David Johns heads to Stratford, via some lively locks, and relives some wonderful childhood memories of the Avon.
When I was eight years old a new science fiction series began transmission on the BBC. For a young lad who was already overexcited about a space film called Star Wars that had also just been released in the UK, tuning in to this new TV show without fail each week became an obsession (to my mother’s despair).
Featuring an incredibly sleek spaceship, teleporters, talking computers and a group of kind-hearted convicts as the good guys, Blake’s 7 transported me happily into another universe.
My favourite character was Avon, played by Paul Darrow. He was a sardonic computer genius with a roguish attraction for the ladies. I always rather wanted to be him and in later life would indeed end up working with computers though I failed utterly at the roguish attraction bit much to my ongoing chagrin.
Wistful but happy memories of this formative time on my younger self were prompted by another Avon which I also had a regular appointment with those forty-odd years ago, and met once again this summer.
It was on the river of that name that my parents kept their sailing boat and most weekends we would head down to the mooring at Bredon in Worcestershire.
There Dad would either to do some maintenance aboard while my sister and I played in the adjacent field or we would set sail for the short trip downstream to Tewkesbury Cruising and Sailing Club. Even in winter I often went along with my father, when the boat was hauled out onto nearby hard standing for antifouling and other annual works.
Four decades later and I found myself at the helm of my own craft on the same stretch of water though the narrowboat is certainly less than interstellar when pushing upstream. Perhaps a rocket engine on the back would help although the “pass at tickover” folk might be in for a shock… a project for another day maybe?
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