Spey was always big, probably somewhere close to 7ft 1ins wide when built in Uxbridge in 1937 for the crude oil trade on the Shropshire Union Canal. A few years ago, we called in at Uxbridge on our way to Battlebridge basin, a rare foray down from the North for us. We moored up outside and knocked on the office door. “We’ve brought a boat back to complain. It’s all rotten and the engine keeps going out.”
But being amongst the widest boats on the network has been hard work, with some unsatisfactory limits of navigation, other locks barely squeezed through on ropes and pulleys. The scheduled renewal of the planks on the right-hand side gave us a one-offchance to re-gauge at 7ft exactly.
After 12 months of careful planning, and a colossal wood order, we went down onto Northwich dock early February 2020, nine years after we rebuilt the front end. We were to replace four of the five side planks, one lining plank, one board under the swim, and bring the gauge in 11/16ths of an inch around the engine room bulkhead and forward knees.
Old planks were scraped clean of tar and plating. A large jack was used to lift the boat back into shape. The poor condition of the planks in question had allowed the rear end to sag, a process known as ‘hogging’.
Templates were made of the existing planks. The new boards of fresh oak are flat, but the planks we cut from them must be bent to the hull.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 2020-Ausgabe von Canal Boat.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 2020-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