT GENERATIONAttracting young people to the world of the waterways

CUTTINGSWhat the media has been saying about waterway issues

3.

8.

12.

14.

19.

22.

24.

32.

36.

38.

42.

36

24

32

12

Ten Good Reasons to be an IWA Member

Campaign for properly funded waterways Provide a voice for youHelp improve your local waterwaysDefend the waterways from unwelcome developmentGive practical fi nancial and political support for waterways restorationProvide expert advice for waterway managers and restoration groupsOrganise restoration holidays for young peopleProvide over 5,000 days of volunteer labour each yearArrange affordable insurance for waterway organisationsEnable greater appreciation of the waterways through education and experience

••••

•••

The following special offers are now available exclusively for IWA members:

Channel Glaze - 10% discount on double glazingCotswold Outdoor - 10% discountEuropcar - Special hire rates to IWA membersLee Sanitation Ltd. - 10% on orders over £100Midland Chandlers - 5% discountNarrowboat Services - 10% discountRoadPro - 5% discountUK Boat Hire - 15% discountUltimateBerths.com - Free ListingWillowbridge Marina - 10% discount on chandlery purchases and services in the yardWorcester Marine Windows Ltd - 5% discount

Please note: All discounts and offers are entirely at the organisers’ discretion.

To take advantage of these offers please go to: www.waterways.org.uk/support_us/members_area/member_discounts_special_offers_public

IWA has teamed up with both Navigators & General and River Canal Rescue to enable an insurance facility that is unique to the market, with the added benefit that every policy taken out and subsequently renewed helps IWA, and thus furthers our charitable work for the waterways.

These specialist inland waterway insurance policies are tailored to fit your needs, covering loss and damage to your vessel, protecting you against legal claims, paying for injury and damages caused to other property and providing the security of inclusive breakdown cover.

Obtaining a quote couldn’t be easier, simply fill in a few details on our online form, and one of Navigators & General team will call you back.

The policy incorporates many features that are unique including:

Membership of River Canal RescueDedicated insurance cover for owners who permanently live aboard their boats (additional cost)Personal public liabilityMarina benefitsMedical expenses cover£3 million pounds third party cover

The Inland Waterways Association is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority.

••

••••

IWA ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION RATES•Adult/single £30.00 •Joint/Family £37.50

Details of all other rates are available from IWA Head Office – see the Directory on the address sheet.

MEMBERS’ SERVICES

YOUR SUPPORT HELPS IWA TO:

2 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

Contents/Agenda.indd 1Contents/Agenda.indd 1 20/1/12 2:14:16 pm20/1/12 2:14:16 pm

Page 3: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

An exciting year aheadThe Canal & River Trust launch should be one of the milestones of 2012. We have the name and the logo for the new charity with no hint of a boat or navigation in either, so let’s hope that what it says on the tin is not translated literally - thus forgetting the statutory obligations. At the time of writing we still await news of any funding settlement agreed between the CRT Transition Trustees and the Government and, as I have pointed out before, this will be crucial if this New Era is to be a long term success and provide security for the nation’s waterways. Aspects of the initial launch and structure may not be to everyone’s liking but I am sure that these can be recognised and put right at a later date if necessary. But the basic foundations and charitable objectives need to be fit for purpose.

I am confident that the transition trustees will have done their best in the time available to achieve a successful launch, even if the signs are that the target date may be missed. They need to be confident of the support of, and the engagement with, all waterway supporters and this will depend upon how well they have handled the crucial aspects I have mentioned. I hope that they are successful and can then rely upon future support and commitment, especially from IWA members.

We hope to build a special relationship with the CRT in the years ahead and I know that the input from our members, branches and regions in terms of feedback and information from the grass roots will help ensure that CRT is aware of the areas of mutual interest.

I have reservations that the appointments made to date in terms of trustees, partnership boards and chairs, council members and advisory groups show an apparent high level of ‘newness’ with no obvious previous depth of experience of the waterways. Whilst new faces, thinking and approaches are to be welcomed, these require an extensive learning and induction process before each reaches the level of basic understanding of waterway related issues needed to make an effective contribution. Inevitably, much of the learning and induction has been led and carried out by people within British Waterways. In itself it can be good to explain to others what the operation does but it doesn’t always bring out the challenging questions of why we do it that way. Seasoned and long term supporters and users of the waterways had been led to expect a greater say in how their waterways were to be run under this new model but so far they have seen a very low incidence of names or faces they recognise or respect. Is that because such names have not put themselves forward? Have they not wanted to get involved? Have they tried to get involved but been put off by attitudes in some quarters that they are just boaters who always complain about things? Have places been targeted for ‘newcomers’ at the expense of long term supporters? Whatever the reasons, the real concerns are that the essential changes in culture within BW and within traditional waterway supporters and the many and varied groups that they affiliate to might be delayed if there are not enough respected, knowledgeable voices working within and alongside the CRT at this exciting and challenging time. It needs to be demonstrated that this is not a rebranding of BW, as many sceptics believe, but is a new organisation, so please do your bit.

Other challenges of 2012Few can be unaware of the intense activities that this Olympic year will bring to London and the other Games venues and to UK tourism. A valuable legacy for the waterways will remain in the form of cleaned and improved waterways and access around the Olympic Park site. Members have expressed some concerns about the restrictions to navigation and mooring around London during a twelve week period in the summer and we have taken these concerns up with British Waterways, as they now are, since they have determined the restrictions after taking into account the requirements of the security forces. We queried the inconsistency of restrictions on the River Lee, where pre-booked passage had been negotiated with the security forces, and the Regent’s Canal where passage was to be prevented throughout by welded shut barriers. We also queried the period

of the restrictions being many weeks more than the duration of the Olympic and Paralympic Games and were advised that these reflected the lock down periods of the Olympic village and venues, even though the affected waterways are some distance from these areas. It seems unjustified to have restricted waterways that are surrounded by roads, housing and offices that have no specific restrictions applied.

IWA’s Festivals team will be providing harbourmasters to the pre-booked mooring areas available during the games period as this is seen as a way of providing experienced volunteer resources to help CRT, a fellow waterway charity.

A side consequence of the Olympics is that London’s waterways have seen a focus of effort by BW to address the problems of overstaying boats on visitor mooring areas and boaters who claim to be continuous cruisers whilst failing to comply with the required terms of their licence. At a time of increased housing and commuting costs many people have seen living on a boat as a cheaper alternate to bricks and mortar without factoring in the costs of an appropriate mooring to facilitate this choice. IWA supports residential boating in appropriate and approved long-term mooring locations. Whilst some might argue there is a shortage of suitable long terms moorings in the areas of demand, the problem of overstaying boats has been exacerbated by a lack of adequate enforcement activity by BW over many years. When action is taken it appears to be sudden and unexpected to those affected, particularly if they have taken advantage of the lack of regular enforcement for some time.

It would have been ideal if the problem of overstaying boats could have been solved before CRT was launched since it will be an inherited problem for them but I doubt that it will be. It is important that enforcement is consistent throughout the waterway network and not just confined to key honeypot sites near major towns and cities. The enjoyment of the majority requires that restrictions on visitor moorings are followed by all boaters if visitors are to leave with a favourable experience that they will want to repeat. It would be sad if the pleasures of a relaxing leisure activity were to be spoilt by a selfish minority. I am a supporter of those who continuously cruise, a right defended by IWA for many years as a 12 month licence should allow one to cruise for those 12 months, subject of course to routine and major planned maintenance works requirements and the unforeseen unscheduled emergency stoppage. It is a pre-requisite of enjoying one’s licence that there is adequate depth and water supply to enjoy one’s cruising, continuous or otherwise, and I would like to compliment all navigation authorities for the way they have coped with limited rainfall in some areas in recent years with only minimal disruption to navigation in certain areas.

ElsewhereWe continue to support the transfer of the Environment Agency navigations to the CRT and are seeking a solution from the EA to their closure of Welches Dam Lock in East Anglia, possibly involving volunteer input to remove a temporary restriction that seems to have become long term.

Please don’t forget the Inglesham Lock appeal to fund this year’s WRG work there to get a vital eastern front opened on the Cotswolds project.

Clive Henderson

AGENDAThe Column of the National Chairman

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 3

Contents/Agenda.indd 2Contents/Agenda.indd 2 20/1/12 2:15:18 pm20/1/12 2:15:18 pm

Page 4: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

4 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

E - Waterways General Eighth page 2012

ToiletsSparesTanks& MoreT: +44 (0)1295 770000www.leesan.com

Based on the junction of the Grand Union & Oxford canals we provide the ideal location from which to start your holiday.

Whether you have a couple of weeks or just want a short break we have an excellent range of quality, reliable boats so that you can relax, unwind and enjoy the wonderful scenery.

Call NOW or e-mail for a brochure, prices and availability

Calcutt Boats Ltd Stockton Southam Warwickshire CV47 8HX

Explore the Heart of England on a

canal cruise

• Customers report up to 15% fuels saving

•The reduction of prop walk•Greatly reduced stopping distance• Firm, precise steering response both ahead and astern

• Complete control of the vessel at slow manoeuvring speeds in marina’s, locks and ports

• Reduction in noise and vibration throughout the vessel

•A reduction in wake and wash• World wide patented duel thrust blade design

•Cast in the UK

The Axiom Propeller.

Scientifi cally proven to have equal

thrust in both ahead and astern, noother propeller is going

to stop your boatfaster.

+44 (0)1832 734 609www.axiompropellers.com

p04_iwa.indd 1 20/1/12 17:20:41

Page 5: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

MOORINGS • CHANDLERY • BOAT REPAIR • MAINTENANCE • RESTAURANTS • BARS • SHOPS • BOAT SALES

1719

18

1 2

35 6

78

91110

12 141513

4

GLASSON MARINA - Lancashire

RIPON RACECOURSE MARINA - Yorkshire

GALGATE MARINA - Lancaster

LEMONROYD MARINA - Yorkshire

WHITE BEAR MARINA - Lancashire

HULL MARINA - Yorkshire

WHIXHALL MARINA - Shropshire

KINGS MARINA - Nottinghamshire

SAWLEY MARINA - Nottinghamshire

DIGLIS BASIN MARINA - Worcestershire

PRIORY MARINA - Bedfordshire

GOYTRE WHARF MARINA - Monmouthshire

VICTORIA BASIN MARINA - Gloucestershire

APSLEY MARINA - Hertfordshire

LIMEHOUSE BASIN MARINA - London

PORTAVON MARINA - Somerset

COWROAST MARINA - Hertfordshire

BATH MARINA & CARAVAN PARK - Somerset

PACKET BOAT MARINA - Middlesex

POPLAR DOCK MARINA - London

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

11.

12.

13.

14.

15.

16.

17.

18.

19.

20.

16

20

BWML - with 20 marinas across the UK from the tranquillity of the Brecon Beacons to the hustle and bustle of the London Docklands.We really do have something for everyone.

BWML-FOR ASSURED QUALITY, VALUE AND

SERVICE

BWML-FOR ASSURED QUALITY, VALUE AND

SERVICE

We provide over 3000 berths for all types of craft from Coastal berths at Hull and Glasson Basin Marina, to our premier site on the Inland Waterways with over 600 berths, at Sawley Marina on the Trent and Mersey Canal and River Trent.We offer a comprehensive range of services which include:-

• Residential moorings • Chandlery • Brokerage • Graded moorings • Repairs and maintenance • Canal boat hire • Boat sales

let us do the hard work so that you can do the relaxing 0115 9077 400 bwml.co.uk

This is backed by a helpful skilled and professional team, committed to providing the highest level of customer service and consistent approach to quality, in a safe, relaxed and friendly atmosphere.

p05_iwa.indd 1 20/1/12 10:20:19

Page 6: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

6 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

Chilling.Whilst

you relax

Tel: 01903 733 877

Email: [email protected]

www.boatfridge.com

UK’s leading inland waterways refrigerator manufacturer since 1996

The easy fit ‘S’ window system

Simple, Stylish, Slimline, Safe, Secure

Email: [email protected]

Features:■ Unique patented locking catch and support■ Quick easy fitting no screw holes■ Easy clamp in operation by one person■ Quick exchange of glass for security blanks■ Individually decorated panels to fit livery■ Slim profile - no protusions for easy window dressing

Safety shutters easily fitted from inside the boatSee our new secondary glazing system now available

Worcester Marine Windows Ltd Unit 10, Three Springs Trading Estate, Vincent Road, Worcester WR5 1BW

01905 358800

CHANDLERYWe offer a wide and ever expanding range of products

with a fitting service available

BOATYARD SERVICESFor surveying, blacking, painting and repairs.

Mechanical and electrical work to the highest standard.

DAYBOAT HIREEnjoy a trip on the picturesque Oxford Canal

for groups of up to 12.

HIRE FLEETOur well known 20 boat hire fleet is maintained

to a high standard. Boats are available for short breaks, weekly hire – or longer!

Rose Narrowboats LtdFosse Way

Stretton-under-FosseNr Rugby, WarwickshireCV23 0PU 01788 832449

www.rose-narrowboats.co.uk

p06_iwa.indd 1 20/1/12 10:36:23

Page 7: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

Northampton Sales OfficeBlisworth Marina, Blisworth Arm, Blisworth,

Northampton NN7 3EF

01604 859 376

OVER 15 NEW DEMONSTRATORS TO VIEWTHE LARGEST RANGE OF DEMONSTRATORS IN THE UK

Visit www.newandusedboat.co.uk to discover more.

Derby Sales OfficeMercia Marina, Findern Lane, Willington,

Derbyshire DE65 6DW

01283 707 357

Hanbury Monarch Sailaway Range

Hanbury Narrowbeam Range

Aqualine Narrowbeam Range

Unpainted: Narrow from £24,950 50x6’10 inc VAT Wide from £33,950 50x10 inc VAT

Peacock: 2 layouts available, side bathroom with a U shapedgalley or a walkthrough bathroom and galleyHigh spec galley with eye level oven, four gas ring hoband built in microwavefrom £65,950 57x6’10 inc VAT

3 layouts available:Manhatten, Madison and MonacoChoice of bedroom or gally at sternSide or walkthrough bathroom Choice of Oak or Ash interiorsHigh spec kitrchens & BathroomsBeta Marine 38 4 cylinder 1498ccWide choice of optional extras to personalise your boatexactly to your needs

from £82,950 57x6’10 inc VAT

Aqualine Widebeam RangeVariety of layouts available: CanterburyChoice of bedroom, gally or lounge at sternChoice of Oak or Ash interiors1 or 2 bedroom optionsHigh spec kitrchens & BathroomsBeta Marine 60 4 cylinder 2434ccWide choice of optional extras to personalise your boat exactly to your needs

from £128,950 60x10 (£110,459 excl; VAT)

Hanbury Widebeam RangeMonarch: 2 fully fit layouts available

One or two bedroomsOptions of galley, bedroom or saloon at sternFully lined in oak or ashHigh spec galley with hardwood worktops, eye level oven, four gas ring hob and built in microwaveCanaline 52 4 cylinder 2200cc engine/twin alternatorStandard lengths are 50, 57 and 60ftStandard beams are 10, 11 or 12ft

from £90,950 50x10 inc VAT £104,950 60x12 inc VAT

Swallowtail: 2 layouts available, galley at stern with a side bathroom or a galley at stern with a walkthrough bathroomHigh spec galley with eye level oven, four gas ring hob and built in microwavefrom £65,950 57x6’10 inc VAT

Sailaway: Fully gloss painted, ballast, floorboards, windows, front doors, mushrooms and engine

Narrow from £27,950 50x6’10 inc VAT Wide from £36,950 50x10 inc VAT

Sailaway Plus: As above + fully lined, insulated, 12v & 240v tails, 2 bulkheads

Widebeam from £42,950 50x10 inc VAT

Sailaway Additions: As above + Additions pack

Widebeam from £50,950 50x10 inc VAT

N&U NOV WW SP_Layout 1 18/10/2011 15:08 Page 1

p07_iwa.indd 1 20/1/12 10:40:12

Page 8: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

8 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

IWA at WorkNews from around the branches

E-mail your news and photos to [email protected]

MILTON KEYNES CANAL CLEAN UPA total of 69 volunteers took part in the latest two-day clean up of the Grand Union Canal through Milton Keynes, from Fenny Lock to the Galleon, Wolverton, including 12 scouts from Trinity Scout Group and 18 scouts from 1st Linslade Scout Group of Leighton Buzzard. The event was again generously sponsored by Wyvern Shipping Co of Linslade, Leighton Buzzard and was supported by British Waterways.

The clean up operation primarily involves a boat from the Milton Keynes Branch towing a BW hopper from the stern of which are deployed heavy duty grappling hooks. By this method the centre fairway is cleared. In addition, a BW fl at is attached alongside a second boat and with this the offside of the canal is cleared using long handled nets to remove fl oating items like bottles and cans. Meanwhile grappling hooks thrown from the towpath are used to recover other items.

All the branch clean ups involve teams of litter pickers who are remarkably successful in fi lling plastic bags with all kinds of discarded items. Where possible, recovered items are recycled. This was supported by a BW dredger which has resulted in several heavy objects being removed from the canal that would otherwise have been beyond the capability of volunteers.

David King, the Event Organiser, said “An important aspect of these dirty and energetic events is the opportunity to socialise in the evenings. We make our stops at strategic locations to enable evacuation to local hostelries. On both the Friday and Saturday evenings we enjoyed good food as well as good company in convivial surroundings.”

BRIGHT FUTURE FOR THE BASINGSTOKE CANAL2012 looks very promising for the Basingstoke Canal. First restored and reopened in 1991, the canal has been plagued by poor maintenance and water shortages. This has been compounded by issues with the Environment Agency and Natural England concerning the SSSI status of much of the waterway. Local demand is huge with marina waiting lists on the neighbouring Wey. Through all the difficulties IWA has played a major role in ‘fighting the canal’s corner’, both in terms of campaigning carried out by its Guildford & Reading Branch, and providing volunteers through Waterway Recovery Group.

More recently there are more positive signs. There had been a pledge by the owners, Surrey & Hants County Councils to spend £1.6m from capital to make good some of the maintenence issues. Recently, however, a new bridge in Woking threatened to blight the eastern end of the canal. This bridge was to connect the new World Wildlife building to the centre of Woking. The unsightly structure was to be named after the Surrey and England cricketers, the Bedser twins . The bridge was a very high, featureless concrete structure with enormous ramps defacing the canalside. After a local and national e- petition campaign , the latter strongly supported by IWA members, we not only have a lower bridge in keeping with its context , a wooden structure without the massive ramps, but also the promise of a new boat basin in Woking. Thanks are due to IWA members who supported the petition and Head Offi ce who did a great deal of the member liaison work; and to Woking District Council, who did indeed listen.

The maintenance works are proceeding and the Basingstoke Canal is on schedule to reopen in April. There will be a boat rally over the weekend of the June 2012 Jubilee Bank Holiday - details from Verna Smith at [email protected]. As the main line to Waterloo runs close to the canal at numer-ous points, this could be a good place to moor and then visit the Thames Diamond Jubilee Pageant. There will however be many local attractions. The county councils under prompting from IWA and the Surrey & Hants Canal Society are actively promoting the canal and seeking a heritage lottery grant to fi x both maintenance and water supply problems.

On the water supply issue there is a working group in which IWA has a leadership role. We will also address English Heritage concerns to ensure that additional water leads to additional boat movements. WRG has and will continue to be actively involved in what looks a bright future for the beautiful Basing-stoke Canal. Guildford & Reading Branch has played a major role in protecting and promoting this priceless waterway in the south of England.

Artist’s impression of Bedser Bridge.

Deepcut Locks on the Basingstoke Canal. (Robin Smithett)

[email protected] [email protected] 1 20/1/12 2:17:46 pm20/1/12 2:17:46 pm

Page 9: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 9

RESTORING THE SUSSEX OUSEIWA Kent & East Sussex Branch (IWAKES) are working with the Sussex Ouse Restoration Trust (SORT) and have recently reported on the progress of the restoration of Isfield Lock on the River Ouse. The working parties had another good year where the targets set for progress at the site have once again been achieved. Restrictions on access to the site during the shooting season, the loss of daylight hours as they headed into winter and increasingly difficult working conditions as the weather got wetter meant that the volunteers were required to secure the site for the winter months ahead and wait until the first spring warmth heralds another chance to get on with the restoration.

The target for 2011 was to demolish the second section of the damaged west chamber wall and then rebuild it. That has been achieved. The work certainly presented more challenges than previously encountered, with three-quarters of the original chamber wall requiring demolition and rebuilding. In addition, new coping stones had to be made as the original stone ones had either been lost or were too badly damaged to be re-used. Whilst this was going on another group of volunteers were busy exposing and cleaning the west wing wall and the wharf wall at the upstream end of the lock that originally served the paper mill that once stood there. This required the felling of a 70ft alder tree that had grown straight out of the wall and obviously prevented any restoration from progressing.

Although progress may seem slow to outsiders, real progress is being made at Isfi eld Lock. This progress is down to the regular group of volunteers from SORT and in particular Paul Morris and Ted Lintott, who between them make sure the work proceeds during all of the available working time.

The project at Isfi eld is entirely within the remit of Sussex Ouse Restoration Trust (and the local landowner). However, IWA, the Branch and Region, have given much support and have paid £2,000 for a dumper for use on the project. A £2,500 tax-effi cient donation was made via IWA Head Offi ce and insur-ance from IWA; the linked WRG accreditation and training is also a valuable contribution. The design of the repairs (includ-ing all site setting out) was the work of Roy Sutton (as IWA Honorary Consultant Engineer) for which he has Professional Indemnity cover from IWA.

Kent & East Sussex Branch closely liaise with SORT on pub-licity and statutory issues such as Water Framework Directive, yet another example of the mutually supportive easy-going col-laboration. The restoration Project Manager is Paul Morris who read an advert in the IWAKES Branch magazine asking for a volunteer project manager eight years ago. Without him the project would never have started.

NEWS FROM NOTTS AND DERBYSHIRE

The Derby Canal now has Outline Planning Permission for the main 12-mile length of the canal, granted by all relevant local authorities. This means the canal line is now not only protected but also expected to become a canal navigation (by the local authorities). Funding and developers can therefore now be sought in the full knowledge that “planning authorities” are officially supportive of the restoration. The branch has presented a cheque to the Derby & Sandiacre Canal Society to help with the manufacture and installation of six interpretation boards which are now in place along the towpath at strategic parts of the canal. Ramblers, walkers, cyclists and others can now gain a better understanding of the history, wildlife and future plans for the canal.

Other branch activities include work on the “Local Plan” which is now encompassed in each Council’s Local Development Framework (LDF) and in the “Nottinghamshire and Nottingham Waste Core Strategy Preferred Approach” where waterborne freight should play a major role, taking congestion off the roads and transferring freight to the underused major river waterways network - a benefit to all.

IWA at WORK

ABOVE: The Trent barge Leicester Trader is under restoration. (Michael Smith)ABOVE AND LEFT: Restoring

the Sussex Ouse.

Is your branch doing something that demonstrates the great work that our members do? If so let us know - send

your story and pictures to [email protected].

Now protected - the line of the Derby Canal.

[email protected] [email protected] 2 20/1/12 2:18:52 pm20/1/12 2:18:52 pm

Page 10: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

10 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

BRAND NEW315 berth marina on the Hertfordshire / Essex border

London 30 minutes by train

To reserve your berth contact us now on 01279 792777email: [email protected] web: www.roydonmarinavillage.co.uk Roydon, Essex, CM19 5EJ

Roydon Marina Village

OPEN DAYS

EVERY MONTH

NEW

VISIT OUR SHOW LODGES

THE FIRST 100 BERTHS TO BE RESERVED WILL RECEIVE A 10% DISCOUNT OF ANNUAL MOORING FEES

CCTV & 24hr securitySecure parkingMains electricity to all berthsWater points on pontoonsFree Wi-Fi

Pump out and Elsan disposalIlluminated footways from car parks to berthCafeShowers and toilets

Laundry facilitiesDiesel, solid fuels and gas

With one call your personal package can be organised just for you. www.abtuckey.co.uk • 01926 812134

Tuckey’sThere is only one name for narrowboat transport.

With over 40 years experience we are here to help.

when you subscribe to Waterways World by Direct Debit

FREE Waterways World Annual& Route Planning Map

EVERY YEAR

See page 40 for details

Waterways World by Direct Debit

Waterways World Annual

p10_iwa.indd 1 20/1/12 14:52:25

Page 11: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 11

www.webasto4u.com

UK main distributor covering Shropshire, Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire, Cheshire, Merseyside, Lancashire and Staffordshire.

We can

supply & fi t

trade

& retail

Next daydeliveryavailable Kings Lock is recognised as one of the leading authorities for supply and installation of

heating systems of all applicationsEberspächer & Mikuni conversions fi tted on site at

Kings Lock£1713.57 inc. £600 voucher – off site charge will apply. £600Cash Voucher ofavailable with Thermo Top E or C heating units.Alternatives available.

FREE

PASSING THROUGH MIDDLEWICH, CHESHIRE?BRING YOUR BOAT TO US FOR A FREE CO TEST

WE SUPPLY SOME OF THE BIGGEST NAMES IN THE BUSINESS….Colllingwood Boats, Orchard, Braidbar, Sea Otter, Stoke-on-Trent, Piper, Bourne Boatbuilders, Burscough, Aintree Boats Co and Navigation Narrowboat Co.Give us a call, we may be able to beat your current source and supply of heating.

DID YOU KNOW?We are one of the offi cial dealers dedicated to distribution of Webasto heaters, Isotherm fridges and air conditioning to some of the biggest and best boatbuilders on the inland waterways.

KINGS LOCK CHANDLERYwww.kingslock.co.uk BOOTH LANE, MIDDLEWICH, CHESHIRE CW10 0JJ. TEL 01606 737 564

Webasto Fuel Filter Kits £427 day timer kits £89.95

Frost Sat Kits from £58Webasto Thermo Top servicing£45 + return carriage charge

p11_iwa.indd 1 20/1/12 11:26:36

Page 12: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

12 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

The All Party Parliamentary Waterways Group, for which IWA provides administrative and secretarial support, held a hearing on 8th December last year to give the Waterways Minister,

Richard Benyon MP, the opportunity to inform the Group of progress on the Canal & River Trust (CRT) coming into being in April and for Group Members to be able to question him. The hearing, chaired by the Rt Hon Alun Michael MP, was well attended by Group Members and waterways stakeholders.

The Minister reported that progress had been made on what both Government and the CRT Transition Trustees believed was the right model on governance for the CRT to begin life. There was now a target for 50% of the Council to be elected over time. On membership, the Trustees had decided that the charity should not have a membership for fund-raising purposes, believing that other means of raising funds and stimulating voluntary giving were more effective for fundraising than a formal membership.

He could not say what government funding was going to be for the CRT since negotiations had not yet finished. But he did reveal that the negotiations were complex, including the issues of adequate maintenance of the canal network, mitigation of possible future liabilities arising from environmental or other legislative requirements and the CRT’s pension arrangements; and he repeated that the Government was committed to a sustainable and prosperous future for the waterways, wanting to give the CRT the best possible start that it could. He expected to be able to make announcements shortly.

Waterways Classifi cationWaterways classification had become an issue.The Minister specifically mentioned that IWA had raised concerns about the proposed amendments to the system for classifying waterways in the Transport Act 1968 because it was concerned that the CRT would seek to reclassify “cruising” waterways to “remainder” waterways. He gave an assurance that any applica-tion from the CRT to reclassify a waterway would be subject to a full cost benefit analysis and wide consul-tation with those likely to be affected as required by the Transport Act. In addition, he was sure that the

Trustees would consult the charity’s Council and the relevant Waterways Partnership before embarking on such a significant course of action that would impact on a large number of its users. These mechanisms would help to ensure a robust and transparent process on a re-classification of any of the charity’s waterways.

In answer to questions from the Rt Hon Alun Michael and other MPs present, Richard Benyon said:

He did not want or expect to see closures of any waterways. That would not be constructive. The Government wanted to ensure that in the medium term there was scope for a reduction in the per-centage of assets that were in poor and very poor condition. He added that the Government wanted the existing network to be both maintained and enhanced.On ownership, Alun Michael, whilst recognising what the Minister had said about fund raising, sug-gested that in his experience, part ownership of a charity under for example, co-operative arrange-ments, delivered local ownership and commitment. Richard Benyon commented that he could see that possibility, locally and as a part of natural evolution.

Finance IssuesSome Transition Trustees were present, includ-ing the chairman, Tony Hales. They were invited to comment. Tony Hales said that the CRT would be reviewing its governance in three years and that would be the time to reflect on the sugges-tions made. On finance, he said that commercial activity would be the most significant contributor, outweighing the government contribution by some margin, and that the Trustees were comfortable about the future prospects for this commercial activity. The Trustees were also confident about the forecasts for the contribution for voluntary income and donations, which were expected to reach £6-8m after 10 years. There were also contributions to be made by other government departments, local government and bodies such as Transport for London and the Olympic Delivery Authority. It was a question of determining the benefits they receive from the network so that they recognised that a contribution was justified. However, he reiterated the view of the Trustees that the £39m per annum

12 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

Waterways Minister Richard Benyon.

Canal & River Trust - A Campaign UpdateMinister Updates All Party Parliamentary Waterways Group

Popular waterways: the River Lee (top) and Huddersfi eld Narrow Canal (above).

A Campaign Update.indd 1A Campaign Update.indd 1 20/1/12 2:23:16 pm20/1/12 2:23:16 pm

Page 13: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 13

On 12th September last year, Government launched a supplementary consultation on the detail of the Order to transfer the functions of British Waterways (BW) in England and Wales to a new waterways charity, the Canal & River Trust (CRT).

The Waterways Minister announced on the 20th December the publication of the Government’s Response to this consultation, (available at http://www.defra.gov.uk/consult/closed/).

The consultation asked for views on the detail of certain aspects of the Transfer Order. The majority of responses to the consultation supported the overall direction of the Government’s proposals, and, subject to obtaining parliamentary approval in due course, the Government intends to proceed as follows:

It will remove the Ministerial power to direct disposal of property under the Local Government, Planning and Land Act 1980, since it will not be needed by the CRT; It will not extend the provisions in the Transport Acts 1962 and 1968 on Employment to the CRT, on the basis that they have largely been replaced by more recent employment legislation;

It will amend sections 104 and 105 of the Transport Act 1968 to give the CRT an enhanced ‘statutory proposer’ role in relation to ministerial orders on classification and maintenance of its waterways; It will amend section 27 of the Transport Act 1962 to restrict the power of direction to circumstances in the interests of national defence; It will not apply the House of Commons Disqualification Act 1975; Scottish Parliament (Disqualification) Order 2010; National Assembly for Wales (Disqualification) Order 2010 or the Northern Ireland Assembly Disqualification Act 1975 to the Trustees of the CRT, because this would not be appropriate for Trustees of a charitable body.

In addition, the Government intends, also subject to parliamentary approval, to apply the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to the CRT, in respect of all those statutory functions that the CRT will inherit from BW through the proposed Transfer Order. This limited application of the FOIA will have the effect of excluding from the provisions of

the Act those broader charitable functions carried out by the CRT. It will also exclude bodies that merge with the CRT, unless the FOIA already applies or is made to apply to them at the point of merger.

Recognising that, as concerns administrative burdens, this will initially put CRT in a potentially disadvantageous position with regard to other statutory navigation authorities, the Government will, within two years, launch a procedure, under s.5 of the FOIA, to consider extending the provisions of the Act to other statutory navigation authorities, with the intention of creating a level playing fi eld.

In these circumstances, the Environmental Information Regulations (EIRs) may be considered to apply to the CRT to the extent that the CRT is carrying out ‘functions of public administration’. Ultimately, this will be a question for the courts to decide. In the meantime, The Minister has asked the CRT Trustees to make a public commitment to adopt a transparency policy that closely follows the provisions of the EIRs; we are seeking to capture this commitment in the funding agreement being negotiated between Defra and the CRT Trustees.

Government responds to Supplementary consultation on the Waterways Charity

A Campaign Update

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 13

offered by central government was not enough. The finance package overall needed to be enough to secure the network’s assets in the long term and ensure that day-to-day maintenance was carried out together with network dredging; and to ensure that pensions were safeguarded. He recognised the duty of Trustees to be in a position to satisfy the Charity Commission that the Trust was sustainable.

Public Benefi tLynne Berry reported on public benefit. It had been evaluated at around £500 million but that didn’t fully reflect issues such as the social return and the well-being benefit etc. CRT Transition Trustees were currently developing a more detailed public benefit model to embrace these wider issues.

Richard Benyon offered to return to the Group to give a further report when the financial negotia-tions were concluded. That was welcomed by the Group. It is likely to take place early this year.

Alun Michael ended the hearing by saying that it was not unheard of for charities to go wrong, volunteer led or otherwise. It would not be an easy transition. It was going to be very challenging and there was profound interest from MPs on all sides of the House. The transi-tion would be scrutinised with great interest.

IWA’s ViewpointIWA view this to have been a very constructive hear-ing. It was helpful to hear that the Minister was con-sidering the need for adequate maintenance of the canal network, mitigation of possible future liabilities arising from environmental or other legislative requirements and the CRT’s pension arrangements – all points of concern that IWA has raised with central government and that IWA members have taken up with their constituency MPs. It was also good to hear that Tony Hales wanted to see a financial arrange-ment that secured the network’s assets in the long term, day-to- day maintenance, and network dredg-ing, recognising the need for Trustees to satisfy the Charity Commission on sustainability.

The Minister’s response to the IWA on waterways classification was also seen to be a helpful clarification.

IWA’s Campaigns team conclude that the delay in announcing the financial settlement, the acknowl-edgement from MPs of the broad influx of letters from concerned constituents on the subject of sustainable funding, and the CRT’s trustees looking in detail at the wider public benefits all point to a detailed and thorough negotiation on funding now taking place. The outcome is awaited with anticipa-tion and great interest.

A Campaign Update.indd 2A Campaign Update.indd 2 20/1/12 2:21:22 pm20/1/12 2:21:22 pm

Page 14: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

14 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

The Inglesham Lock Restoration Appeal in support of the Cotswolds and Wilts & Berks canals restoration schemes is progressing apace and IWA

is looking for further donations to now help finalise the fundraising.

IWA and WRG have set an ambitious target to restore the lock by 2013.Three further WRG camps together with weekend digs are planned for this year.

Inglesham is strategically important as it is the eastern starting point for the Cotswolds restoration and provides additional focus for the Wilts & Berks canal restoration that spurs off it several miles west of the lock’s junction with the Thames.

The Cotswolds is one of only a few major funded projects that is currently making major progress, and IWA is keen to support this as one of the first of a series of appeals it wants to carry out in support of these schemes around the country.

IWA aims to provide a new landing stage, restore the lock chamber with the facility to deliver back pumping and clear the cut above the lock, whilst also ensuring that the balance of the work can be completed to have the lock operational as quickly as possible .

Speaking about the restoration appeal, Inglesham Appeal Chairman and IWA National Treasurer Les

Etheridge said: “We want to wrap up the fundraising this year if we possibly can, so that we can focus our attention on completing the practical restoration works unhindered. This then puts us in a position to support schemes in other parts of the country.

I would urge all waterway supporters to help us finish the fundraising for this scheme as quickly as possible.”

Please send a cheque made out to IWA to IWA Inglesham Appeal, Island House, Moor Road, Chesham HP5 1WA.

INGLESHAM – one fi nal fundraising push

IWA has written to the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, the

Olympic Delivery Authority, LOCOG and Robin Evans at British Waterways to register its extreme concern at the closure of Commercial Road Lock on the Regent’s Canal for the duration of the Olympics.

IWA wishes to establish why, if boats are being allowed (under tight control) to pass on the Lee right next to the Olympic site from Tottenham to Limehouse, access to Limehouse should be restricted to the route via the Thames and not allowed via the Regent’s Canal, which is over 1.5km from the Olympic site at its closest point.

IWA has no problem with closing the Hertford Union Canal completely and blocking it physically, so everyone has to go via Commercial Road Lock, but considers that the entry to Limehouse Basin via Commercial Road Lock would be easy

to police using whatever approach they are using at Tottenham. On behalf of London boaters and craft visiting especially for the Olympics, IWA wishes to understand “what’s the difference?”

Limehouse is 2.5km from the nearest point on the Olympic Park with a sizeable built up area in between, so there is no risk from vessels at Limehouse.

This would avoid the risk of encouraging unsuitable vessels to use the Thames and all of the associated navigational risks caused by attempting a downstream tidal passage.

IWA London Region officers had requested British Waterways to properly consult during the process and involve stakeholders in the discussions. Regrettably, despite these requests, the discussions and negotiations were conducted at arm’s length.

CONCERN OVER OLYMPICS CLOSURE

waterwaysKEEPING OUR WATERWAYS ALIVE

Limehouse Basin. (Loopzilla at fl ickr.com CC-BY-SA)

News.indd 1News.indd 1 20/1/12 2:25:02 pm20/1/12 2:25:02 pm

Page 15: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 15

Spring 2012 | NEWS | FREIGHT | RESTORATION

There are over 100 waterway stakeholder organisations that operate as charitable trusts

and societies on the waterways in the UK. In 2012 the Canal & River Trust will join the waterway charitable sector. Many existing charities and groups will be interested in understanding the impact associated with this and the opportunities it may bring.

In order to provide a forum for debate, IWA is holding a special workshop, jointly organised with the trustees of the Canal & River Trust, and to which senior management within British Waterways will be contributing, to consider these issues, and is cordially inviting representatives

of all canal and river societies to join us at The Bond Conference Centre, Birmingham on Saturday, 18th February.

We are hoping the day will be an interactive and informal opportunity to share concerns, explore ideas and strengthen relationships.

To register your interest in this special workshop in Birmingham please email [email protected].

Places are limited by venue size and will be allocated on a first-come basis. Because of this, we would be grateful if organisations would nominate just one or two representatives, rather than request places for several members.

CRT PARTNERS WORKSHOP

Canalway Cavalcade is one of the most successful events on the waterways calendar. Not just any

old boaters’ gathering or rally, it is a unique waterways and community festival staged in the impressive surroundings of Little Venice every spring since 1983.

This year’s event will take place from Saturday 5th to 7th May. There will be a range of entertainment for the entire family, with a boaters’ gathering, a pageant of boats, a procession of illuminated craft, trade shows and stalls, bands, Morris dancers, a real ale bar, plenty of good food…and much more besides.

Admission is free.

IWA is seeking to recruit volunteers to help organise the 2012 Cavalcade. Vacant posts include: Catering Assistant Manager; Entertainments Assistant Manager; Public Address Manager & Commentators; Waterspace Assistant Manager; WoW Schools Project Manager.

Also required are volunteers of every kind during this exciting event so if you are bringing your boat, live in the vicinity or are visiting London and can spare a few hours you will be most welcome to join the team.

Applications and requests for full job specifications should be made to Jerry Sanders, 07788 204442/07970 835523, e-mail [email protected].

Canalway Cavalcade 2012

The Canal & River Trust is seeking to appoint a further three volunteers to join its board of trustees ahead of taking over from British Waterways.

The Canal & River Trust is looking for candidates with significant experience gained through operating at a senior level in a substantial enterprise, including the handling of senior management and governance issues and an understanding and empathy with the natural and built heritage of the waterways.

In addition, applicants are sought who have particular experience in finance (to chair the Trust’s Audit Committee), property investment and asset management (to chair the Trust’s Commercial Investment Committee) or senior leadership within organisations focussing on large-scale engineering, asset and environmental management.

The recruitment of the new trustees is being undertaken by a committee made up of two existing trustees and two independent people appointed by Defra. The appointments will be recommended for approval at the first meeting of the Canal & River Trust Council in March 2012.

Successful candidates will be appointed for three years with the expectation of renewal for a second three-year term. They are likely to need to devote approximately three days a month. The roles will not be remunerated, although legitimate travel and other expenses will be fully reimbursed.

Those interested in applying can find further details from search specialists Saxton Bampfylde Ltd, at www.saxbam.com/job quoting ref number QAWTA or by calling 020 7227 0890 (during office hours) or emailing [email protected].

CRT Trustees Sought

Fires aboard inland waterway craft occur on average at the rate of one a week throughout the year. The Boat Safety Scheme recommends that

all boaters should be fully aware of the grave risks of fire and should adopt and rehearse a fire emergency plan. For full details on boat fire safety and routine safety checks visit www.boatsafetyscheme.com.

For more information on fire safety visit www.direct.gov.uk/firekills.

Fire safety on boats FIRE SAFETY ON BOATS

In partnership with

News.indd 2News.indd 2 20/1/12 2:25:35 pm20/1/12 2:25:35 pm

Page 16: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

16 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

Crick Boat Show Help!

If you’ve ever wanted to get involved with a boat show here’s your

chance. Waterways World, as organiser of the Crick Boat Show, is looking for about a dozen people to help with various tasks in the build up to the Show, the Show days themselves and the break-down after the Show. Some of the tasks will require some heavy manual work (fence erecting, furniture shifting, pipe-laying etc), other tasks will be less physically demanding (show programme distribution, seminar theatre support). We are mainly looking for volunteers but there is the possibility of several paid positions for the manual tasks. The build up period starts in earnest on Monday 28th May with the Show starting on 2nd June and finishing on 5th June, with break-down largely completed by 7th June.

For anyone who volunteers for a minimum of two full working days we are offering a free family weekend ticket to the Show, plus free camping pitch or mooring slot for the duration of the Show, a meal allowance for the days worked, a fixed amount towards travel costs to reach Crick, PLUS a one year subscription to Waterways World.

If you are interested in offering your time to be involved with Crick, write to Sue Ruth at Waterways World, 151 Station Street, Burton-on-Trent, Staffs DE14 1BG or email [email protected] with a brief resume telling us about yourself and a note on the type of duties you are interested in. Let us know if heavy manual work is an option or not, the number of days you would be willing to work and whether you would be available pre-Show, post-Show or during the Show.

waterwaysKEEPING OUR WATERWAYS ALIVE

Major Christopher (Crick) Grundy, who died on 4th November last year, was imbued with the spirit of

the inland waterways from the earliest days. Born in Colne, Lancashire in 1926, he was the eldest son of Reginald and Marjorie Grundy. His parents’ first boating holiday – an unusual concept in those days – was in 1934 on the Shropshire Union Canal; Crick and his younger brother, Martin, first joined them on a cruise in 1938. Both were immediately captivated by the canals.

In 1945, Reginald bought a 30ft converted ex-ship’s cutter, then called Hobson’s Choice. Renamed Heron, the family took it on several cruises on the (then semi-derelict) Llangollen Canal. Famously, in 1947 and 1948, they met up with Tom and Angela Rolt on their narrowboat Cressy, and joined them in overcoming many obstacles and difficulties to successfully reach the head of navigation at Llangollen.

On several occasions in the 1950 and ’60s, whenever a canal was threatened with closure by the authorities, Crick Grundy had the habit of turning up either on Heron or by car with his portable boat, The Blue Bath, on the roof rack. These ‘tactical sorties’ aimed to prove that the particular waterway could be navigated. The survival of the Aylesbury and Stourbridge canals and the Dudley Tunnel are among his credits over this period, while Crick was also involved in the campaign to save the Basingstoke Canal.

His campaigning activity was particularly noteworthy, as it had to be fitted in with his professional career in the army. He joined IWA in 1946 - and was one of just a few founder members to be made honorary life members at the time of our 60th Anniversary in 2006. When he returned from the Korean conflict (in which he was awarded the MC) in 1952, he joined the committee of the Inland Waterways Association’s North-West Branch. This was the start of many years service on IWA committees – including the National Council. He would become a good friend and confidant of both Robert Aickman and David Hutchings, and his calm and shrewd mind at times provided a useful counter-balance to their more volatile natures.

David Hutchings returned to his architectural practice after the record-breaking restoration of the southern Stratford

Canal. The National Trust, which remained in charge of the canal, appointed Crick Grundy as their manager in 1966 – coupling it with the curatorship of nearby Packwood House. It was a tricky and difficult job to take on. The restoration had been pushed forward at great speed for political reasons, leaving the reopened canal needing much more work to put it into a fully reliable, navigable state. Crick had to juggle a shortage of funds and never-ceasing demands for maintenance work; he would be out at all hours, and in all weathers, to deal with problems caused by what he called “the extraordinary efforts of the users”.

Crick’s most lasting contribution to the waterways was his work for the Upper Avon Navigation Trust. When David Hutchings took on the restoration of the navigation between Stratford and Evesham, Crick helped him in drawing up the plans (which were for a virtually new navigation) and, particularly, with the complex negotiations with landowners and the river board.

Much of his most vital work, like this, was behind the scenes. In the 1950s, he had worked with Aickman to draft the memorandum and articles that set the course for the IWA. The two then worked together to secure UANT its new Act of Parliament, which permitted it to run the navigation and raise tolls. Crick rightly remained proud of this achievement by a small, independent charitable trust.

Crick devoted much time in recent years to working on the conversion and fitting out of a 57ft Calder & Hebble keel, Draepwelle. He is survived by his wife, Hope, whom he met in 1966 when she was a member of the crew of the pair of hotel boats, Mabel and Forget Me Not, and by his daughter, Jemima.

David Bolton

Crick Grundy 1926-2011 – a true pioneer of the canals

News.indd Sec1:3News.indd Sec1:3 20/1/12 2:26:07 pm20/1/12 2:26:07 pm

Page 17: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 17

Spring 2012 | NEWS | FREIGHT | RESTORATION

The Canal & River Trust, has appointed chairs to

a number of the Waterway Partnerships that will play a role in the management of canals and rivers across the network.

They are as follows: Manchester & Pennine - Professor Walter Menzies, previously chief executive of the Mersey Basin Campaign; North Wales & Borders - Jim Forrester, currently director at Imperial War Museum North in Manchester; South Wales & Severn - Jack Hegarty, who has been managing director of Wychavon District Council since 2004; Kennet & Avon - Fleur de Rhe Philipe, a member of Wiltshire Council since 1997, currently serving as cabinet member for economic development and strategic planning; North West - Professor Steven Broomhead, currently professor of entrepreneurial education at Liverpool Hope University; West Midlands - Peter Mathews CMG, a past chair of the Black Country Consortium; Museums - Laurence Newman, Chairman, Epsom & St Helier University Hospitals NHS Trust.

Chairs are now being sought for the remaining Waterway Partnerships in the North East, Central Shires, East Midlands, South East and London, and recruitment for the All Wales Partnership is continuing.

Although British Waterways Wigan is taking bookings for this year, it has recently been telling applicants that

any boats with a draft in excess of 24in may be excluded.

IWA has taken this issue up with BW as, although the skipper’s guide to the Link indicates that 24in is the maximum, many boats with drafts up to 36in have successfully navigated the Link in the past.

IWA understands that the issue surrounds siltation in the first pound after the rotating tidal gate. BW staff let boats proceed while the tide is still coming in thus giving more depth to the first pound. The designed depth over the lock cills is 4ft, therefore there is a presumption of plenty of leeway for boats with drafts above 24in.

Following IWA pressure, a hydrological survey was carried out which will now hopefully clarify the situation. BW, as a result of the new survey, confirm that the new maximum safe draft for boats will be 33in. BW has explained the reasoning as follows: “The level was set using

The new Staveley Town Basin on the Chesterfield Canal has been completed, with contractors beginning to fill it with

water on 9th December. The basin forms the centerpiece of an imaginative redevelopment of the canal in Staveley between Hall Lane Bridge and the Staveley Northern Loop Road Bridge, both of which have recently been built with full navigational height. It has involved Waterway Recovery Group and Chesterfield Canal Trust volunteers constructing over 600 yards of new wash wall beyond the former end of navigation close to Mill Green Bridge.

Approximately 210ft long and 147ft wide, the basin offers facilities to enable the economic development of the isolated section of the Chesterfield Canal in advance of full restoration. The basin and lock area forms a new eastern terminus for the five miles of navigable canal from Chesterfield pending further restoration towards Renishaw and Killamarsh.

Once fully developed, the basin will provide secure moorings, slipway, craning area, car parking, cycle racks and showers. The area will be managed by a not-for-profit trading company and will provide ten small business start-up units targeted at waterway-related enterprises, plus a bunk house for volunteers working on the canal. There will also

be a row of cottages facing the lock which will be available for rent.

It is estimated that, once completed, the area will generate £80,000-£100,000 annually. This will prevent the maintenance costs of a fully-restored canal causing pressure on local council budgets.

Meanwhile, a low-level railway bridge just east of the basin has necessitated the construction of a ‘dropped pound’ formed by two new locks. Work on the first of these – Staveley Town Lock, No 5a, is now well underway, with the foundations, head walls and tail bridge in place. The bridge will be traditionally styled and will be known as Staveley Town Bridge, No 5a. Below the lock will be an events area, where a major trailboat festival will be staged at the end of June.

Chairs appointed for CRT Waterway Partnership

Staveley Town Basin Completed

Ribble Link Access Campaign

many criteria, however the main restricting factor has been the seasonal siltation that we remove at the start of each year. In theory it may well be possible to get a craft with a deeper draft through the link in April but there would be significant concerns about its ability to return by July; or even earlier if we have very heavy rainfall in spring”.

IWA will continue to monitor the situation locally.

Staveley Town Lock.

Waiting for the locks on the Ribble Link.

News.indd Sec1:4News.indd Sec1:4 20/1/12 2:26:25 pm20/1/12 2:26:25 pm

Page 18: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

18 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

Public relations and social media is of continuing importance to IWA and we need someone to help with the day-to-

day duties of helping us manage and develop our local and national public relations and social networking channels.

The post will be ideally suited to someone with a public relations or journalism background who is looking to develop their experience.

For more information please see the internship specification – visit the IWA website.

Following a reorganisation at IWA Head Office, partly necessitated by a need to

reduce costs, the post of Operations & Information Systems Officer has been declared redundant, and David Forrester left the Association’s employment at the end of December.

IWA is grateful to David for the positive contribution he has made to the Association during his period of employment.

Meanwhile, Jerry Sanders has resigned as a trustee of IWA.

However, he remains chairman of

IWA’s Promotions & Communications

Committee, as well as a member

of IWA Festivals Committee, which

is part of IWA’s trading subsidiary

company Inland Waterways

Enterprises Ltd.

At the December meeting of

IWA’s trustees, Gren Messham

was appointed a member of

IWA’s Finance Committee, and

Gareth Jones and Alan Wiffen were

appointed corresponding members.

waterwaysKEEPING OUR WATERWAYS ALIVE

Broads Dredging Grant

The Norfolk and Suffolk Broads is to be given an £800,000 grant to help find new ways of removing sediment which builds up in the waterways. The money from the European

Union will fund research into new methods of dredging sediment and recycling it.

In addition, the Broads Authority said the money would also help fund an extension to the sediment island at Duck Broad.

The project is expected to run until 2014.

IWA Public Relations & Communications Internship

Personnel Changes

The restored historic cast-iron aqueduct carrying the Cromford Canal over the railway at Leawood

was reopened on 28th November by Councillor Simon Spencer, Deputy Leader of Derbyshire County Council. Also present at the ceremony were representatives of the Friends of the Cromford Canal and Amber Valley Borough Council.

Repairs were carried out to the cast iron straps that held the structure together, the metal trough has been cleaned and painted with a protective paint system and the old timber towpath has been replaced with a new freestanding steel towpath,

The aqueduct is the only surviving example of a suspension girder bridge in the UK, and needed repairs to address corrosion issues and to ensure its long-term stability.

The aqueduct’s status as a scheduled monument means that the council has a statutory duty to maintain it and all repairs have to be approved by English Heritage.

Sufficient funds were available to ensure that the restoration works allow for

navigation in the future, and the Friends of the Cromford Canal look forward to seeing boat traffic across the aqueduct in the years to come. There is also better access now for working parties on the canal south of the aqueduct.

CROMFORD AQUEDUCT REOPENED

The Leawood Aqueduct reopening party on 28th November.

Duck Broad.

News.indd Sec1:5News.indd Sec1:5 20/1/12 2:27:16 pm20/1/12 2:27:16 pm

Page 19: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 19

Spring 2012 | NEWS | FREIGHT | RESTORATION

IWA has always been of the view that, just as bus services require bus stops and rail networks need

stations, so waterborne freight is dependent on the availability of sites at which cargo can be handled. It was of course for this reason that in 1997 the Government’s safeguarding direction and the commendable effort of the PLA ensured that the disappearance of wharves was slowed down and that some of those not in use were reactivated for cargo handling.

In July 2000 the responsibility for assessing planning applications was assumed by the Mayor of London. A revised list of safeguarded wharves appeared in 2005 and a further revision was initiated in 2010, and the report prepared by URS Scott Wilson was

made available for consultation late in 2011. This takes the form of long-term water freight trade forecasts in various commodity trades, rarely an accurate guide to reality and open to varied interpretation, in relation to wharf capacity in London’s different regions. While this may work reasonably well for the Thames wharves it does not provide an acceptable basis for providing the capacity which might encourage modal shift on to the canals.

Perhaps London needs to look to Leeds where the local authority, together with British Waterways, and encouraged by potential users, seems to be taking a more realistic and pragmatic approach to wharf safeguarding. The City is intent on maintaining existing wharves and

has agreed on safeguarding sites suitable for waterborne freight. A site at Stourton has been identified for a new wharf and the City sees concrete batching and asphalt as possible waterside industries. Steel, timber and containers could also provide traffic. There has already been a successful trial shipment of steel sections from a Trent wharf to Leeds.

B y way of Freight Facilities Grants, Government has

over the years funded a number of projects for waterborne freight but in recent years revision of the scheme, certainly as far as England is concerned, has minimised the impact of modal shift. In Scotland the Waterborne Freight Grant and Mode Revenue Support have been subsumed by the Future Transport Fund, specifically geared towards environment improvement.

The movement of round timber from production areas in Scotland has in many places put a heavy burden on inadequate road links. The Timberlink proj-ect, collaboration between ports, British Waterways and forestry companies, provides a good example of effective use of FFGs to shift traffic to waterways.

The Kanutta (42.0 x 8.0 x 4.3, 1,450 dwt) has been moving timber through the Caledonian Canal from Loch Etive to Inverness and the Red Baroness (65.0 x 10.7 x 4.0, 1,450 dwt) has been well employed in coastal timber movements.

The Caledonian Canal provides an obvious short-cut between Scotland’s west and east coasts and the most recent of several attempts to use this more fully comes from the Great Glen Shipping Company which, with a Modal Shift Revenue Support grant, has acquired two former 1978 built Alderney Shipping ves-sels, the Isis and Burhou I (both 57.5 x 10.1 x 3.4, 953 dwt). The length of the lat-ter has been reduced by 12m so that it can navigate the canal. Timber may well be the main cargo but a new deck-mounted deck excava-

tor will facilitate handling of bulk cargoes, with winter suggesting that salt is likely to be important.

The Scottish Government welcomed this “exciting development…it will support our aim to reduce greenhouse

gas emissions by taking lor-ries off our roads…(and will) benefit the local communi-ties, tourists and the freight industry.” It would seem that the Scottish Government has a more positive strategy than exists south of the border.

FREIGHT FACILITIES GRANTS

The Kanutta carries timber through the Caledonian Canal.

SAFEGUARDING WHARVES

Leeds shows the way in safeguarding it’s wharves.

News.indd Sec1:6News.indd Sec1:6 20/1/12 2:27:50 pm20/1/12 2:27:50 pm

Page 20: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

20 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

From its inception, the IWA has been concerned with the multi-functional use of the waterways including freight transport, and this was crystallised with the creation by

Charles Hadfield in 1971 of the Inland Shipping Group, now the Inland Waterways Freight Group. IWA is formulating its current policy with respect to freight.

Where freight movement by water is sustainable in economic, environment and social terms, IWA will lobby waterway authori-ties to maintain the waterways to statutory standards and in a condition suitable for modern vessels. Furthermore, it will press them to market and facilitate opportunities for freight traffic. Where there is significant freight potential, IWA supports the continuing enhancement of waterway capacity and facilities and will encourage Government and planning authorities to consider waterway freight transport in drawing up plans, and identifying and where appropriate protecting/safeguarding suitable loca-tions for industry and freight interchanges.

IWA supports Government funding to encourage modal shift from roads to water and with like-minded lobby groups will seek to raise awareness of the opportunities for and advantages of waterborne freight. IWA recognises the benefit of freight traffic on smaller waterways in encouraging the retention of commercial craft of heritage interest and in maintaining channel cross-section.

IWA POLICY ON FREIGHT

BARGES RETURN TO SELBY

Following collaboration between the Commercial Boat Operators Association (CBOA), Hewitt Marine & Westmill Foods, the first consignment of rice

was loaded on board Hewitt Marine’s Seagull on 5th December last year. This was destined for delivery to the Westmill waterside rice milling and packaging plant at Selby, Yorkshire on the River Ouse.

Some 285 tonnes were loaded at King George Dock in Hull but it is anticipated that in future this will be increased to 300 tonnes. Hewitt Marine expects to carry many more loads on behalf of Westmill, with each trip saving a minimum of 12 trucks making their way through the narrow, historic streets of Selby.

Westmill is no stranger to sustainable transport. Until four years ago, when problems caused modal shift back to road, the rice was delivered in LASH (lighter aboard ship) barges pushed by tugs belonging to Dean’s Tugs and Workboats Ltd, based at Hull.

The Westmill plant at Selby.

Cory and London

The Cory company has a long association with the Thames and London and this was formalised in 2002 with a 30-year contract with the Western Riverside Waste Authority, the

provision of a new materials recycling facility at Wandsworth and the construction of the Belvedere Riverside Energy from Waste plant where, through a new jetty, Cory Lighterage delivers over 600,000 tonnes of waste a year from Wandsworth and ships 170,000 tonnes of incinerator bottom ash to Tilbury. This gives an annual saving of 100,000 HGVs on London’s roads - is it too much to hope that at some time in the future a rationalisation of waste and recyclables collection and disposal could result in greater use of the Lee Navigation and the Paddington Arm?

waterwaysKEEPING OUR WATERWAYS ALIVE

Freight traffi c on the Paddington Arm.

News.indd Sec1:7News.indd Sec1:7 20/1/12 2:28:10 pm20/1/12 2:28:10 pm

Page 21: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 21

SigmaDrive PROPULSIONSYSTEM STOPS NOISE AND VIBRATION

UK agents: Clements Millard Marine Consultants LtdTel: 01271 321 257 email: [email protected]

SIGMADRIVE is available as standard for engines from 10bhp to 1300bhp and is the only system on the market that can be installed with V-Drive gearboxes

SigmaDrive allows the propeller shaft to ‘self-align’ between rubber bearings and shaft seals and will therefore give longer life to all propulsion system components.By installing SigmaDrive you will have ensured that your propeller shaft line is always accurately aligned.

maintenance required

component life

WINNER2011 Seawork

Innovations AwardMarine Equipment,

Electronics & Materials Category

1951 Clements WW 128x88.indd 1 20/01/2012 11:25

Based on the junction of the Grand Union & Oxford canals we provide the ideal location from which to start your holiday.

Whether you have a couple of weeks or just want a short break we have an excellent range of quality, reliable boats so that you can relax, unwind and enjoy the wonderful scenery.

Call NOW or e-mail for a brochure, prices and availability

Calcutt Boats Ltd Stockton Southam Warwickshire CV47 8HX

Explore the Heart of England on a

canal cruise

p21_iwa.indd 1 20/1/12 17:19:47

Page 22: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

22 | IWA waterways - Winter 2011

My BackgroundMy first waterways recollection is of an old sailing dinghy which my father used at the Thames at Laleham. Later we hired boats on the Broads and bicycled along the Basingstoke Canal. I went angling by Chertsey Bridge and when I was 16 I spent a week canoeing on the Thames from Lechlade to Chertsey – you’ll note I went downstream! In the ’60s I was a regular volunteer on the Stourbridge Canal restoration. Later I was part of “Protest” canoe trips on the derelict Basingstoke, Kennet & Avon, Ashton and Lower Peak Forest canals. I was at “Operation Ashton”, Welshpool, Droitwich Dig and other celebrated restoration work parties. The Upper Avon restoration caught my attention – I can talk for hours about the building of George Billington Lock. By now, I’d been helping out on hotel boats and was hiring boats.

In the meantime, I’d taken a leading role in IWA’s campaign about the Transport Act 1968. I was IWA General Secretary from 1971-4 and campaigned successfully against the proposed hand over of BW to regional water authorities. After that, I went back to being a chartered accountant and went into corporate finance, specialising in raising money for small companies, including those in the property sector. I was chair or finance director of a number of companies, including some on the Stock Exchange’s AIM market. I was involved with charities, including their investment portfolios. I set up my own water freight advisory firm and became chair of the Commercial Boat Owners Association. In the last five years, I have also been a member of the Government’s Inland Waterways Advisory Council and of the British Waterways Advisory Forum. All three as a volunteer – the same as being a CRT Trustee.

About 10 years ago I bought a boat and I now own an old BCN tug built of riveted steel at Harris Bros yard at Bumblehole, Netherton. Helen is 51ft long and draws 3ft along her whole length – and yes, I do know the bottom is sometimes too near the top! For the technically minded, the engine is a three-cylinder Bolinder.

The New TrustWhy did I want to be a Trustee? Well, I reckoned I could offer a combination of my long and deep waterways knowledge with my

experiences in running businesses, including those in property; and I felt I was able to put forward a users’ viewpoint.

The setting up of Canal & River Trust gives waterways users the chance to influence how the waterways are run. Instead of BW executives reporting to the British Waterways Board who in turn report to Government, the Trust’s executives will report to the Trustees who are accountable to the Trust’s Council. That Council will consist of various types of users. But remember that as charity trustees are in law responsible for what a trust does, responsibility for the Trust’s actions is at the Trustee level. Users will also be involved with the 13 Waterway Partnerships around the country. The Trust has announced its plans to have special groups advising the management about navigation, heritage, angling, environment, freight, education/youth and volunteering. There will also be a National Users Forum. The Trust will have a public annual meeting, as will the Waterway Partnerships.

On the all important money side, the Trust will get away from the near annual review with Government about how much the grant will be. Instead, the Trust will have a legally binding contract with Government lasting for at least 10 years about the sum Government will pay the Trust – that’s a huge improvement and will help with maintenance planning. The Government began by offering £39m a year for ten years; the Trustees said that wasn’t enough.

That £39m needs to be seen in the context of the total income. The last BW accounts showed £159m annual income for the English and Welsh waterways arising from:

Transition Trustee John Dodwell talks about his early days, the new Trust and his hopes for the future...

MEET THE

“I see the waterways continuing to need

a vigorous IWA. For a start, there are the

waterways outside the Trust’s scope,

including many meriting restoration”

Trustees

22 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

The Interview - Dodwell.indd 1The Interview - Dodwell.indd 1 20/1/12 2:29:43 pm20/1/12 2:29:43 pm

Page 23: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Winter 2011 | 23

◗ £34m from property rentals and wayleaves and premiums;◗ £24m from utility income (eg cables in the towpath) and water sales ◗ £29m from boat licences, mooring permits and British Waterways Marinas’ gross income◗ £10m maintenance and other income (mainly from local authorities)◗ £12m contribution to other third party funded works (restoration/regeneration)◗ £3m miscellaneous◗ £47m Government grant.

So we can see that there was £100m of non-Government income (putting to one side the £12m third party works figure as it is roughly matched by the £15m third party works expenditure).

Of course, it’s glaring that the £47m Government figure is, if the Government has its way, going to go down by £8m to £39m. This £8m is 17% of the £47m. It’s 5% of the total £147m income (leaving aside that £12m third party money). But we know we need more.

Where does the property rental income come from? Over the years, BW has been able to make use of the waterside property it inherited largely from the canal companies and, at the last count, had an investment property portfolio valued at £380m. This will form part of the Trust’s endowment fund – similar to what many charities have. The aim will be to keep this intact in a separate “pot”. The income will be transferred to a maintenance “pot” where, together with other income, it will contribute to maintenance. From time to time, individual assets in the investment “pot” may be sold but the sale proceeds will be used to buy new investments – not be used to prop up the maintenance “pot”.

The FutureChange is in the air – and yet some things remain the same. The long standing IWA slogan of “Waterways for All” will continue to strike a chord – indeed, that’s one of the main reasons for the Government’s long term support. It is estimated that some 13m people visit the waterways each year. The wider public benefits from the waterways through drainage, towpath use, urban and rural regeneration and industrial heritage, plus wildlife and plant habitat.

I’ve already mentioned the change in management accountability. Other changes have already begun. In the last three years, BW has really embraced the use of volunteers – not just on the towpath but in the office. Volunteer lock-keepers are on the increase – with over 50 locations targeted for 2012. Now, I know there have been teething troubles with volunteer work parties and if you’ve suffered, then tell IWA’s Vaughan Welch who can do a collation and talk to waterways management. And through the Waterway Partnerships and advisory groups, there is a new feel of openness. Gone are the days some of us remember when BW gave the impression they didn’t need help.

And being a charity means the Trust can now seek donations and legacies and benefit from Gift-Aid; will qualify for business rates relief (worth about £1m pa); and will be effectively free of corporation tax etc.

We now have the chance to act as an overall single waterways movement. No more of Us against a stingy Government who won’t pay enough. The answers are in our own hands. It will take time for this to filter through and there will be stubborn diehards on each side of the old fence – but that’s not the way forward. Sitting on the sidelines being critical is the easy part - now we have the chance to be on the inside, influencing matters.

What does all this mean for IWA and its members?As a Trustee, it’s not for me to suggest how IWA might develop. But then I’ve been an IWA member since 1961. IWA has done wonders for the waterways, over the last few years as well as before and so I am very interested in IWA’s future.

I don’t see IWA withering on the vine. The new Trust will not have local branches. It will be appealing for support from the wider public rather than the specialist waterway supporters - although I hope that, like me, you will become a formal Trust Supporter in due course.

I see the waterways continuing to need a vigorous IWA. For a start, there are the waterways outside the Trust’s scope, including many meriting restoration (and the sooner, the better). The Government contract will need renewing at the end of the ten years – and the right political background will be needed. IWA branches have a valuable role to play in planning matters; in social meetings; in providing volunteers; in spreading the message with rallies etc.

We have a good background for working together and taking the best out of BW and its management and the voluntary movement. The Droitwich Canals have recently been re-opened; lots of work is nearly completed at Bow Back Rivers; boat numbers are up by 10,000 to 35,000 over the last ten years; non-Government income is up from £60m to £100m pa over the same period; and, importantly, the percentage of major structures (embankments, aqueducts, cuttings, bridges, locks, culverts etc) in poor condition has fallen from 30% to 18% over ten years. Impressive that may be, but there’s still room for improvement, especially dredging - as my Helen knows all too well!

Dare I finish by paraphrasing President Kennedy? “Ask not what the waterways can do for you. Ask what you can do for the waterways”. Well, all IWA members can look confidently in the mirror on that one!

The Interview

Crusing the waterways aboard the old BCN tug Helen.

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 23

The Interview - Dodwell.indd 2The Interview - Dodwell.indd 2 20/1/12 2:30:01 pm20/1/12 2:30:01 pm

Page 24: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

24 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

The Magic of

FenlandFenlandT

here’s nowhere quite like the Fenland waterways of eastern England. From the Great Ouse and its tributaries in the south of the region, to the Witham

Navigable Drains further north, these remote rivers, dykes and channels - many built specifi cally for drainage purposes - offer unrivalled opportunities for recreation, whether it be navigation, bird-watching, angling or walking.

The Great OuseOne river is synonymous with the Fens - the Great Ouse. It made the marshy landscape, the hiding place of Hereward the Wake, the Anglo Saxon freedom fi ghter of the 11th

century. Engineers have worked for centuries to keep it on the straight and narrow - from the revered Cornelius Vermuyden in the 17th century to the Environment Agency’s fl ood relief engineers today. Though Hereward’s marshlands are now drained, and the pound sterling has replaced Ely eels as the local currency, this remains a unique waterland - a web of lodes and leams, sluices and drains, with Ely Cathedral, the ship of the Fens, sailing majestically above it all. This is a region of vast skies, fantastic sunsets and splendid isolation, these Cambridgeshire rivers being blissfully quiet for most of the year. You can enjoy boating as it used to be in bygone times.

24 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

Magical Fenland.indd 1Magical Fenland.indd 1 20/1/12 2:32:18 pm20/1/12 2:32:18 pm

Page 25: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 25

Not that the Great Ouse traverses typical Fenland scenery throughout its length. Currently navigable up to Kempston Mill, a couple of miles above Bedford, its upper reaches are characterised by gentle watermeadows and woodlands. Picturesque villages and elegant market towns provide frequent distractions: Hemingford Grey, Houghton, Godmanchester, St Neots and Huntingdon. None is fi ner than St Ives, with its 15th century arched bridge complete with tiny chapel and its large market square graced with a statue of Oliver Cromwell.

Fenland scenery begins in earnest at Earith, where the tidal New Bedford River heads off, straight as an arrow to the north east. Most pleasure boats continue along the winding Old West River - the original course of the Great Ouse - to Pope’s Corner, confl uence with the

The Magic of Fenland

Twenty Pence Bridge on

the Old West River.

River Cam. Henceforth the river continues, wide, straight and deep, through Ely and Littleport, to Denver Sluice and beyond to a link with the Middle Level Navigations at Salters Lode (see page 28).

But don’t be tempted to rush the journey. Ely, in particular, is a delight - a fascinating little city of quaint shops, good pubs and tearooms and a waterfront to rival any on the Thames; plus of course its magnifi cent cathedral which dominates the Fens for miles around.

Enhancing the Great Ouse are several enchanting tributaries, each with their own character: the Cam leads to Cambridge and all its glories; Burwell, Reach and Wicken lodes offer short diversions from the Cam; and the Lark, Little Ouse and Wissey provide mile upon mile of lonely cruising or riverside walking beneath vast Fenland skies.

RIGHT: Canooeists on the Great Ouse at Bedford.

ABOVE: Godmanchester on the Great Ouse. (Robin Smithett)

LEFT: Leaving Hermitage Lock on the Great Ouse. (Robin Smithett)

Magical Fenland.indd 2Magical Fenland.indd 2 20/1/12 2:33:39 pm20/1/12 2:33:39 pm

Page 26: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

26 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

FACTS & FIGURES

Navigation Authorities: Environment Agency (Anglian Region) 08708 506506, www.visitgreatouse.co.uk; Conservators of the River Cam (Cam above Bottisham Lock) 01353 662203, www.camconservators.co.uk.

Walking: Although there is no towpath alongside much of the Great Ouse, the Ouse Valley Way is a network of footpaths following the route of the river from source to sea, including the navigable length. This is one of the longest river walks in Britain. www.ousevalleyway.org.uk.

Pick of the Pubs: The Samuel Pepys, Huntingdon; Old Ferry Boat, Holywell; Nelson’s Head, St Ives; Cutter Inn, Ely; Maid’s Head, Wicken; Fort St George, Cambridge.

Getting there: Access to the Great Ouse from the main network is via the River Nene and the Middle Level (see overleaf). All that will change with the completion of the Bedford & Milton Keynes Waterway, a new canal to connect the Great Ouse at Bedford with the Grand Union Canal at Milton Keynes. At such time the Great Ouse system is expected to become much busier - although the project is a long-term one.

The River Nene The Nene is a quintessentially English river where time seems to have stood still. It traces a remote course across the Northamptonshire countryside, its banks lined with a succession of picturesque stone villages. Numerous solitary locks punctuate the journey and along the way you’ll encoun-ter children fishing for newts and tadpoles beside ancient watermills, whilst families pic-nic in wildflower-strewn meadows. England’s green and pleasant land indeed!

But this is a river of contrasts too. There are outposts of industry at Northampton, Wellingborough and Peterborough, as well as a lively holiday complex at Billing. Medieval bridges and more modern locks come in vary-ing shapes and sizes, although fortunately all but six of the once-feared manual guillotine lock-gates have now been converted to electri-cal operation.

Above all, the Nene remains a haven of tranquillity, where long lines of moored craft and lengthy lock-queues are thankfully rare. Northampton is a fine county town which repays exploration and there is much of interest along the upper reaches, as the river meanders extravagantly across a widening flood plain. Several villages keep a respectful distance from the water, Woodford being the

best of them with its traditional stone cot-tages grouped around an expansive green.

But it is below Thrapston that the Nene attains new heights of scenic splendour. Wadenhoe is delectable, a mix of picture-post-card stone and thatch cottages facing each other across a narrow, winding lane that leads to the renowned King’s Head.

Everyone stops at Oundle, a refined stone-built town famous for its public school. Further downstream is Fotheringhay, forever associated with Mary Queen of Scots (she was imprisoned here and executed in 1587) and boasting a wonderful riverside church. Many observers regard this as the most beautiful vil-lage on the entire inland waterway network.

More typical Fenland scenery is on the menu as you journey downstream to Peterborough, a thriving city with a lengthy promenade equipped with a full range of facilities for boat-ers. However short your stay here, make sure you check out the cathedral with its imposing west front. Passing the entrance to Morton Leam - giving access via Stanground Sluice to the Middle Level - the Nene continues down-stream to the tidal lock at Dog-in-a Doublet, which marks the end of the road for most boat-ers and walkers. Only those suitably prepared should attempt the tidal passage to the Wash.

Wicken Lode.

RIGHT: Fothorignhay church on the Nene.

St Ives Bridge.

Magical Fenland.indd 3Magical Fenland.indd 3 20/1/12 2:35:16 pm20/1/12 2:35:16 pm

Page 27: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 27

IWA’S WELCHES DAM CAMPAIGNWelches Dam Lock - at 47ft one of the smallest on the waterway network - has been closed ‘by stealth’ by the Environment Agency over a number of years. EA has installed a ‘temporary’ coffer dam, ostensibly to prevent water seepage, but this has severed passage, the statutory right to which is enshrined by law.

For its part, EA is denying that it has a statutory responsibility to repair the lock. Furthermore, it says that such repairs would be too costly in the current financial situation, given the limited use of the lock over the years.

The issue could be resolved by the completion of the final phase of the Fens Waterway Link (see page 30), but in the meantime a vital principle is at stake: how to force a navigation authority to carry out its legal responsibilities. Following consultation between IWA’s Navigation Committee and Peterborough Branch, preliminary legal soundings have been taken concerning a court case which could incur costs of over £100,000.

An alternative course of action could be to acquire a temporary lease for the waterway and utilise volunteers to restore the lock, possibly installing a larger structure than the present one.

Water Newton Lock on the Nene.

Upper Barnwell Lock, River Nene.

Magical Fenland.indd 4Magical Fenland.indd 4 20/1/12 2:36:07 pm20/1/12 2:36:07 pm

Page 28: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

28 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

FACTS & FIGURES

Navigation Authority: Environment Agency (Anglian Region) 08708 506506, www.environ-ment-agency.gov.uk/navigation.

Walking: The Nene Way is a well sign-posted 110-mile long-distance trail running from Badby in Northamptonshire to Sutton Bridge, Lincolnshire. From time to time the route deviates away from the water, adding variety to the journey and providing extensive views across the valley.

Pick of the Pubs: King’s Head, Wadenhoe; Ship Inn, Oundle; Falcon Inn, Fotheringhay; The Crown, Elton; Queens Head, Nassington; The Haycock, Wansford.

Getting There: Access to the Nene from the Grand Union Canal is by way of the Northampton Arm, which descends through 17 narrow-beam locks and a couple of lift bridges to join the river at Northampton. It is a matter of eternal regret that the locks of the Northampton Arm were built to narrow-beam dimensions, thus prevent-ing wide-beam craft from travelling from the Grand Union Canal to the waterways of East Anglia.

The Middle Level NavigationsThis is a totally unique cruising area. It divides opinion - people either love it or hate it. But if you have a penchant for utter peace and tranquillity, vast Fenland skies and unpol-luted air, then this network of waterways - primarily built for drainage and flood pro-tection purposes - could be the place for you. That said, many perceive the Middle Level as merely a link between the Great Ouse and the Nene, the normal route being via Well Creek, the Old River Nene, Whittlesey Dyke and King’s Dyke. An alternative route via Welches Dam Lock and the Forty Foot has been una-vailable for some time, owing to the long-term closure of Welches Dam Lock (see page 27).

Perhaps the real joy of the Middle Level lies in exploring the periphery of the system, including the Twenty Foot and Sixteen Foot drains, Monks Lode, Great Raveley Drain and many more remote dykes and drains. Be sure to visit March, Ramsey and the twin ‘Dutch-style’ villages of Upwell and Outwell during your travels.

FACTS & FIGURES

Navigation Authority: Middle Level Commissioners 01354 653232 www.middlelevel.go.uk.

Boating on Well Creek, Middle Level Navigations.

The tidal River Witham.

Magical Fenland.indd Sec1:5Magical Fenland.indd Sec1:5 20/1/12 2:41:50 pm20/1/12 2:41:50 pm

Page 29: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 29

Walking: A number of footpaths follow the line of several of the Middle Level waterways, facilitating sev-eral circular walks. Simply check out the relevant OS maps (Landranger series 142 (Peterborough), 154 (Cambridge & Newmarket) and off you go!

Pick of the Pubs: Globe Inn, Upwell; Red Lion, March; Jolly Sailor, Ramsey.

Getting There: Access to the Middle Level Navigations is via the Nene and the Great Ouse.

Fossdyke Canal and River WithamThe Fossdyke Canal runs from the River Trent at Torksey to Lincoln, from where the River Witham may be navigated to Boston, a dis-tance of 43 miles; suitably-equipped seagoing craft may then continue onwards to the Wash.

Far removed from the mainstream boating areas of the Midlands, these waters are not to everyone’s taste, the scenery being predomi-

The Magic of Fenland

nantly flat and featureless. But they should not be overlooked, for arriving by boat in historic Lincoln is one of the great inland waterways experiences. Moor in Brayford Pool, visit the cathedral, enjoy shops and restaurants galore, then move on to Boston where you can explore the nooks and crannies of this fascinating old port to your heart’s content.

Such urban pleasure aside, the principal appeal of these Fenland waterways lies in their astonishingly remote nature - you certainly won’t be queuing for locks herea-bouts. And if you fancy an encore, consider the Witham Navigable Drains: a further 40 miles or so of navigable waterways travers-ing an eerily quiet landscape.

ABOVE: Torksey Lock. (Alison Alderton)

RIGHT: Brayford Pool, Lincoln. (Alison Alderton)

Magical Fenland.indd Sec1:6Magical Fenland.indd Sec1:6 20/1/12 2:36:58 pm20/1/12 2:36:58 pm

Page 30: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

30 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

FENS WATERWAYS LINKThe Fens Waterways Link is the biggest waterway enhancement project in Europe. Linking Lincolnshire and the River Witham with Cambridgeshire and the River Great Ouse, the ambitious six-phase scheme will comprise some 50 miles of new navigations and will open up access to a further 145 miles of waterways, connecting the cathedral cities of Lincoln, Peterborough and Ely with the market towns of Boston, Spalding, Crowland and Ramsey. New locks will be built, drains made navigable and canals cut.

Amidst great celebrations, Phase 1 was brought to a successful conclusion in March 2009 with the official opening of Boston Lock, connecting the Haven at Boston with the South Forty Foot Drain.

Phases 2 and 3 of the project involve the connection of the South Forty Foot Drain with the River Glen at Guthrams Gowt, and with the Glen above Surfleet Seas End Sluice along Vernatt’s Drain. This will run parallel to the River Welland to beyond Platt’s Bridge, where a new channel will be built to join the River Welland above Fulney Lock.

Final stages of the scheme will see a link provided between the Welland and the Nene at Peterborough. Thereafter, the proposal is to complete a route from Peterborough to Earith without boaters having to use the tidal Great Ouse at Salters Lode. The plan is to use the Forty Foot Drain from Horseway Lock to the Old Bedford River, which would then be made navigable from Welches Dam to Earith - although Welches Dam is currently, and controversially, closed (see page 27).

For further details of the Fens Waterways Link visit www.fenswaterways.com.

FACTS & FIGURES

Navigation Authorities: British Waterways (Newark) 01636 704481, www.britishwater-ways.co.uk; Witham Fourth District Internal Drainage Board 01205 310099, www.w4idb.co.uk.

Walking: A good path follows the Fossdyke Canal and River Witham all the way from Torksey to Boston. A number of interven-ing railway stations make shorter one-way walks possible.

Pick of the Pubs: White Swan, Torksey; Pyewipe, Lincoln; Tyrwhitt Arms, Short Ferry (near Bardney Lock); White Horse, Southrey; Malcom Arms, Anton’s Gowt.

Getting There: Access to the Fossdyke Canal is via the tidal Trent. Due care and attention is needed to arrive at Torksey Lock at the correct state of the tide. For advice contact BW (01636 704481).

ABOVE: The opening of Boston Lock, 2009.

BELOW: Vernatt’s Drain.

New lock opened 2009

Magical Fenland.indd Sec1:7Magical Fenland.indd Sec1:7 20/1/12 2:42:17 pm20/1/12 2:42:17 pm

Page 31: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 31

Billing Lock on the River Nene - Britain’s loveliest waterway? (Robin Smithett)

Magical Fenland.indd Sec1:8Magical Fenland.indd Sec1:8 20/1/12 2:43:04 pm20/1/12 2:43:04 pm

Page 32: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

Looking for an exciting and interesting way to make a difference in preserving the UK’s industrial heritage? Whether you are a complete

beginner to canal restoration or have tried your hand at restoration before, we would love to hear from you….

The Inland Waterways Association’s Waterway Recovery Group (WRG) runs over 25 week-long Working Holidays, called ‘Canal Camps’, every year throughout England and Wales. Whether you fancy rebuilding a lock, digging out a canal channel, or clearing vegetation from a towpath we will have something to suit you.

Canal Camps are a great experience for anyone who loves being outdoors and enjoys meeting new people from different backgrounds and of different ages. Each camp costs only £56 per week – this includes food and accommodation. Our Canal Camps are open to anyone aged between 18 and 70.

Volunteers come from all walks of life … so why don’t you join us on a canal camp and try something completely different in 2012!

WRG Needs You…

in 2012!2012! Canal Camps 2012

Midlands Cromford CanalCost: £56Location: DerbyshireDates: 4th-11th August; 11th-18th August Activities: demolition, construction, stone walling, bricklaying

The Cromford Canal is a waterway being reborn in the heart of the Peak District. Volunteers will be working on the Derwentside Spill Weir – demolishing the existing structure and constructing a new weir. There will also be the chance to work on the Gauging Narrows at Sawmills, continuing rebuilding work on the stone walls started in 2011.

32 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

WRG Needs You in 2012.indd 1WRG Needs You in 2012.indd 1 20/1/12 2:46:25 pm20/1/12 2:46:25 pm

Page 33: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

Uttoxeter CanalCost: £56Location: StaffordshireDates: 26th December - 1st January 2013 Activities: scrub bashing, bonfi res

Our 2012 festive camp will be working on the Uttoxeter Canal clearing vegetation around Bridge 70, so there will be plenty of scrub bashing, bonfi re and other winter activities … a perfect way to work off your Christmas dinner!

Chesterfi eld CanalCost: £56/*£72 Location: DerbyshireDates: 31st March – 9th April*; 18th-25th August; 25th August-1st SeptemberActivities: lock construction, brick and block laying

In 2012 WRG volunteers will be returning to help construct the new Staveley Town Lock. The new lock is an important step in the restoration project, enabling the canal to get under a railway line a few hundred metres further on. Volunteers may also get involved in the construction of a small footbridge and wharf wall. There will be plenty of work to keep both experienced WRGies and newcomers entertained.

South West & South WalesMonmouthshire CanalCost: £56Location: South WalesDates: 30th June – 7th July; 7th-14th JulyActivities: heritage construction skills, vegetation clearance

The ‘Mon & Brec’ is a popular location for volunteers – this year there will be plenty of activities throughout the camps from the reconstruction and repair of Tredegar Lock, to vegetation clearance of the canal corridor from Drapers Lock.

Herefordshire & Gloucestershire CanalCost: £56Location: GloucestershireDates: 6th-13th April Activities: machine operation, towpath construction, piling

In 2000, WRG helped to restore Over Basin and this Easter volunteers will restore the next stretch of the canal (approximately 275 metres) north of the basin. Work will include excavators and dumpers removing silt from the canal, as well as the construction of a new towpath.

Cotswold Canals – Inglesham LockCost: £56Location: CotswoldsDates: 11th-18th August; 18th-25th August; 25th August – 1st SeptemberActivities: bricklaying, lock restoration, dam construction, demolition

IWA is in the process of raising £125,000 to enable volunteers to restore and re-commission this iconic structure just off the Thames at Lechlade. In 2012 volunteers will construct a dam to enable access to the lock chamber, as well as repairing the stop plank grooves, and continuing to repair the wing walls. If you enjoy learning new skills then this could be the camp for you!

North West & Welsh BordersManchester, Bolton & Bury CanalCost: £56Location: LancashireDates: 14th-21st JulyActivities: lock restoration, demolition

Take a week out and get outdoors and dirty on the Manchester, Bolton and Bury Canal. Volunteers will be working at Nob End, repointing one of the locks and assisting in the building of a picnic area, as well as helping with the demolition of an old works building.

Lancaster CanalCost: £56Location: LancashireDates: 21st-28th July; 28th July-4th AugustActivities: channel construction, vegetation clearance, stonework restoration

WRG volunteers will be spending two weeks reprofiling and relining a 225 metre section of the canal at Stainton. Work could include vegetation clearance, stonework restoration and earth moving so there will be the chance to operate excavators and dumpers! Book now and join us in the beautiful setting of the Lancaster Canal this summer.

WRG Needs You...in 2012!

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 33

WRG Needs You in 2012.indd 2WRG Needs You in 2012.indd 2 20/1/12 2:47:39 pm20/1/12 2:47:39 pm

Page 34: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

Montgomery CanalCost: £56Location: ShropshireDates: 4th-11th August; 11th-18th August; 18th-25th August; 25th August-1st SeptemberActivities: channel construction, blocklaying, landscaping, machine operation

Escape with us to the stunning countryside of the Welsh Borders. In 2011 volunteers trialled experimental approaches to restoring rural waterways and this year we hope volunteers will be able to construct an 80-metre channel – by installing a liner system of geotextiles and bentonite matting, followed by blocks. This is a fantastic opportunity for volunteers to assist in restoring a length of the Montgomery Canal, helping to ensure its future.

South East Wendover Arm, Grand Union Canal Cost: £56Location: HertfordshireDates: 14th-21st JulyActivities: bricklaying, waterway archaeology

In 2011 volunteers exposed the Wendover Arm’s derelict Whitehouse’s Pumping Station and in 2012 WRGies will rebuild the station’s wharf wall and culverts, as well as excavating the coal storage areas. Wey & Arun CanalCost: £56Location: SurreyDates: 30th June–7th JulyActivities: improvement works, construction of a boat house, slipway and landing stages

Spend a week helping to restore a section of the canal at Dunsfold between Tickners Heath and Compasses Bridge Cross. Volunteers will be involved the construction of a boat house, slipway and landing stage.

Chelmer and Blackwater NavigationCost: £56Location: EssexDates: 11th–18th February; 28th July -4th August; 4th-11th August; 27th October–3rd NovemberActivities: bank protection, brickwork, towpath construction

Why not join the Essex Waterways team in 2012 and help maintain this beautiful waterway. Get stuck into works including bank protection, painting, towpath improvements, scrub clearance and waterside repairs. In summer volunteers will also spend two weeks carrying out major repairs to Rushes Weir.

Basingstoke CanalCost: £56Location: SurreyDates: 21st-28th JulyActivities: canal maintenance, landing stage construction

This year volunteers will be involved in a multitude of tasks including the building of landing stages, towpath repairs, vegetation clearance and other remedial works to locks on the Deepcut Flight. This camp will give volunteers the chance to try their hand at lots of different tasks and there may also be the opportunity to operate excavators and dumpers.

Tell me moreAccommodationOur standard accommodation is best described as basic – usually in village halls, scout huts or community centres unless otherwise stated.

Kit ListYou will be sent through a full list of what to bring, the essentials being a sleeping bag and camping mat; waterproofs; old work clothes; steel-toe capped boots or wellies… and most importantly a sense of humour! We will supply any other safety equipment required, including a hard hat.

The working dayOur week-long working holidays usually start around 4pm on the first Saturday and finish around lunchtime on the following Saturday. The working day runs from 9am to 5pm (depending on the weather!) with plenty of tea-breaks and lunch on site. A cooked breakfast and a substantial, home cooked evening meal will also be provided.

Duke of Edinburgh AwardWRG welcomes participants completing the residential aspect of their Duke of Edinburgh Award. All volunteers participating in the scheme must attend the camp for the full seven days to be eligible for the award.

WRG Needs You...in 2012!

COME AND JOIN US!For more details on the above canal camps or to book please go to www.wrg.org.uk or call 01494 783 453 ext 604. To request a Canal Camps Brochure 2012 (available NOW!) please contact Jenny Black at IWA Head Office on either 01494 783 453 ext 604 or email [email protected].

34 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

WRG Needs You in 2012.indd 3WRG Needs You in 2012.indd 3 20/1/12 2:48:11 pm20/1/12 2:48:11 pm

Page 35: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

www.britishwaterways.co.uk

WaterwaysWorld

www.waterwaysworld.com

FIND OUT MORE AND BUY TICKETS ATWWW.CRICKBOATSHOW.COM OR CALL: 01283 742972

SAVE WHEN YOU BUY TICKETS IN ADVANCE PLUS CHILDREN UNDER 5 GO FREE

• Free Parking• Dogs Welcome• A variety of great value

food and refreshments

www.crickmarina.com

Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Bank Holiday

2nd – 5th JUNE 2012Crick Marina, West Haddon Road,

Crick, Northants, NN6 7SQ

The NUMBER ONEboat show at the HEART

of the waterways

CRICK BOAT SHOW& Waterways Festival

Food Demonstrations • Children’s Fair and Entertainment • Water Vole Food and Craft Marquee • Free Boat Trips • Live Music • Learn About

Boating • Free Boating Seminars • Heritage and Wildlife Areas • Kingfi sher Boating Marquee • Diamond Jubilee Celebrations • Plus Much More…

crick.indd 1 21/12/11 4:53:11 pmp35_iwa.indd 1 20/1/12 11:04:46

Page 36: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

After months, or even years, of planning, you’ve finally taken the plunge and bought a boat of your own; or maybe you’ve just upgraded to the craft of your

dreams. The next decision, and almost as important in its way, is where do you moor it. Location, location, location comes into play. Do you choose rural or urban, close to your home or hundreds of miles away so you can enjoy a different area during your precious holiday?

Perhaps the main question, however, is on-line or marina. Both options have their pros and cons.

On-line MooringsOn-line moorings sometimes comprise nothing more than a length of offside bank with, if you’re lucky, a water point as the only facility on offer. Nevertheless, they are the chosen option for many who prefer to keep their boat in an informal, often rural location. British Waterways customers would currently pay some £65 to £125 per metre per year for an on-line mooring at most points around the system. If you should happen to live by a canal, you may be able to moor your boat at the end of the garden but it is still legally in BW’s water so a proportion of the local mooring charge is payable.

Formerly, BW published rates for new moorings at the many locations it managed but, in 2007, it decided to seek closed bids when vacancies occurred. Early results were mixed, with some bids being higher than previous charges whilst some were lower. It has now changed from closed tenders to eBay-style auctions with guide and reserve prices.

The Rise...and Rise...of the MarinaA few years back, moorings were in such short supply that prospective buyers were often advised to find a mooring before they bought a craft. Then came the ‘marina boom’.

There were of course, already a number of long-established medium-to-large marinas around the system, such as those at Braunston, Cholmondeston and Whilton. Then for many years almost no new marinas were built, due to a succession of barriers faced by would-be developers, including a hostile planning regime pre-disposed to demanding expensive environmental impact studies.

The Yacht Harbour Association was among the organisations that campaigned for change and it helped persuade British Waterways to become involved. Overcoming its previous antipathy, BW became enthused and eventually set up its own marinas unit - BWML - which now operates 20 marinas

TOP: Braunston Marina.

MIDDLE: Whilton Marina.

ABOVE: Small in beautiful; mooring basin at Bottisham, River Cam. (Robin Smithett)

The Mooring Debate:On-line MarinaVERSUS

36 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

Moorings/Marinas.indd 1Moorings/Marinas.indd 1 20/1/12 3:20:16 pm20/1/12 3:20:16 pm

Page 37: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

across the UK, from the Brecon Beacons in Wales to Hull Marina in East Yorkshire, from Glasson Marina in Lancashire to Limehouse Basin in London’s Docklands.

There are those, including Tim Coghlan of Braunston Marina, who feel that the pendulum has swung too far the other way, and that there is little if any control over where new marinas are built. The result, according to Mr Coghlan, is that boating is becoming more and more concentrated in relatively few ‘honeypot’ areas.

The Trent & Mersey Canal would seem to be a classic example: a number of big new marinas, including Mercia Marina, the largest of them all - have been created within a relatively short length of canal. Severe congestion is the inevitable result in peak season, with 14-boat lock queues trying the patience of all concerned. Pity the first-time hirer, who picks up a boat from Stone or Great Haywood, and finds himself embroiled in such a situation.

The upsurge in marina development had taken off a few years back, when the economy was booming, narrowboat-ownership was burgeoning and all was right with the world. Then came the global financial crisis, recession, doom and gloom...

The inland waterways industry suffered along with everyone else; boat-buying declined, a number of boat-builders went to the wall and several of the brand spanking new marinas were left with empty berths aplenty. And yet, remarkably, marina development continues. Relatively recent additions to the system include new marinas at Audlem on the Shropshire Union Canal,

Church Minshull on the Middlewich Branch, and Aston on the Trent & Mersey Canal south of Stone. Castle Marinas now operate in six locations around the system, and Caen Hill Marina opened on the Kennet & Avon Canal last October. Shortly before this issue of Waterways went to press, planning permission was granted for a new marina at Cropredy on the South Oxford Canal, although proposals to develop large marinas elsewhere in the Midlands are facing stiff opposition from protest groups.

Marina ComfortsLeaving aside the politics of excessive development, no-one would deny that off-line marinas are able to offer a comprehensive range of services in an entirely secure environment. The largest - such as the 585-berth Mercia Marina at Willington near Burton upon Trent - sometimes resemble a small holiday village, with waterside lodges available for sale or rent, gift shops, pubs and tearooms on site. Amenities may include full boat length jetties, several facilities blocks, chandlery outlets, CCTV cameras, Wi-Fi etc. If all that sounds a little too ‘industrial’ in scale, there are plenty of smaller marinas all around the network that still offer a good range of services in a more bucolic environment.

And the price of all this? A berth in a Midlands marina or basin ranges from around £110 to £140 per metre per year. Sites in and around London are likely to charge considerably more than this. But it is very much a buyer’s market at the moment - with plenty of empty berths to be found in most areas - so it certainly pays to shop around.

On-line moorings on the Shropshire Union Canal. (Graham Booth)

The Mooring Debate

Acknowledgement Thanks to Graham Booth for supplying much information used within this feature.

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 37

Moorings/Marinas.indd 2Moorings/Marinas.indd 2 20/1/12 3:20:47 pm20/1/12 3:20:47 pm

Page 38: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

THE NEXT GENERATIONWe look at attempts to attract young people to the world of the waterways

In 2004 I had just joined the National Festival committee and it was suggested to me by the late Barry Green (then

Personnel Director) that it would be a “good idea” to run an art competition for schools as a way of involving the local community in Burton upon Trent.

As someone working in a very large school at the time – I was well aware that such approaches usually ended up in the bin! We were living in different times – educational criteria and national curriculum targets ensured that only projects meeting specific aims would be given even a cursory glance.

How then could we turn an “art competition” into something that would tick all the boxes? As I was currently involved in implementing Personal, Social, Health Education and Citizenship in my own school – I scoured the criteria and there it was: concern for the environment, respect for local community and other similar targets – and so the ‘Art is Rubbish’ project was born.

The task was to create a thing of beauty from waste materials with a waterways theme.

Based around the idea that schools can discuss the impact of waste upon the environment in a meaningful way with all ages including very young pupils and of course the importance of recycling, the project took off.

That first year in Burton upon Trent we had 11 schools take part. They produced some wonderful collages and sculptures which were put on display in the local sports centre. The Mayor came and presented prizes (every school received something) and the children talked about what they had done to “collect the waste” and make their exhibit.

Similar projects have now been organised every year since then – wherever we have held a National Festival. Local publicity has been gained for the schools along with some very good prizes donated by the navigation authorities, local authorities, recycling companies and others. We even had Anglian TV come and film the children in 2007. As a community project – drawing people into the idea of waterways and their impact upon them – it has been very successful. Schools have taken their classes out for a walk alongside

Waste Not, Want Not… another way of engaging with the local community

ABOVE, BELOW AND RIGHT: ‘Art is Rubbish’ entries down the years.

their local waterway and for some children it was the first time they had been there.

Since 2007 Beryl Chapman has been the Schools Project Co-ordinator and has detailed below how she organised her project at Burton upon Trent in 2011. However, this was the most successful year yet – and the pictures demonstrate how much work went into the entries.

We are currently organising a similar project for the Northwich River Weaver Festival in June 2012 and several schools have already signed up with hopefully more to follow. This is our way of saying to the local population: we are not just boating enthusiasts, we care about the waterways and their future so it is important to us that young people get involved. After all, they will need to take over from us as time goes on.For further information on how to set up such a project, email: [email protected].

‘Art is Rubbish’ at Burton in 2011Primary schools in Burton upon Trent took the ‘Art is Rubbish’ theme to heart in 2011 and produced some of the best entries ever. Schools were contacted by letter during the first week of the spring term inviting them to take part in the project during the summer term. They were very soon emailing and phoning to sign up and very soon more than a dozen schools were on board.

38 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

The Next Generation.indd 1The Next Generation.indd 1 20/1/12 2:56:32 pm20/1/12 2:56:32 pm

Page 39: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

Child-friendly Hire Boat on the Oxford

Expanding hire company Oxfordshire Narrowboats launched an interesting

innovation last summer – a hire craft and day boat specially designed for families with children.

Based on the Muddy Waters children’s books, the 69ft hire craft includes a special playroom with bean bags, play tables and storage space at child height, a TV you can plug a Playstation into – and CCTV so the adults can keep an eye on what the children are up to. Next to it is the children’s bedroom with four fi xed bunks, plus an en-suite with a child-height sink.

There’s also a day boat, Jolly Boatman, with a similar child-friendly appearance and room for ten people on board. Both boats are based at Lower Heyford on the South Oxford Canal.

The Muddy Waters series of books, created by local author Dan Clacher, is rather like Thomas the Tank Engine for canals – a series of cheerful narrowboat-based characters with big eyes on the front doors and a smile on the bow. The ten books, from Jolly Boatman’s Lesson and Hamish and the Falkirk Wheel to Owen’s Dancing Dragon, are available from canalside shops and from www.iwashop.com.

The Next Generation

I soon learned that about half of the schools were working together with teachers from one of the local senior schools. They were keen to make a series of related sculptures and finally decided upon their theme of waterway features each one linked to Burton upon Trent. A map of the area was made into a jigsaw puzzle with each school incorporating their piece into the finished article.

While the teachers and children were busy cutting and sticking over the next few months, I arranged a date and venue for the prize-giving; the mayor and other guests were invited and the search for prizes begun. Several local organisations and businesses made generous donations even in these difficult economic times.

On the day before the awards were to be presented, we received the entries at the Shobnall Leisure Centre in Burton. We were amazed at the quality of them all, not to mention the ingenuity and creativity of some of the ideas.

The next day a group of children from each school together with their teachers arrived to see their art work displayed along with all the others. They were not disappointed! Everyone agreed all the collages and sculptures made an impressive sight. Then the Mayor of East Staffordshire, Councillor Patricia Ackroyd, spent time touring the room commenting on all the work and listening to the children as they described how they made their entries. Each school won a cash prize, vouchers and goodies from local organisations with the overall winner receiving a class visit to the National Forest Adventure Farm. Each school was also presented with a framed certificate of participation in the project to display in school.

A few weeks later at the Waterways Festival at Shobnall Fields it was most rewarding to meet and talk to parents, children and staff who had come along to see the display in the IWA marquee. It was clear that the children had learned a lot more about recycling, their local environment and history of the area through their participation in the ‘Art is Rubbish’ project.Beryl ChapmanNational Festival Schools Project Co-ordinator

Not enjoying being NEET

Not in Employment, Education or Training could sound a great way to spend your days. Lounging around maybe, in front of the TV, with a can or two and a bucket of popcorn with like-situated friends.

However, the true picture is rather different. I attended a conference about NEET training in the North West during December and met several organisations which are trying to help these young people, some of whom have extremely difficult home circumstances and very little adult support to change their lives. Whilst the trainers who provide education and work experience for these young people are doing their level best, once the course finishes there is very little “out there” in the wider community as far as jobs and further meaningful training for them. As a result some of them simply go round and round on the NEET training treadmill.

The Waterways Action Squad, based at Ellesmere Port and featured previously in these pages, are now working on volunteer projects to try and develop more confidence and self-esteem among these young people, and IWA is supporting them in every way we can. We will report on future projects as they progress. Gillian Bolt

‘Art is Rubbish’ participants at Shobnall Fields, 2011.

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 39

The Next Generation.indd 2The Next Generation.indd 2 20/1/12 2:56:53 pm20/1/12 2:56:53 pm

Page 40: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

01283 742970www.waterwaysworld.com

when you subscribe to Waterways World by Direct Debit

• 12 magazines a year delivered direct to your door

• NEVER miss an issue

• 10% off all Waterways World books

• FREE postage and packaging on all purchases from Waterways World

• COMPLETE protection with the Direct Debit guarantee

FREE Waterways World Annual& Route Planning Map

EVERY YEAR

access to the digital versions of all issues of Waterways World at

www.waterwaysworld.com for the duration of your postal subscription

+FREE

Waterways World | Subscription Offer 12 issues

delivered direct from

the printer to your door

CHEQUE OR CREDIT CARD■ 1 year – £37.80 (1 year digital subscription included)

■ 2 years – £75.60 (2 years digital subscription included)

■ I enclose a UK£ cheque/postal order for payable to Waterways World

■ Please debit my Visa/MasterCard/Switch/Delta card (Charged in the name of WW Magazines)

*UK prices only – please call +44(0)1283 742970 for overseas rates

Security Code Issue(Switch)

Expiry Date Valid From

Signature Date

DIRECT DEBIT – for hassle free automatic renewals, a free Annual each year and protection from the Direct Debit guarantee

■ £37.80 every 12 months (digital subscription included for duration of postal subscription)

■ Plus free Annual for each year your Direct Debit continues. Starting with 2012

I understand that I can cancel my subscription at any time.Please retain the Direct Debit guarantee at the bottom of this form

THE DIRECT DEBIT GUARANTEE - TO BE RETAINED BY THE PAYEE This Guarantee is offered by all Banks and Building Societies that accept instructions to pay Direct Debits. If there are any changes to the amount, date or frequency of your Direct Debit, Waterways World Ltd will notify you 10 working days in advance of your account being debited or as otherwise agreed. If you request Waterways World Ltd to collect a payment, confirmation of the amount and date will be given to you at the time of the request. If an error is made in the payment of your Direct Debit, by Waterways World Ltd or your Bank or Building Society, you are entitled to a full and immediate refund of the amount paid from your Bank or Building Society.If you receive a refund you are not entitled to, you must pay it back when Waterways World Ltd asks you to. You can cancel a Direct Debit at any time by simply contacting your Bank or Building Society. Written confirmation may also be required. Please also notify us.

Complete this form & return to: Waterways World, Reader Services, 151 Station Street, Burton on Trent, Staffordshire, DE14 1BG.Or call 01283 742970 or visit www.waterwaysworld.comWe cannot accept faxed/photocopied Direct Debit forms – please send original.■ Tick if you prefer not to receive occasional mailings of interest to Waterways World readers.Media Code: IWA/Spring12UK prices only – please call +44(0)1283 742970 for overseas prices

Title Initials Surname

Address

Postcode

Tel Email

PERSONAL DETAILS

Title Initials Surname

Address

Postcode

GIFT RECIPIENTS DETAILS

Direct Debit (uk only) Instruction to your bank or building society to pay by direct debit

Direct Debit Instruction

To the Manager

Address

Postcode

Account in the name of

Signature

Banks & Building societies may not accept Direct debit Instructions for some types of accounts INSTRUCTIONS TO YOUR BANK OR BUILDING SOCIETY. Please pay Direct Debits from the account detailed in the instruction subject to the safeguards assured by the Direct Debit Guarantee. I understand that this instruction may remain with Waterways World and if so, details will be passed electronically to my Bank or Building Society.

ORIGINATORS IDENTIFICATION 80 - 96 - 42 Reference (Office Use)

Branch Sort Code Account Number

Please complete and return to Waterways World at the address below.Name and full postal address of Bank/Building Society

WaterwaysWorld

The perfect gift that will last all year round

feb 12 subs.indd 1 20/1/12 11:08:42

Page 41: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 41

LIMEKILN CHANDLERSWWW.LIMEKILNCHANDLERS.CO.UK

• AT WOLVERHAMPTON6 Bridgnorth Road, Compton,

Wolverhampton WV6 8AA • Tel: 01902 751147

• Opening Times: MON-FRI 9am TO 5pm

SAT 9am TO 4pm Closed Sunday

Visit our show rooms for specialOffers and great prices every day

at Stourport on Severn orWolverhampton

• AT STOURPORT ON SEVERNThe Boat Shop, Mart Lane, Stourport DY13 9EL TEL: 01299 821111 Opening Times: TUES – FRI 10am TO 5pmSAT 10am TO 4pm. Closed Sunday

Brokerage service now available, no sale no fee on all boats within 10 miles of our shops.

Rent our Wet Dock or Dry DockExcellent rates, phone Stourport for details

Available from Stourport BasinDiesel, Pump Outs, Water, Calor Gas

Stourport Basin Marina York Street Boat Yard

Moorings available at Stourport Basin Marina with electricity points and water on site.

Phone Stourport for details

p41_iwa.indd 1 20/1/12 11:32:44

Page 42: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

42 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

The last quarter of 2011 saw a most wel-come revival of public interest in the gen-eration of power by water. I am sure that any thinking person would agree that the generation of power through the use of fossil fuels cannot go on indefinitely, but some of the alternatives seem worryingly intrusive. Even Stoke Bruerne is threat-ened by the construction of a nearby wind-farm with enormous whooshing turbines, which will certainly not add to the tran-quillity of the scene. All the more pleas-ing therefore to read in several national journals, notably The Daily Telegraph and The Daily Mail, that a new, small-scale hydro-electric plant is about to be com-missioned by HRH The Queen to provide power for Windsor Castle and the adjoin-ing royal estate. “Lowered into Romney

Weir by crane after months of prepara-tion, the pair of 40-ton steel ‘screws’ will provide almost all the electricity needs of the royal estate” said The Mail. Members might care to be reminded that this most sensible use of our natural rivers was an early plank in IWA’s political platform, emanating mainly from Tom Rolt, but even 65 years ago in IWA’s infancy it was not a new idea. Fred Thacker noted that electricity was being generated at Goring Mill over a century ago in his monumental history of the Thames. Still, it’s good to know that eventually these ideas catch on. Mind you, Prince Philip has “been typically forthright in his scepticism”, but as a director of the power company concerned said, “I hear from the Royal Household that he asks about the progress

of this system often and he is truly sup-portive and very interested in the techni-cal details”. These details were illustrated in The Mail and showed a system based on an Archimedean screw, such as was once used, in the reverse direction, to pump out lock chambers and coffer dams. Fishermen will doubtless be glad to learn that “alongside the screws is a £100,000 fish tube-which enables salmon, trout and eels to by pass the system safely” and, should these funny creatures be unable to understand the Environment Agency’s directional notices, “Rubber bumpers will be installed on the screw’s metal blades to prevent harm to fish”. Oh! I almost forgot. The Mail’s headline could have won the prize for the most excruciating Pun of the Year: “Merry waves of Windsor”.

Still in the Thames Valley, a not-unconnected tale emerged concerning the weir at Northmoor, above Oxford in the BBC Local News. For while lock keepers are being turfed out of their cottages in order to save a notional £384,000, the Environment Agency is proposing to automate the old paddle and rimer weir at a cost of £2.5 million. According to the BBC: “The EA said it needed to mechanise the weir because it was no longer safe for its employees to use. But campaigners said the money could be better spent elsewhere. Mike Hill, one of the campaigners, said there was no evidence that a mechanised weir would protect homes from flooding better than a manual weir. He said the cur-rent system could last another 40 years without modification. He added: ‘One wonders what the real reason is behind this move by the EA. They’ve talked about health and safety and yet we have a lock keeper that’s retired after 30 years of service on that part of the River Thames, who has got no health and safety issues at all, no injuries’. The area manager for the EA, Innes Jones, said that paddle and rimer weirs used heavy pieces of wood that were three times the weight that it was legal for an employer to make someone lift.” It could be that the Health & Safety is being used as a cover. Paddle and rimer weirs are ancient devices, dating back probably to Anglo-Saxon times, and are potentially dangerous structures when a considerable fall of water is con-cerned. However, the fall at Northmoor is not great and it is dif-ficult to believe that either the paddles or rimer posts can weigh that much. On the other hand I would not care to go out on any weir in the dark to draw wooden paddles. The article concludes with the statement from Mr Jones: “During the serious floods in 2007, it took two specially-trained members of staff several hours to fully open the Northmoor weir… those kinds of delays could put houses at risk of flooding. The new mechanised system would be push-button operated and useable by a wider number of EA staff.”

PEOPLE POWER SINKS MARINA Last year’s drought was picked

up by the media. While mat-ters seem to be worst in the furthest eastern reaches of the country, the Midlands have not been immune, as users of the Grand Union, Leicester Section will know. The news as reported by the Leicester Daily Mercury showed that 18th Century technology remains as baffling as ever to 21st Century reporters. “An underground water tunnel is being used to transfer water from the River Tove in Northamptonshire, to the canal. The water is then pumped up through a series of locks, to the stretch of the canal in south Leicestershire.” Fine and dandy, but what on earth is this Enid Blytonesque “under-ground water tunnel”? In my, albeit limited, experience, most tunnels are underground. The water is pumped directly out of the River Tove below Stoke Bruerne locks, which admit-tedly crosses the Grand Union Canal by means of an inverted siphon, but what is this tun-nel? I can only suppose that the paper means Blisworth, Crick and Husbands Bosworth Tunnels. Anyway Jeff Whyatt,

the local Waterways Manager did his best to explain to the paper what it was all about, but the paper still got it mud-dled. “When locks are opened, water is moved up the canal” wrote the reporter. I suppose these days basic physics is no longer taught in schools, but surely people understand that water flows downhill? The paper went on to tell us that “boats that need more than 2ft 4in of water to float have been banned from the 11 mile section between Kibworth and King’s Lock in Aylestone. For boats that are still able to travel, use of locks on this stretch have also been restrict-ed to between 10am and 2pm.” The article concluded with a charming picture of Tony and Mary Matts of Foxton Boat Services who “were concerned at the water levels” posing on the bridge at the bottom of Foxton Locks. On the other side of the Midlands the Stourbridge News reported that “Waterways engineers were keeping a close eye on Stourbridge’s canals after van-dalism and summer weather left water levels low.”

THE MERRY WAVES OF WINDSOR

Water flows downhill!

Cuttings.indd 1Cuttings.indd 1 20/1/12 2:58:35 pm20/1/12 2:58:35 pm

Page 43: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

WaterwayWaterwayCUTTINGSCUTTINGS

DAVID BLAGROVE TAKES A LIGHT-HEARTED LOOK AT WHAT THE

PAPERS HAVE HAD TO SAY

Cuttings PleaseSend all your waterway cuttings to

David Blagrove at IWA Head Offi ce, Island House, Moor Road, Chesham HP5 1WA

Two final, and slightly off-beat, items would surely have gladdened the heart of the late Robert Aickman, who was ever on the look-out for unusual uses for the waterways. One comes again from the ever-useful BBC website, this time from the Staffordshire area. Sarah Henshaw of Lichfield, a bookseller, has evidently found a novel (yes, I know, puns are not only the province of pop journalism) way of promoting her business. According to the Beeb: “The 28-year-old travelled 1,000 miles through 700 locks on The Book Barge over six months. Miss Henshaw and her shop have now returned to the barge’s permanent mooring in Barton Marina. The former journalist

opened her bookshop in 2009 when she moved back to Staffordshire after spending several years working in London… Earlier this year she decided to embark on her trip to encourage people to support independent booksellers. ‘The last few years have seen a huge decline in the number of non-chain retailers in the wake of massive discounting trends by supermarkets and online stores,’ she said. At the start of May she set off on her voyage travelling along the canals of England and Wales and calling in at various towns and cities along the way including Birmingham, Stratford-upon-Avon, Oxford, London, Bath, Bristol, Gloucester, Worcester, Llangollen,

Manchester, Skipton, Leeds and Nottingham”.

Meanwhile, the Lib Dem News told us that Councillor Peter Thornton from South Lakeland attended that party’s Conference in Birmingham last autumn and took the opportunity of going there aboard their boat,

which is normally moored at Great Haywood. “When they arrived they had some serious discussions with Special Branch but eventually persuaded them that they were not a threat and they were allowed to moor behind the ICC.” Our founder would doubtless have been delighted.

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 43

Demise of resident lock-keepersThe Thames has been much in the news during the last quarter. The long-threatened removal of resident lock keepers has begun, in spite of previous assurances. The Reading Chronicle noted in October last, “River users and homeowners in flood risk areas will be put in danger if the Environment Agency does away with resident lock keepers along the Thames, warns an experienced worker. Mike Eagles, 65, who retires as the Goring lock keeper at the end of the month after 27 years, when his cottage will be let to private tenants, said: “I would urge them to change their mind.” Like Mr Eagles, his colleague at Whitchurch Lock (above) will not be replaced when he retires next March, and a similar fate awaits

Lib Dem councillor Peter Thornton in Birmingham.

Blakes Lock in Reading and six others in Oxfordshire and Surrey, which are already vacant or will become so shortly.” The case for the lock keepers was duly put by the GMB Union, who re-iterated the points already made and said that “the agency’s “reckless” plans could cause devastation in Reading and surrounding vil-lages if there was a repeat of the heavy rainfall of 2003 and 2007”.Of course, the EA said that it was all the Government’s fault. It hopes “to plug some of its £800,000 funding gap left by a reduc-tion in Government cash with £416,000 from renting out the lock keeper cottages”. The Agency’s spokesman went on to say that the empty posts will be covered by seasonal staff and its 36 other lock and weir keepers, and … the changes have had no detrimen-tal impact on four locks in Oxfordshire and Surrey which have already been vacated. “I understand that one of these cottages has been empty for several years now with no apparent income from letting. But, let the EA have the final word: “Spokesman Dave Ferguson said: “There is no evidence to suggest that this move will have any impact on health and safety performance. People using the river are responsible for their own safety and in any emergency they should contact the emergency services. That is what we train our staff to do”.

Whitchurch Lock - one of a number of Thames Lock houses placed on the rental market.

AICKMAN-ESQUE

Cuttings.indd 2Cuttings.indd 2 20/1/12 2:59:00 pm20/1/12 2:59:00 pm

Page 44: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

The best in waterways history and heritage through rare archive pictures and articles by acknowledged experts

Well researched articles and fascinating stories of people and placesUpdates on current issues affecting the preservation of the waterways

Exclusive access to carrying company fl eet lists at www.narrowboatmagazine.com

Regular features include: Famous Fleets; Canals That Never Were; Historical Profi les; Tracing Family History

POSTAL SUBSCRIPTION OFFER

Subscribe today and enjoy all the subscriber benefi ts:FREE magazine delivery direct to your door

10% off all books purchased from Narrowboat and Waterways World as well as free postage and packaging

(For more information about our wide range of books and merchandise please visit www.narrowboatmagazine.com)

A subscription is the perfect gift for yourself or a friend that will last all year round

Complete and return this form to NARROWBOAT, 151 STATION STREET, BURTON ON TRENT, STAFFORDSHIRE DE14 1BG OR CALL 01283 742970 ■ Yes I would like to subscribe to Narrowboat

PERSONAL DETAILSTitle Initials SurnameAddress PostcodeEmail Tel

GIFT RECIPIENT’S DETAILS (if applicable)Title Initials SurnameAddress Postcode

Direct Debit Payment – for the most benefits Please retain the Direct Debit guarantee at the bottom of this form for your own records

■ £23.96 every 12 months (4 issues)OR ■ £5.99 every quarter(I understand that I can cancel my subscription at any time.)

Cheque or Credit Card■ £23.96 for 12 months (4 issues)■ I enclose a UK£ cheque/postal order for payable to Waterways WorldOR■ Please debit my Visa/MasterCard/Maestro/Delta card

(Charged in the name of WW Magazines)

■■■■ ■■■■ ■■■■ ■■■■ ■■■■ Security code ■■■ Expiry Date / Valid From / Issue(Switch) Signature Date *We cannot accept faxed/photocopied Direct Debit Forms.

Media Code: IWA/Spring12■ Tick if you prefer not to receive occasional mailings of interest to Narrowboat readers.

UK ONLY - For overseas rates please call +44 (0) 1283 742970

· This Guarantee is offered by all Banks and Building Societies that accept instructions to pay Direct Debits· If there are any changes to the amount, date or frequency of your Direct Debit, Waterways World Ltd will notify you 10 working days in advance of your

account being debited or as otherwise agreed. If you request Waterways World Ltd to collect a payment, confirmation of the amount and date will be given to you at the time of the request.

· If an error is made in the payment of your Direct Debit, by Waterways World Ltd or your Bank or Building Society, you are entitled to a full and immediate refund of the amount paid from your Bank or Building Society.

- If you receive a refund you are not entitled to, you must pay it back when Waterways World Ltd asks you to.· You can cancel a Direct Debit at any time by simply contacting your Bank or Building Society. Written confirmation may also be required. Please also notify us.

To the Manager

Address

Postcode

Account in the name of

Direct Debit (uk only) Instruction to your bank or building society to pay by direct debit

Banks & Building societies may not accept Direct debit Instructions for some types of accounts INSTRUCTIONS TO YOUR BANK OR BUILDING SOCIETY. Please pay Direct Debits from the account detailed in the instruction subject to the safeguards assured by the Direct Debit Guarantee. I understand that this instruction may remain with Waterways World and if so, details will be passed electronically to my Bank or Building Society.

ORIGINATOR IDENTIFICATION 80 - 96 - 42Reference (Office Use)

Please complete and return to Waterways World at the address below.*Name and full postal address of Bank/Building Society

Signature

Branch Sort Code

Account Number

Direct Debit Instruction

narrowboat subs Winter11.indd 1 20/1/12 11:19:04

Page 45: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 45

BCBM Boat Share Ltd

Your affordable route to luxury boating

No 1 For Shared OwnershipBCBM

www.bcbm.co.uk 01270 628076

Come and see how owning a share in a luxurynarrowboat or cruiser is a great way to get afloat.

Meet owners and view boats with sharesavailable from just a few thousand pounds

KINGSLOCK CHANDLERY SPECIAL OFFERS

Tel: 01606 737564 • www.kingslock.co.ukKings Lock Chandlery, Booth Lane, Middlewich, Cheshire CW10 0JJ

The Overplate Centre All overplating and stretch work undertaken

Bottom Blacking £10.29 per foot inc VAT

Fuel declaration charge at Kings Lock - no split enforced, it’s your declaration to declare what you think fit

Many of our ex display and chandlery items now on clearanceIncludingEngima 600 Cookers……now £400 eachElsan Blue 4 x 4 ltr………..now £38For a full list of all our clearance items and special offers please call for more details.

Moorings Available58p per foot, per week +

VAT

for winter moorings and maintenance packages

BOOK nOw

• Competitive moorings available

• Excellent cruising routes• Llangollen Canal• Secure parking• Hoist/Slipway• Blacking

• DIY sheds • CCTV • Wi Fi• Full engineering facilities for

plating/stretching• Cheshire’s leading narrowboat

broker

GRP Cruisers welcome

p45_iwa.indd 1 20/1/12 14:54:54

Page 46: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

46 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY

PLEASE MENTION IWA WHEN RESPONDING TO ADVERTISEMENTS

COMMUNICATIONS

BOAT HIRE

BOAT BUILDING BOAT STOVES

CHANDLERY

CANALIAPaul Widdowson BoatsTrad, cruiser, semi, narrow beam,

widebeam, Dutch barges, shell or sailaway.

For the boat you want call Paul on01623 835777; Mobile: 07754 483949Email: [email protected]

Web: www.paulwiddowsonjnr.moonfruit.com

FOR THE WIDEST CHOICE of canal holidays visit www.ukboathire.com You can choose from 11 different start locations and more than 200 boats. We operate Viking Afloat, Alvechurch Waterways Holidays, Red Line Boats and Wessex Narrowboats. So go online today or call 0330 3330591 (local rate) for a brochure.

For a free colour brochure Tel/fax: 01772 769183 Website: www.arlen-hireboats.co.uk

or call in and see us at Ashton Basin, Tulketh Brow, Preston, PR2 2SD

We offer lock free cruising on our well appointed2-7 berth narrowboats.Boatyard services include:

Diesel • Gas • Solid Fuel

Pump-out • Moorings

EQUIPMENT

www.waterways.org.uk

COURSES

The Stone Boat Building ChandleryFor an extensive range of traditional

narrowboat and sailing fi ttings.• Calor Gas • Outdoor Clothing • Windows •• Chimneys • Vents • Fridges & Freezers •

• Water Pumps • & much more!Newcastle Road, Stone, Staffs.

Tel: 01785 812688 | Fax: 01785 811317Email: [email protected]

Website: www.stoneboatbuilding.co.uk

Marine Lamps, Solar Panels & more...

Tel: 01832 270215Email: [email protected]

Web: www.narrowboat-services.co.uk

NEW! Magnetic mounted Solar Panels with built-in regulator/control units – can be attached to a steel roof without the need to drill holes. Simple installation. Marine Lamps, Solar Panels & more…

www.waterways.org.uk

Boost your mobile broadband signal

The Original and BestEstablished 1998

Beware of Imitations

Visit www.boatersphone.com

Books and Guides fromWaterways

WorldWPUBLICATIONS

Order from the Inland Waterways

Association BookshopCall 01494 783453

www.iwashop.com

Order from the

A perfect gift !

IWA Classies Spring12.indd 46 20/1/12 11:05:49

Page 47: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

IWA waterways - Spring 2012 | 47

To advertise here please contact Ian Sharpe ☎ 01283 742977 [email protected] to: Ian Sharpe, IWA Waterways, 151 Station Street, Burton-on-Trent, Staffordshire DE14 1BG | Next issue deadline: 12th April 2012

Lineage adverts cost £1.38 per word (inc. VAT), minimum 12 words. Box adverts start from as little as£33 per issue (plus VAT)*. A copy of our terms and conditions is available on request. (*4 series booking)

INSULATION

SURVEYORS

HANBURY WHARF ENGINEERING SERVICES – FOR ALL YOUR MAINTENANCE NEEDS.• On-Site Crane • Blacking • Engine Servicing • Mechanical Repairs • Electrical Installations and Repairs • Charging Problems • Steelwork Repairs • Anodes • Plumbing and Heating • Solid Fuel Stove Guards. Call 01905 771018 for a quote or visit Hanbury Wharf, home of The New & Used Boat Co.

The Yacht Designers & Surveyors Association01730 710 425 [email protected]

3683_ClassifiedIWA.indd 1 11/10/10 12:50:36

SERVICES

INSURANCE

HOLIDAYS MOORINGS

TRADITIONAL PAINTING SERVICES, NARROWBOATS PAINTED TO THE HIGHEST STANDARD, 18 years experience, many spent working for Phil Speight / Craftmaster. For a competitive quote call John Sanderson on 01384 485564. www.narrowboatpainting.co.uk

Hotel Boat Holidays A holiday aboard our hotel boat Tranquil Rose offers you fully

serviced accommodation with good food freshly prepared each day. We cruise the Thames, the Wey,

the Kennet & Avon Canal, and the Grand Union Canal into the heart of

London at Little Venice.For more information on

possibly the most relaxing of holidays contact:

Thames & Chilterns Holiday Cruiseswww.tranquilrose.co.uk

Telephone: 07966 248 079

REACH THE IWA’S

MEMBERSHIP

EFFECTIVE,

AFFORDABLE

ADVERTISING

Call 01283 742965

0 1 7 8 5 8 1 9 7 0 2 The best value luxury marina!

Prices held for 2012 - Moorings available now POWER & WATER ▪ GATED JETTIES ▪ PARKING ▪ LAUNDRY ▪ SERVICING

FACILITIES ▪ SLIPWAY ▪ DIESEL ▪ PUMP-OUT ▪ LOGS, COAL & GAS

Aston Marina, Lichfield Road, Stone, Staffordshire, ST15 8QU

SERVICES

TRANSPORT BY WATER

WANTED

RECORD COLLECTIONS WANTED – Jazz, Rock, Folk, Classical etc. Call Chris McGranaghan - 07795 548242 or Email me at: [email protected]

INSURANCE

Books and Guides from

Luxury waterside holiday LodgesEnjoy the waterside view from a bespoke luxury lodge at Mercia Marina. Holiday homes available to purchase or holiday let.5 YEARS FREE MOORING for boat owners! Call now for a brochure or book your holiday online at www.merciamarinalodges.co.uk 01283 703332 / [email protected]

Call 01283 703 332 for a mooring pack or email [email protected] www.merciamarina.co.uk

Breathtaking waterside destination and ideally located peaceful haven in the heart of the Midlands. For moorers’ there is everything you could want: full length boat jetties, 16amp electricity and water, workshop, drydock, wide open water space and 4 STAR graded facility blocks.

Moorings availableVisitors welcome

IWA Classies Spring12.indd 47 20/1/12 11:06:12

Page 48: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

48 | IWA waterways - Spring 2012

WATERWAYS ADVERTISING Spring 2012

Index to AdvertisersAB Tuckey .................................................10

ABC Leisure Group ....................................21

ABNB ..........................................................1

Axiom Propellers .........................................4

B.C. Boat Management Ltd .......................45

Blisworth Tunnel Narrowboats .....................4

Boatshed Grand Union ................................6

Braunston Marina Ltd ................................11

BWML .........................................................5

Calcutt Boats ............................................21

Canal Boat Cruises ....................................48

Canal Cruising Co ......................................10

Channelglaze ............................................48

Clements Millard .......................................21

Colecraft Boats ...........................................4

Debdale Wharf Marina ..............................48

Fox’s Boats ..................................................4

InterVac ....................................................48

JL Pinder .....................................................1

Kings Lock Chandlery ..........................11, 45

Lee Sanitation .............................................4

Limekiln Ltd ..............................................41

Maestermyn Group ...................................10

Midland Chandlers Ltd ........................... OBC

Morris Lubricants ...................................... IBC

Peninne Cruisers .........................................6

PRM Newage.............................................41

Rose Narrowboats .......................................6

Roydon Mill Marina ....................................10

Shoreline (UK) Ltd .......................................6

Swanley Bridge Marina ..............................45

The New & Used Boat Co ............................7

Video Active .............................................21

Websters Insulation Ltd .............................21

Wharf House Narrowboats Ltd ....................6

Whilton Marina ........................................ IFC

Worcester Marine Windows Ltd ..................6

Waterways is distributed free to all members of the Association with a readership of over 20,000. Advertising in Waterways offers a precisely targeted medium for businesses in all fields connected with inland waterways, such as boating, hiring, insurance, building, publishing, catering,

chandlery or brokerage.

To advertise in IWA Waterways please contact Ian Sharpe, Advertising Manager, 151 Station Street, Burton-Upon-Trent, Staffordshire, DE14 1BG. 01283 742 965 or [email protected]

L T D

t: 0121 706 5777www.channelglaze.com

‘Established 1979’

Discover the quality, functionality & robustness of Channelglaze Ltd windows for your pride and joy...

Rob & Sue KealeyN/B “Tangled Up In Blue”

10th October 2011

We are more than happy with the �nished result. The windows are well made, well �nished and expertly �tted. This has made our boat now look stunning.

We would have no hesitation in recommending your company to any other boaters out there, who are looking for a company that believes and practices in customer service and satisfaction.

“ “

To see more of our customer testimionials go to www.channelglaze.comTo see more of our customer testimionials go to www.channelglaze.comTo see more of our customer testimionials go to www.channelglaze.com

Near Kibworth, Leicestershire LE8 0XA■ Now available, secure hard standing for any size narrowboat.■ 0.39 per foot, per week plus VAT.■ Lift-out and movement via our 40 tonne travel hoist.■ Storage or DIY fi tout.■ Summer cruising and winter storage available, no BWB licence needed

whilst boat is ashore.■ All positions have water and electricity available.■ Plus we have steel fabrications, gas, electrics and painting experts on site.■ Water moorings also available■ See our website for further details

Enquiries to Mike or CarolTel: 0116 279 3034, Email: [email protected]

www.debdalewharf.co.uk

Books and Guides fromBooks and Guides fromWaterways

WorldWPUBLICATIONS

Order from the Inland Waterways Association BookshopCall 01494 783453 www.iwashop.comCall 01494 783453 www.iwashop.comCall 01494 783453 www.iwashop.comCall 01494 783453 www.iwashop.comCall 01494 783453 www.iwashop.com

A perfect gift !

p048_iwa.indd 1 20/1/12 17:21:47

Page 49: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

Tradition in Excellence since 1869

Morris Lubricants has been blending engine oils for over 140 years. We have arange of oils specially designed for canal boats. That’s why when you choose toput Morris Lubricants in your boat, you can do so with peace of mind.

These specialist oils get to work quickly at the heart of the engine, even at low temperatures, whateverthe conditions. The special formula canal boat range prevents bore glazing and bore polishing, protects components from wear and corrosion and provides improved cold start.

There’s also a great range of products for all your marine needs, like anti-freeze that works attemperatures as low as -34ºC, biodegradable marine two stroke lubricant, and water resistant grease.

With sound, high quality products and uncompromising customer service, you can rely on Morris Lubricants to protect your pride and joy for years to come.

CANAL BOAT PRODUCTS FROM A NAME YOU CAN TRUST

ORDER ONLINE TODAY!morrislubricantsonline.co.ukor call us on 01782 410 391Quote Voucher Code IWA888 for your 10% online discount

Castle Foregate, Shrewsbury, Shropshire SY1 2ELT:+44 (0) 1743 232200 F:+44 (0) 1743 353584

Morris IWA Waterways Full Page Ad - 170111:Layout 1 18/1/11 16:45 Page 1

p13_iwa.indd 1 20/1/12 10:58:22

Page 50: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

Whilton Locks, Nr Daventry, Northants NN11 2NHTelephone(01327) 842577 Fax: (01327) 843964

No.1 For Brokerage and Sales‘’Probably the most experienced Brokerage on the System’’

Selling?• Free professional no obligation

valuation.• Cash offer, part exchange and

brokerage available. • Dedicated sales basin with free

moorings.• Top ranking website with over

30,000 visitors a month.• All boats automatically matched

and e-mailed to potential customers

Buying?• Ever changing extensive selection of

Narrowboats in two locations• Central locations, easy to reach and

open seven days a week.• Dedicated, knowledgeable and

friendly staff.• Clear concise support throughout

the sales process• Over 400 satisfied customers a

year.

[email protected]

whilton.indd 1 20/1/12 14:10:17

Page 51: IWA Waterways Magasine Spring 2012

Extended & Completely refurbished with all

new displays

Online product catalogue at

Next day delivery on most items

www.midlandchandlers.co.uk

Parkgate Lock, Teddesley Road, Penkridge, Staffs, ST19 5RH. T 01785 712437London Road, Braunston, Northants, NN11 7HB. T 01788 891401The Wharf, Preston Brook, Cheshire, WA4 4BA. T 01928 751800Mercia Marina, Findern Lane, Willington, Derbyshire, DE65 6DW. T 01283 701445 Central Warehouse & Trade DistributionCentury Park, Ballin Road, Nuneaton, Warks, CV10 9GA. T 02476 390111

A warm welcome awaits you at one of our stores...

Now in stock!

Compliant to BS8511:2010

* only available on production of a valid membership card (no further discounts apply)

Available for all IWA Members

Untitled-1 1Untitled-1 1 20/1/12 14:28:0920/1/12 14:28:09