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)