Buddy and I set off on
Thursday to find the next place to moor.
We were four miles away from a flight of locks at Astwood and the map
suggested it could be good for car parking at either the top or the bottom of
the flight.
Just after setting off we
proved one of the rules of boating – if you’re going to meet a boat it will be
at a bridge on a blind bend. As the
other boat was closer to the bridge hole I stopped and then reversed out of the
way to let him through. I ended up
letting three boats through.
Waiting for three boats to
come through
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Next, we went through
Dunhampstead tunnel. This is wide enough
for two-way traffic so you can go straight through without having to wait for
passage. It’s not a very long tunnel and
we didn’t meet any other boats anyway.
Going into Dunhampstead tunnel
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The tunnel still has the chains
that the boatmen used to use to pull boats through whilst the horse was led
over the top. They are a useful safety
feature nowadays if someone fell overboard – something to cling onto.
Chains still intact on the
tunnel sides
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A bit further on we
arrived at Hanbury Junction where I had hoped we would be able to moor for a
while. But a scouting mission yesterday
made me realise there were no easy places to park.
Hanbury Junction
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Looking back at Hanbury
Junction – I had come up the Worcester & Birmingham canal on the left – to the
right is the newly restored (2011) Droitwich Junction canal. The Droitwich Junction canal goes to
Droitwich and then joins the (also re-opened in 2011) Droitwich Barge canal
which goes down to join the River Severn.
When we first came down
here in winter 2014 we weren’t planning on going down the Droitwich canals as
our guide book showed they were still under restoration! We soon changed our mind when we found they
were open though.
You know you are arriving
at Hanbury as there are a great many residential boats moored on the offside.
Residential boats at
Hanbury
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We went up the bottom lock
at Astwood and moored up in the pound above, just before the second lock on the
flight. The idea was to have lunch and
then go for a walk to look for parking spots at either end of the flight.
Pleasant mooring above
Astwood bottom lock
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Second lock – taken from
the road bridge.
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After lunch, we went for a
walk but checked the parking first.
There was room for three cars near where we were moored and there was
plenty of room at the top lock. It wasn’t
quite as pretty at the top lock so I decided to stay put.
One of the lanes we walked
along was so little used that it had a lot of grass growing in the middle. I know moss and grass often grows in country
roads but I’ve never seen this much:
We had good views of the
Malvern Hills.
Malvern Hills in the
distance
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We came back along the
canal and at one point there were a dozen or so ducks sitting by the tow path. Karen doesn’t believe that I have trained
Buddy to ignore them so I took some pictures for proof.
Approaching the ducks
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Passing the ducks
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The lock landing was being
repaired at the top lock which will make it difficult to close the lock up when
I come through as there is nowhere to tie the boat up.
CRT at work
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The evening was the best
part of the day, weather-wise, so I got our chairs out and sat by the
canal. Karen joined us when she got home
just as the sun started going below the horizon but it was still warm enough to
stay outside.
Buddy looking down the tow path waiting for Karen to
get home
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2 comments:
Chains to pull the working boats through ! I don't think so, these were installed in many tunnels in the early 1990's if memory serves, at the start of the Health & Safety campaigns. The boatmen used to "leg" the boats through tunnels when horse drawn.
Haha! I wondered if I'd get that comment when I wrote it. We all know about legging of course - amazing wasn't it? But CRT site mentions the chains for pulling too
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