Saturday, July 13, 2019

Day 12 Penkridge to Gailey Wharf

Wednesday 10 July and we travelled from Penkridge towards Gailey Wharf.

 Setting off

This purposeful posse appeared

 ...from their basket on this boat - see their duck ladder down to the water in front right
 
 
 A reminder of Staffordshire's past, the colliery closed in 1993.  At one time, it produced up to a million tons of coal a year

 Denis ponders whether this might become a running gag

 Meeting fellow boaters is a great opportunity to catch up on waterway gossip and get useful tips

 Atmospherics entering the lock

Paddle gear (used to empty and fill the lock)

Invasion of the strimmer team!

Tollkeeper's watchtower at Gailey Wharf
 
 Leaving the wharf for our evening mooring nearby, after filling up (diesel) and emptying (loo)

 

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Day 9 - 11 Great Haywood to Penkridge

Sunday morning 7 July and out early to explore the Great Haywood Canalside Farm Shop.  After purchasing a few overpriced but irresistible goodies, we set off and turned left under the ancient and picturesque bridge onto the Staffs & Worcs canal.

Evidence

 Great Haywood Junction - sharp left and under the bridge
 
 Colourful boats moored on the Staffs & Worcs

A mile after the turn the canal opens out into 'Tixall Wide' a magical stretch of water bordered by reeds and trees.  This was, apparently, an artificially constructed lake made to preserve the view from Tixall House of which the gatehouse is the only surviving part.

 Entering Tixall Wide

 View of the Tixall Gatehouse

 Droll!

 Leaving Tixall Lock and its very attractive cottage

 'Pleasant abode'

 One of the distinctive bridge plates 

 We're going Wolverhampton way

 Graceful curves - another bridge on the S&W

 Catnap waiting to ascend a lock, with paddle boarders. Denis had to be careful opening the paddles to empty the lock, to avoid sending a rush of water towards them.


 Sequence of entering a lock to ascend: first, check no boats in lock and open
 bottom gates

 Second, steer boat into lock entrance

 ...and slowly

 ... slowly

 ...up to top gates

 When boat is safely inside, close bottom gates

Passing Baswich and Weeping Cross, we found a peaceful mooring for the night just north of the village of Acton Trussell, handy for trains into Nottingham for Jan tomorrow.

Pink campion

Monday 8 July, Catnap stayed in her mooring. Denis did chores.

On Tuesday 9 July through Acton Trussell towards our next stop at the small town of Penkridge.  On our way through Acton two things jumped out at us; the verges on the towpath side were full of wildflowers...


and in gardens backing onto the canal were effigies like Sheryl's Scarecrow below.  We later found out they're part of the annual Scarecrow Competition.


 Not sure if Bill & Ben are competing
 
Teddesley Boat Yard on the outskirts of Penkridge

Mooring for the night by the Cross Keys pub, Penkridge
 

Monday, July 8, 2019

Day 6 - 8 Fradley to Great Haywood via Rugeley

Thursday 4 July and we spent most of the day moored in Fradley.  It's a lovely spot but it is also a major meeting point for bikers and we had a couple of hours of noisy comings and goings last night.  Presumably, a bikers' meeting at the Swan pub.

The Swan at Fradley Junction

We moved to Wood End Lock just over a mile past the junction and moored there on Thursday night. Friday morning and we set off in beautiful sunshine through the wooded landscape between Wood End and King's Bromley Wharf.

 A sunny summer morning...

 through dappled light...

 Happy days!

 Old buildings at King's Bromley Wharf

 Towards Rugeley with the huge Armitage Shanks factory on our left. Between this and the fact that the Armitage church organ is described as "enormous" and practically deafens the organist, the absence of double entendres in this post is a miracle.

 A fine example of one of the taller bridges locally
 Here is the remains of the now collapsed Armitage tunnel, where boats must pass in single file along a narrow channel with jutting stonework (the original tunnel sides, we presume).  A crew member goes ahead to stop oncoming boats entering.

Obviously, a gnome wasn't good enough for this boater's garden
 
 Entering Rugeley, where three large supermarkets near the canal make reprovisioning easy
 The Leaning Shed of Rugeley
 Attractive signwriting

 This boat's name means 'tailor' in Irish - be interesting to know why

The site of a Victorian murder dramatised by Colin Dexter.  In 1839 Christina Collins was a passenger on a cargo carrying narrowboat travelling from Liverpool to London.  She was last seen alive at Hoo Mill Lock, two miles north of Rugeley after which her body was found at Brindley Bank.  Two crew members were convicted of her rape and murder and publicly executed.  Rugeley was also home to Dr Palmer, the 'Rugeley Poisoner', was convicted for the 1855 murder of his friend John Cook, and was executed in public. He had poisoned Cook with strychnine and was suspected of poisoning several other people including his brother and his mother-in-law, as well as four of his children who died of "convulsions" before their first birthdays. Palmer made large sums of money from the deaths of his wife and brother after collecting on life insurance, and by defrauding his wealthy mother out of thousands of pounds, all of which he lost through gambling on horses (acknowledgments to Wikipedia).
 
 After all that, here we are moored up for the night at Brindley Bank hoping Christina's shade is a gentle one

 Discussions about the route tomorrow (and where the tea breaks will be)

Saturday 6 July, Day 8 of our trip and we head for Great Haywood.  Weather is fine but slightly overcast.

 Crossing Brindley Bridge over the Trent

 Power gives way to paddle

 As we passed we realised the hull really is "Maid of Oak" and was built in 2006 at Bates Boatyard as a replica

 Speaks for itself
 Realised as we went through this bridge that the graffiti is part of an ongoing debate as some continous cruisers (boaters without a home base) accuse the Canal and River Trust of hiking up license fees to price them off the waterways.  CRT maintain that they are merely trying to fairly regulate and raise revenues to fund the huge amount of work needed to maintain the network and improve services.  It reads: No License Hike. No Gentrification of Canals.
 Colwich Lock Cottage


Essex Bridge, a packhorse bridge which replaced the original wooden structure built by the Earl of Essex in the late 16th century.  It is a Scheduled Ancient Monument.

On Saturday night we moored just before Great Haywood Junction our last night on the Trent and Mersey before turning to head South on the Staffordshire & Worcestershire (Staffs & Worcs) all the way down to the Severn.



Day 42 to 44 Stratford-upon-Avon

A late addition to finish the 2019 blog: Surprisingly, there's plenty of room in the canal basin and we're moored right opposite the...