With falling snow and heavy frosts, winter calls for preparation for liveaboards who don’t want to get caught out if the Big Chill arrives.
Despite the annual apocalyptic predictions of the Daily Express, by and large Britain has escaped those winter blizzards for the last few years.
But that doesn’t mean they won’t happen this year – and when they do we we live board boaters had better be prepared because it can be no fun at all.
About seven years ago we were completely iced in for the best part of two months: the ice on the Coventry Canal was so thick we could confidently walk on it. Fortunately we were in a boatyard. Unfortunately, we weren’t as well prepared as I thought we were. I discovered that on Christmas Eve!
I’d done all the sensible preparations for Christmas: made sure we had full gas cylinders, topped the water tank, laid in stocks of Baileys for the ladies. But I’d completely forgotten that when you’ve been running your Refleks stove 24/7 for a month your fuel tank is probably getting dry.
I felt the temperature in the boat dropping as I shivered under the icy stares from the rest of the crew who were already imagining the prospect of eating Christmas dinner wearing overcoats, hats and gloves. The boatyard was shut and the staff long gone home but I managed to dig out an empty 20-litre fuel container, got a lift to the only fuel station in town still open and Christmas – as well as my skin – was saved. So, rule one: in winter, always keep your fuel tank full.
In fact, the big freeze that year had come quickly and caught many boaters out. Ice forms fast on the still waters of the canals: I recall being on a previous winter trip when one morning’s film of ice had turned, by the next morning, into an almost impenetrable layer.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 2017-Ausgabe von Canal Boat.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 2017-Ausgabe von Canal Boat.
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HIGH AND MIGHTY
Acorns make the perfect store food for jays’ larders
TAKING THE PLUNGE
Why Chris and Sarah Atkin will never forget tying the knot
LABELLED WITH LOVE
Helen Tidy enjoyed one weekend moored next to The Beer Boat ... simply the perfect solution to collecting bottle tops for her next project
MIDDLE THAMES
In the second part of our guide, we follow the Thames upstream from Reading through the steep sided Goring Gap and quieter countryide to reach Oxford
THE GOOD OLD DAYS
Robert Davies recalls childhood memories of a popular holiday destination and uncovers a reminder of the golden age of canals
FIT FOR PURPOSE
Terry Hibbard from Harworth Heating offers his expert opinion following our feature on onboard stove safety
BUCKING UP...
We join Waterway Recovery Group’s first canal restoration working party in six months - as WRG’s volunteers help the Buckingham Canal Society get the project back on track after lockdown
ART ON THE WATER
Graphic artist Katie Ruby lives and works on 32ft narrowboat Poppy
GO WITH THE FLOW
What makes a boat truly stand out from the crowd? Sometimes you just need a little finesse and a taste for adventure
A GLASS HALF-FULL AT BUCKBY WHARF
Tim Coghlan raised a glass on the Grand Union Canal as The New Inn reopened to the relief of regulars