Posts Tagged ‘Lifestyle’

Towpath tidy 26th January Widbrook to Hilperton

Friday, January 18th, 2013

There will be a towpath tidy on Saturday 26th January between Widbrook and Hilperton, organised by boaters with help from the Kennet and Avon Canal Trust’s workboat crew. Please join us!

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K&A boaters’ action group meets 14th January, Bath

Monday, January 7th, 2013

The next meeting of the K&A boaters’ action group will take place on Monday 14th January at 7.30pm in Bath.

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Xmas Competition!

Tuesday, December 18th, 2012

 

Dredging – not just a figment of the imagination! The first person to tell us correctly where on the K&A this photo was taken wins a bar of chocolate! And there’s a bottle of something nice for whoever can think of the best caption for this picture. Email your answers and creative efforts to info@boatingcommunity.org.uk or put them on a comment below, or text 07928 078208, before midnight on 31st December 2012.

 

Boaters’ Voices film online now

Sunday, December 9th, 2012

The Boaters’ Voices film is online now. You can watch it via either of the links below.

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Dundas Carol Service 1st December

Saturday, November 24th, 2012

All boaters are invited to the Christmas carol service at Dundas basin on Saturday 1st December at 6pm. The service will be led by Rev Peter Atwill of Canal Ministries, who lives on Nb Gospel Belle. Mince pies and mulled wine will be served afterwards. There will also be a carol service at Devizes wharf on Saturday 8th December at 6pm.

 

Health matters

Saturday, November 24th, 2012

Two boaters have contacted us to inform us about some health matters. One boater told us about the possible risks of re-using certain types of plastic bottles to store water.

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Sign up online to K&A Boaters’ Code of Conduct

Thursday, November 22nd, 2012

You can now sign up to the K&A Boaters’ Code of Conduct online. Just go to

http://kanda.boatingcommunity.org.uk/wordpress/ka-boaters-code-of-conduct/

and click on “Sign me up”. You can add comments or your boat name if you want. You can also print out stickers in different sizes for your boat window that include a QR code for smart phones to read, so that other boaters and towpath users can find out about the Code of Conduct.

Boaters’ Voices DVD launch, 14th November, Devizes

Monday, November 12th, 2012

Towpath tidy Sat 10th November – please join in!

Monday, November 5th, 2012

There will be a towpath tidy this Saturday 10th November, organised by boaters. Please meet at Dundas wharf at 9.45am for a 10am start. The Kennet and Avon Canal Trust volunteers are also helping with this, and we will be using their work boat Vale of Pewsey to move the rubbish. Bring warm clothes, and work gloves if you have them – we have some gloves to lend as well. Rubbish bags will be provided.

London Calling

Tuesday, October 16th, 2012

London has an entirely different canal community to ours but there is considerable crossover in pressure on the infrastructure and attitudes of CRT and a small minority of the local population.

On the Canalworld discussion forum a London Boater recently posted this. I thought it so pertinent and a worthy message so here it is quoted in entirety. Thanks to Neil T

London.

Causes more prejudice than any other word on [CanalWorld Forum].

There are too many boats for the moorings available here whether visitors or residential continuous cruisers. You have to moor double. You can’t come to town and expect a nice bit of towpath everywhere. You have to moor up outside strangers and expect to be moored against if you have towpath.

Yes there are a sizeable minority of continuous cruisers whose boats are untidy enough to allow prejudice in at the drop of a hat.

The Waterways officials simply do not have the staff or the balls to address the multiplicity of problems that are common in London whether on or off the water.

300 mooring spaces in the Olympic park would solve the problem BUT only if the charges acknowledged that residential / continuous cruisers simply do not have the money to pay £7000 a year for a mooring. Making them available at that kind of price ios not making them available.

Where is the intense lobbying by Waterways officials to solve all of these problems by harnessing the commitment to an Olympic legacy and securing mooring rights along the MILES of available space? Once in a lifetime possibility here. Where is the lobbying from on high?

You have to get used to compromise in London. I have just paid more that £2000 for six months winter mooring, been forced off the best moorings in the area which have been made visitor moorings and now watch non-payers staying where everybody would like to be, next to the facilities, and paid up winter moorers shifted up to a concrete wall, no access to water and disposal, long walk to get off towpath.

This w/e I wanted to cruise up to Islington to go to the Barbican with friends and their kids to a concert. Beautiful day, easy mooring at Islington. Great concert. Come back to the residential mooring area that I’ve paid for around 6pm and all full, space gone. So now me and my £2000 receipt are on a bit of towpath outside of any visitor or winter mooring designation at all. That’s compromise.

The easiest way to tidy up boats moored along the canal is to enact a law which says nothing on a boat’s roof whatsoever except the gangplank / boathook / punting pole on the usual bracket and as many solar panels as you like. NOTHING else on the roof OR on the towpath. Some people would find this very hard but it is possible and would shut the door to that prejudice that liveaboards in London are a bunch of scrofulous freeloading polluters. When you meet any individuals on boats in London they are almost universally great people.

But look along the pall of smoke through the humming generators and throbbing engines, the overflowing disposal point, the big black rats in the rubbish bins, endless cans of old engine oil etc. etc and you don’t see great people.

But you are not looking at scrofulous freeloading polluters either. Boaters have made large areas of London towpath safe for whole communities to walk /jog/ bicycle along and generally reclaim from being no-go areas. You are looking at a system under intense pressure, run by an organisation that has had a large part of its budget stolen as part of a political project and which is staffed by people so entrenched in their way of doing things that they cannot see far enough to think out of the box.

Mooring problems and prejudice could be addressed in London but it needs real imagination and some political clout across many borough boundaries. The salaries of top waterways staff should and could be buying that imagination.