Wednesday 8th October; Oddingley to Perdiswell
Park
It was grey, quiet and dry this morning when we left our
mooring. No-one about except the ladies
in the field opposite and they were too busy eating to be speaking to anyone.
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| Good morning |
It drizzled as we passed through Tibberton, just enough to need
waterproofs, but the heron didn’t seem to mind. Perhaps it was digesting a good meal, I can't think it was fish-spotting from 20 feet up a tree.
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| Hello up there! |
The drizzle had stopped before we got to the top of Offerton locks. The top lock wasn’t quite empty, and as I
filled it the volunteers emerged from their hut, one to go down to set the next
lock and the other to join us at the top.
We were down the flight of 6 in half an hour, probably the fastest we
have ever done it – they aren’t particularly deep, but one of the pounds is
quite a long one, too far to lock ahead if you have no-one else to help you.
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| Thanks! |
There was just enough time to boil a kettle, make tea for
Dave and a pot of coffee for me before we arrived at Tolladine lock. It started to drizzle again on the way.
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| Undergoing repair? Yeah, right |
I looked back at my blogs and found a photo I took of the same
paddle taken in March last year, 18 months ago.
I refer you to Neil’s summary of the
recent CRT survey. The
lock took ages to fill of course, being a deep one, so I amused myself by
stretching to reach a large section of floating reed to add to the heap that
had already started building up. I was
holding on to the gate, since you ask.
Back on the boat once more, my
insulated cup kept my coffee warm as we worked through the last lock of the
day, Blackpole. Luckily a boat had just
come up so I only had to push the gate open and we were down in a jiffy.
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| This top gate swings open a bit – someone has fashioned a
prop from available materials. Very
helpful, if you can remember which way round it went. |
Our favourite Worcester mooring at Perdiswell Park was free
and we were all tied up by midday. The
contractors were out between Tolladine and Blackpole locks doing their annual edge-to-edge cut, and it looks as
though they have been here too, but only with the mower. They were strimming everything in sight back there, so
why didn’t they trim the nettles by this mooring I’d like to know!
The resident swans were rushing along the canal towards us
as we moored. Too impatient to paddle all
the way to the bridge behind us, they had suddenly burst into frantic action
and took off for a bit.
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| I missed the lead one. |
Then all they did was paddle about behind us, pecking at the
greenery. It took us a little while to
moor, as the sun had come out and we wanted the best spot for the solar. Jess started agitating for a visit to the park before we had finished lunch, so Dave did that while I went off to the
supermarket for some bits and pieces.
Then he went to Halfords while I prepared to do battle with the flue pipe. We still haven’t got around to getting ourselves
a proper flue brush, so it would have to be a bunch of holly as usual.
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| Prickly, but effective |
And as usual, the stopper was the baffle plate. Before I started, I donned Dave’s engine-hole
clobber – bitter experience tells me I will get soot all over my arms. There must be
a knack to getting the baffle plate out, but I haven’t found it. The plate has a screw at one end, which drops
through a hole in a lug projecting forwards from the back of the fire. The plate sits on lugs on the other
three sides to hold it above the fire. It's purpose is to direct the heat forwards to the glass and the room before it goes up the flue and away. And you can't clean the flue till you've taken it out. ‘Just lift the screw out of
the hole’, the instructions said, and ‘tilt the baffle plate’ above the lugs to
drop it down and remove it. There seems to be no space to tilt it, and it kept getting jammed, but I managed it
in the end - I wish I knew what I did! I dragged the holly through the flue a few times, cleaned up the soot
and it was as easy as pie to get the baffle plate back in again. Why?
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| The screw is rather long.
I wonder why? Maybe we’ll bring
the bolt croppers next time and trim a little bit off. |
Jess and I went for a walk in the sun afterwards to soothe
my shattered nerves. Dave had been busy working
on the port side with some paint restorer stuff he got in Halfords, followed by
T-cut, which is bringing up the paintwork quite well. But the sun went, and by the time we should have been admiring tonight's Harvest Moon there was a thick blanket of cloud. To start with it wasn't cold enough to light a fire - later on we wished we had.
4 miles, 8 locks