Buddy and I
set off after breakfast on Tuesday, so that once again we could get to our destination for the day by
lunchtime.
Straight into it – Buddy waiting at the first lock of the day –
Fosse bottom lock
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After the first two locks,
we stopped at Fosse Wharf to top up with water.
As the sun had come out I moved the tomato and chilli plants onto the
roof.
Mike and Lesley, whose
plot of land and mooring we are heading for in Cropredy, are currently on a two-week
canal holiday around Cheshire. They have
been posting about their travels every day on Facebook and Mike has been
sending me pictures of stop plank stores to add to my page of stanking planks. Lesley contacted me yesterday to say the
couple who they are on holiday with have a connection with me. They are good friends of a couple I know,
Joce and Martin. I first met Joce when
we shared a house together many years ago in Surrey and when we started our own
families went on many winter and summer holidays together! Also, I had met Jane and Duncan several times
at Joce and Martin’s house and think they were in one of the skiing trips Joce
used to organise.
Going up Fosse bottom lock
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We soon reached Welsh Road
lock, the fifth of the day, which is where I wanted to moor. We love the spot at the top of the lock,
opposite the lock cottage. The cottage
is fairly large for a lock cottage and Colin and his wife live there. I got to know Colin quite well when we used
to moor here in the winter and had many a chat with him leaning on their fence.
Welsh Road lock cottage
from our mooring
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As I was mooring up I
could hear a family of buzzards above us and for the first time got a picture
of one of them. Not very clear or close
as it’s only an iPhone but at least you can see the classic outline.
Buzzard circling over our
boat as we moored up
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Us from Welsh Road lock
cottage
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When I was coming up the
lock I noticed a sign outside the cottage; they have now got into selling
drinks and ice creams.
There seemed to
be a constant stream of boats passing during the middle of the day and I would
say that very few didn’t stop and buy something. I popped over during the afternoon for an ice
cream and had a chat with Colin’s wife (I’m hopeless with names). She is
a mental health worker and is based in Dartford in Kent which is where I was
born (well, that's where the hospital was). When I
first left school I worked as a live-in farmhand on farms in the Yorkshire
Dales for eighteen months or so and then moved back down south and worked on
farms attached to mental asylums in Dartford.
So, we had a pleasant 20 minutes chatting about the various mental
hospitals in Dartford and their patients, which are now long gone apart from a
small unit where she works – the asylums not the patients, but I suspect many
of them are long gone too.
The pounds are still quite
low so Buddy has been finding it difficult to get water but he managed to find
a spot by the lock when we were chatting
So much better than that
tap water they try and make me drink from my bowl
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The water is taking on the familiar blueness of the blue lias limestone, the bed rock of this area. It'll get bluer over the next few miles until we get to Napton where we're joining the Oxford canal.
Later on, Buddy and I had
a walk to Long Itchington and on the way a boat was coming past us – it was nb
Paneke which I know I have seen around before.
Anyway, the guy driving called out to his wife, “It’s Mr Chalkhill Blue”. I asked them their names, Roger and Jane, and
Roger also told me that they are readers of this blog. It was good to meet you guys, even if it was
fleetingly 😊
I forgot to ask what the
boat’s name meant but could tell it was Maori.
I looked it up later and apparently it can mean three things: boat;
advance; and point (as in game scoring).
I guess it means boat in this context but I suppose it could be advance
as in going forwards. They also had a good display of flowers on their roof but I didn't think tp ask to take a picture.
Our mooring later in the
day when the clouds had all rolled away. The boat on the right is Colin’s boat
on their permanent mooring outside the lock house.
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In the evening, Karen
picked me up and we went for our weekly bridge session with our lady friends in
Stratford on Avon.
2 comments:
Ten out of ten on the translation. We bought the boat with that name, and tracked down the meaning on the Maori language line as 'flat bottomed boat or punt: to move forward or pass by'. Couldn't think of anything better. Your flowers look terrific by the way.
Enjoy Cropredy :)
Rog and Jane nb Paneke
Thanks for the feedback 🤗 See you again I'm sure
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