Wednesday, 14 May 2025

To Crick: Day 11

A very long day by our standards these days!  We set off at 8am, turning right at Old Turn Junction and going under Broad Street, or Black Sabbath Bridge as it’s now been christened.


Then it was through Gas Street Basin and the narrow of Worcester Bar, which is the start of the Worcester and Birmingham Canal.


We stopped at Holliday Wharf for water and to get the washing machine going, and then set off again about 20 minutes later.  The next section is accompanied by the railway, with mostly West Midlands Trains going to all sorts of places, but also Cross Country services, including one from Plymouth to Edinburgh.


At Edgbaston you get glimpses of the University with its tower, and it’s been interesting to follow the rebuild of University Station, which was just a shell when we passed a few years back, and has developed ever since.



Nature has also disguised the new aqueduct just beyond here, and today a heron was sitting on one of the railings and stayed there as we went past.


When we got to Selly Oak, we moored up opposite the Sainsbury’s.  The moorings are in a kind of winding hole (there’s actually another one a hundred yards further on).


We did a shop for the next few days, and also picked up a new smart tv we’d ordered from Argos.  It’s smaller than the current one, which fits better, and the smart aspect means we should be able to stream things without having to download them.  When we had brought everything back to the boat, it took two attempts to get out of the mooring.  The first time, the stern got a bit caught in the mud on the offside, and the wind blew the boat pretty much back to where we’d started.  The second time, I knew not to go so far back.  Before long we were at King’s Norton Junction, and turning sharp left onto the Stratford Canal.


The first feature is the old guillotine lock, which nowadays you just go straight through.


Then come Brandwood Tunnel.  The sign at the portal says it takes 16 minutes to go through; we did it in four.


While there are miles and miles without locks, there are lift bridges, including the electric one at Shirley.  A boat was coming the other way, and the lady said she’d stay there while we went through too.  So they came through and then it was our turn.  Probably because of a road closure nearby, no cars were held up.



The North Stratford always seems like a bit of a slog.  It’s pretty slow going and there aren’t even that many bridges to tick off.  And today, lots of the canal had big branches floating in it.  It looked as though someone had done a lot of cutting back and just dumped everything in the water.  I managed to get one branch off the rudder while we were going along  but we also made a brief stop so I could get more off the property.  We had lunch on the move as the miles ticked by, and eventually we reached the two lift bridges at Hockley Heath.


We got to the top of the Lapworth flight, with plans to do the first four locks and stop in the long pound.  at the second lock, there was a big log in the lock, and although i tried to keep an eye on it and Adrian brought the boat in very slowly, the swirling water meant it disappeared and the boat stopped, seeming wedged.  Using the pole, I knocked the log loose, and then Adrian reversed out while I pushed the log out of the lock and kept it to the side while he went back in again.  We have reported it.  Things were simpler and the next couple.


We moored up at gone 4.30 — and have got a chicken in the oven for a midweek roast!

18 miles, 4 locks. (74 miles, 58 locks)

Tuesday, 13 May 2025

To Crick: Day 10

Really sunny and warm today, and we were having a day off, with a bit of sightseeing and some boat jobs.  After breakfast we changed the bed and walked up to Five Ways to a dry cleaners, where we put the bedding in for a service wash.  We could easily wash it all on board, but we don’t have the drying capacity.  From there we walked down to the Worcester and Birmingham Canal, along to the Mailbox, and into town.  Among our discoveries was the Great Western Arcade.


We also went to see the well known bit of the Bullring shopping centre.


On our way back, we walked past the Floozie, who while having more water than when she was in a flower bed for a time, was in no way in a Jacuzzi.



We had lunch on board and walked down to the rubbish and recycling compound, and then decided to visit the Library of Birmingham, which we haven’t been to for a while.



Perhaps the best bit is the Secret Garden on the 7th floor, with great views in all directions.  Dominating the skyline these days is the Octogon building, which isn’t finished yet but is now the city’s tallest.



In the opposite direction, we could see the canal and Briar Rose.



We had an ice cream from a van outside the library, and then walked up Broad Street to get our washing.  Boats have been coming and going throughout the day, and the towpaths are busy with people.  We haven’t really seen signs of the Birmingham bin strike, except that all the streets seem a bit dirty.  It could be because street cleaning vehicles have apparently been redeployed to collect refuse.

Tonight, we have tickets to see a play at the Crescent Theatre, just a short walk away on Sheepcote Street.

0 miles, 0 locks.  (56 miles, 54 locks)

Monday, 12 May 2025

To Crick: Day 9

Mad O’Rouke’s Pie Factory last night was very good again — and very good value.  And we had a very quiet night on the moorings by the health centre.  This morning, a boat came past heading towards Wolverhampton while we had breakfast, and another followed just as we were about to leave.  We made a very short journey through the bridge to Coronation Gardens  where there’s a rather anonymous water point.  The park has a statue of the boxer, William Perry, the Tipton Slasher.



We got washing going while the tank filled, and then set off again at 8.30, through Tipton Junction without turning down to the museum, and on along the Old Main Line.  One thing we’ve noticed in the urban areas is the proliferation of coots.  Lots of them seem to have very small chicks at the moment, with the mothers sitting on nests with her wings over them.


There’s always plenty to see on the Old Main Line, including lots of old basins.


We passed Brades Hall Junction, where we had an unfortunate incident with the staircase locks a few years ago.


Before Oldbury Junction there are some new houses being built, sandwiched between huge warehouses, and with the M5 thundering overhead just a few dozen yards away.


Then it was our turn to head under the motorway.


There’s a huge new waste to energy plant being built alongside the canal.  In fact it turned out it’s right by the Spon Lane Locks.


We went over the Stewart Aqueduct over the New Main Line, through Summit Tunnel, and took the obligatory photo of Smethwick Pumping Station.


At Smethwick Locks, the pound between the top and the middle locks was very low, so we spent a few minutes running water through the lock to get some depth.  It was no hardship waiting in the sunshine.


I’d also opened a top paddle on the middle lock to fill it, so we could go straight from one lock to the other.  But then we spotted someone at the middle lock trying to empty it.  As Adrian was now heading out of the lock, he sounded his horn a few times until the guy closed the bottom paddle, and shrugged in the direction of his boat.  When I got to the lock I explained to him that we’d spent a while topping up the pound, and he’d just been emptying it again.  It may have been that the guy was a novice, because when Adrian had left the middle lock he closed the gate, before his boat had gone in!  Anyway, we then had the unusual sight of boats swapping between two locks on the Smethwick flight.


After the third lock we joined the New Main Line at Smethwick Junction.


The housing development at the Icknield Port Loop has now reached the Main Line, with one block of flats finished and lots more scaffolding going up.


We headed through the Oozells Street Loop, hoping for a mooring there, but the only space was under the bridge, which we didn’t fancy.  So we continued through, and reversed up the Main Line.  We are next to a garden in memory of Albert Rooke, apparently known as the Harbourmaster of Birmingham.



This afternoon, we wandered along through Gas Street Basin to The Mailbox to buy something for dinner tonight.  The actor, Simon Williams, was sat outside one of the restaurants there — he’s probably recording The Archers at the moment.  Since we’ve got back there’s been some thunder and a few raindrops, just as we’re heading out to meet a former colleague of Adrian’s for a drink in town.

9 miles, 3 locks.  (56 miles, 54 locks)

Sunday, 11 May 2025

To Crick: Day 8

The moorings at Autherley Junction were really quiet; as I mentioned last time we stayed there, some years ago you’d have avoided the area completely.  With a lot of locks to do today, we were up early, and set off at 7.45.  Within the first few yards, a dispute between ducks resulted in one of them landing on our plank, and then appearing quite surprised that it was moving.


It was 8am when we went into the bottom lock.


The first two locks were full and needed emptying, but then a whole load were empty ready for us.  Adrian worked the first ten before we swapped over.  There are lots of huge railway bridges, and there was a family of goslings.




It began to look as though I’d got the raw end of the deal, because from Lock 9 they started being full, and needing to be empty.  But then we met a boat at Lock 6, a young Belgian couple who’ve rented a boat for six weeks from near Oxford, and were planning to get back to the countryside up the Shroppie.  We also met a boat at Lock 3, immediately after yet another rail bridge.


We didn’t set any records today.  We were ready to leave the top lock three and a half hours after we started.


We paused on the moorings above the lock for a little while, then set off again to make a small detour.  Just before Horsley Fields Junction, where the Wyrley & Essingtom goes off, the areas both sides of the canal have been cleared.  It feels much more open.


We turned onto the W&E, under the junction bridge and through the narrows.


We had an appointment at the Urban Moorings.  They accept deposits from compost loos, and we had a bucket full to donate.  They have big purpose-built compost bins, which we could do with more of around the network.  Also, a gas bottle ran out last night, so we bought a new one.  The price was £45.50 which is pretty standard these days, and we liked that we could support them.  We moored up alongside the boats on the outside, with our bow next to a stern, so we could get across.


Unfortunately as Adrian took the new gas bottle, he hurt his arm.  We’re not sure what it is, but probably a ligament that’s pulled somehow.  When we had paid and untied, we reversed back to the junction, which was achieved without getting too stuck in the shallow edges, and then turned towards Birmingham.  There were lots of people out on the towpaths enjoying the sunshine, and we had our photo taken many times.  Everyone seemed very pleased to see a boat.  At Coseley Tunnel, I always wonder the the houses built on top have problems with insurance.


Just before Factory Junction is a huge new housing development.  I’m sure the site has been vacant for many of the years we’ve been coming this way.


We turned right at Factory Junction, onto the Old Main Line.  There was some sort of event on at the Malthouse Stables Activity Centre, and people came out to wave.  There were some old cars parked outside.


We moored up just round the corner on the John the Lock moorings about side the health centre.  This evening we’re going to Mad O’Rourke’s, because we enjoyed it so much last time we were here.

8 miles, 21 locks.  (47 miles, 51 locks)