We’re Getting There..

21 Aug

It may not seem so looking at this…001

But, trust me, progress is being made. This clearly has to be fixed before the splash as has this…004And other nasty bits here and there.

All this loose stuff has to be dug out, right back to the chicken wire, then re-filled with a stiff old mix of concrete. It’s a case of eggs and omelettes really. Scary stuff nevertheless.

The little boat’s new position, as well as the prospect of sharing the cost of a crane-in, has spurred the John on big time. There’s now the space to get around the boat and to set up a useful work station – and that makes it all so much more do-able.

Realistically though, it’ll never be done by next Tuesday. But no matter, real efforts are being made to get her ready for the water – the operative word being ready. No point jumping the gun – would only result in disaster for sure.

While John concentrates on the structural side of things such as rebuilding the rudder…IMG_20150809_090534

Our very kind neighbour Peter, who is very taken with Ijcvogel, is enthusiastically putting in time on the essential prep work…006003005

Which is so, so important.

I’m itching to get some paint on now – she’s going to look so good – that will be my contribution. The thinking is to keep the same colour scheme, more or less, then the crowning glory will be the addition of a rope fender…007

Which John has acquired from one of the temporary residents. It will be fitted all around the boat’s middle and, as well as looking the business, may even be strong enough to act as a means of walking around the boat, once she’s launched.

For now though, the prep work continues. The oiling of the woodwork is not only enhancing – greatly – the look of the boat, but has totally eliminated all leaks from the superstructure. Rain if it will – none of it ends up inside now. And that’s a real result.

There’s some superb wood…

002Which is really coming up a treat.

The trick is to not get too side-tracked with the cosmetics and concentrate on what has to be done to get her afloat. Painting will, obviously, be a whole lot easier while on the hard. John can be busy with the repair/rebuilding as well as fine-tuning the engine while this is being done by his dutiful slaves the little boat’s other adoring fans.

It’s hard sometimes to find the time/energy/inclination to keep at it but we are surrounded here by unfinished works-in-progress and abandoned projects.

And John is determined that his little boat will not become another.

Cranes and Boats and Planes

5 Aug

Fun on the farm last week…048

…with the help of this bad boy.

A total of seven lifts scheduled, the sequence carefully planned and starting with a move for none other than…002

…the little boat.

Here goes…005

Up…006

up…007

around…008

and away…009

To her new spot…011013015

And John wasn’t at all worried…010

As you can see from his relaxed demeanour.

Space now…021

…for two narrows to be inserted.

First…027

Over…029

And down.

Next up…030032036

Not without a scary moment…039

But on the ground…041

Safe and sound.

One for the back of the truck…052

…and away to the field.

It was getting late as the dutch barge was lifted…062

The full moon showed up…057

Here she comes…066072

Pretty eh?

A wide beam was due out too but was getting dark…076

And cold.

So the fat boat slept in the slip and BB headed for Hobo and the removals were completed the next day.

Thirsty work…IMG_20150731_085204

The little boat is now shored up…054055

In her new, bigger, more open spot. With garden…047

And – allegedly – the best blackberries for miles around.

There’s now lots of grinding and scraping going on and many new faces about. It’s good to get to know these new folk, all with their own stories, and watch the progress made on the boats.

In two or three weeks the crane will be back to lift in those who are heading off – back to their former lives or, in some cases, pastures new.

Which has concentrated John’s mind somewhat. As in trying to get the little boat to a stage where it will be ready for the water, thus sharing the cost of the crane-in. This mainly involves making sure the hull is watertight and the engine runs.

He’s almost there with the exhaust now…001

Just needs to connect up inside.

Ideally would like to get a coat or two of paint on and fit the lovely old rope he’s sourced, by way of a bumper strip. Thinking this will look the business.

Everything else can be done when she’s afloat – assuming she does float. Indeed will probably be a better way to work on the interior; only then will we really know how she sits and therefore how stuff needs to be. She looks level as she sits on the hard but, judging from the ghost of the waterline that can be seen, it will be a very different picture when afloat: the sharp end will sit way up in the air while the stern lies low in the water…IMG_20141126_0001

A bit like this, only more so. We think.

You may remember that some time ago we invited suggestions for a new name for the little boat here. Thanks to all those who offered alternatives, even if we never really made a decision.

I, for no real reason, googled her original name the other day and was asked if I’d like the page to be translated. I said yes and what do you know…the Dutch Ijsvogel translates to Kingfisher, which we didn’t know – but like – so seems we’ll be sticking with that.

In English or Dutch?

I favour one language on one side and the other on the other but we shall see. It’s all up to the John of course – as is whether or not she’s ready for the splash when the time comes. There’s a bit to do before then and, when one has to go out to work, time may be tight.

John is keen to get her in the water though. And what a day that will be..!

PS: For the plane spotters among you, this is a McDonnell Douglas MD11F…041

Bought and upgraded by Boeing.

The farm is under Stansted’s flightpath and we always know when one of these cargo planes, often FedEx, is coming as they are very low and noisy hand-flown and have a very distinctive sound. Screechy I’d call it.

Lazy Days

27 Jul

Not just my favourite thing in the whole wide world but Lazy Days is also the name of a boat.

A very special boat in fact. A Dunkirk Little Ship.

You may have heard about them on the news recently and, indeed, know their history but if not you can see/read about them here.

That saves me a whole lot of work will fill you in a whole lot better than I can. And because Boatbird would much rather rather be telling you about her time spent aboard Lazy Days recently at the Thames Traditional Boat Show at Henley on Thames.

006

So how come I get to be so privileged?

Well, it’s like this:

John’s brother-in-law bought and restored Lazy Days and keeps her on the Thames to use as an apartment during the week while he works in the city, so he, John’s sister, niece, nephew, cousin  and various other bods would be at the rally to show her off.

But the star of the show, who lives in South Africa but currently on a visit to John’s sister (who lives somewhere oop north in the UK) was John’s dad, Terry. Who just happened to have a birthday that very weekend…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

…his 89th!!

Terry went along on the recent trip to Dunkirk with Lazy Days – there really is no stopping him! He has a sailing boat, Fling, back home, which he regularly still crews along with his mates. I think it must be the Pilates he does twice a week that keeps him so fit.

I’ve stayed at John’s dad’s several times at his home in Port Elizabeth so was good to see him again, but I’d not met any of the other relatives so this was an ordeal I couldn’t escape also a pleasure.

So many good reasons to be there.

Not that I need a good reason to be on the Thames; it’s a lovely river where we had a lot of fun cruising with Hobo some years back…DSCN1437Approaching Tower Bridge

23100_1600Always a joy to be there and the best way, in my view, to see the city.

But this isn’t about  the Hobo’s adventures. It’s about Lazy Days.

We left Hobo early on the Sunday morning, hit the M25, then the lanes – lovely ride. Easy venue to find, parking at Fawley Meadows no problem – the mark of some good organisation.

Now we had to find our little ship so strolled along the bank, taking in all sorts of craft along the way, and just when there was nowhere left to go – up pops John’s cousin Robert. Not wishing to confuse you but he was actually on a plastic boat/gin palace very smart cruiser being skippered by John’s nephew Tom, who was on a pleasure cruise with a bunch of mates and had stopped by.

Typically, we’d chosen a left turn when it should have been a right so were as far away as we could be from our intended destination, Lazy Days, which was moored at the other end of the allotted stretch of river.

Never mind. We had a lovely meander through the boat jumble stalls, a good look at the classic cars…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

…TJ likes a good engine.

This one had a split personality…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

Is is a boat? Is it a car?

These looked like fun…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

Zoom in, just right of the lead rider, to see a little girl getting a flying lesson.

And I could swear this rider is none other than Peter Kirby…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

What say you Josephine?

And then there was this…

005

Remember Bluebird? Donald Campbell? Sure you do.

She looked so small. She’d been on the water the day before but a miserable bloody crane driver wouldn’t lift her in on the day we were there. Shame.

Still, John (screen left) had a nice chat with the boys in charge of her. He loves to talk engines.

After another good leg stretch we found Lazy Days, boarded, did the intros/re-unions and got the guided. Superb.

Best news of the day though, we were in time to join them as they did the parade thing – down and up the river, taking in a loop of Temple Island…017

Another boat ride for Boatbird – that’s two in a week – excellent!

John loved it too…012

Not least because of the aerial activity…020

Some low-level aerobatics.

As well as several sightings of the Red Kite…018

…which reminded us of flying in to White Waltham airfield when Hobes was on the Thames before. There’s a lot of them around here.

Some interesting craft about…014

Love these amphicars…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

Though getting back up the slipway looked a little tricky, but with a good head of steam…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

And a lot of luck nerve and good judgement…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

He made it…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

Would love to take some unsuspecting person for a ride in one then plunge into the river! I know someone who was taken on just such a ride, as it happens, who said it was darned scary! These were not, by the way, his actual words.

But back to the parade….

008

And as we came back to the main event, TJ spotted us and got busy…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

…as we pass Liz’s barge.

We had our very own Naval representative…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

Then we spot TJ…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

Well some of us (notably the female variety) did. Wave everybody.

The guy on the microphone gave our history to the crowd. Back in the day, there was mutiny aboard apparently!

But we were a good crew, seen here re-deploying the fenders…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

…that we were instructed to disappear as we set off. Spoils the photos it seems. I agree – look back at the previous two shots and you’ll see what I mean.

John’s son, TJ, had driven here too – fresh from working in Wales. Unfortunately he just missed the boat – literally – but was at least ashore to take the shots that we couldn’t/didn’t. I’ve credited them to him by way of a caption (though BB did the cropping) because they are so good. Well done that man!

Once re-birthed and after the tea party, we got busy putting Lazy Days to bed…

taken by TJ

taken by TJ

Well the boys did.

A fabulous day and a big thanks to our hosts – and of course, Lazy Days.

And here we all are…

taken by an innocent bystander

taken by an innocent bystander

L to R: John, BB, TJ, Birthday Boy, Alice, Jill and Kevin.

Smiley faces all round. Aaahh.

Was lovely to meet you all/see you again – including the ones not pictured, who were by now heading down river to Windsor.

Friends Re-united

22 Jul

I hated school.

County High School Wellingborough for girls to be precise…2013_05_13_14_50_21

Dickensian, demanding of academic excellence and where the majority of the teachers were bonkers. Really, they were.

I never felt I fitted the bill, always a little out of kilter and so left as soon as I was allowed to – age 15 – to enter the real world, get a job and start living. Little did I know…

But never in my wildest dreams did I imagine that, some 49 years down the line, I would still be in touch with my old school chums. Mainly due to the wonders of cyber space plus super-human effort on the part of  the more persistent and communicative amongst us.

From time to time we get together – in the flesh as it were – to compare ailments and discuss medication congratulate each other on maintained beauty/youthfulness and catch up with each other’s lives.

Sometimes it’s just the annual school lunch but once in a while we get a little creative and find a more inspiring venue and this year (not for the first time) it was Southwold. We like it there and one of our member has a caravan by the harbour so that’s very convenient.

And so it was that, on July 15th, a few of us that could escape for a day or two assembled at the lovely sleepy Suffolk coastal village of Southwold – much-loved by us all.

Just a handful of us this time…022

Kay, Jude (all the way from Yonkers in New York don’t you know) Jackie and Jose, with Archie bringing up the right hand side.

A nice number though not quite up to the heady heights of 1996…scan0249

…when it was 30 years since we started at that school. Next year will be 50 years since, so perhaps we should mark that milestone accordingly. Any ideas..?

Once all assembled, hugging over, chatted out and coffee’d up we set out for Walberswick. We hopped through the gap in the hedge from the caravan site and walked along the harbour, where you can check out the boats (if you’re a boatbird) and buy the best fresh fish in the world. Probably.

Over the bridge…001

…with numerous photo stops.

Even one of the boats…002

Just for me.

A tramp across here…008

Taking in this…007

And this…010

Fascinated by the insect with the red spotty wings…009

Anyone know what it is?

Onward through the heath…012

…another photo call.

Looking good girls.

Splendid tree…013

And arrival at the delightful village of Walberswick…015

…where we did lunch at The Bell. And very good it was too – fish all round like you do when at the coast..

We were amused by the numbering system though…017

The waiting staff actually shouted the whole number across the garden… as in “three thousand and forty one…” It made us giggle but you probably had to be there to appreciate this one.

Anyway, why not just say 41?

Then the beach, where one woman and her dog performed for us…020

And boy, can Archie run…021

He likes to chase the gulls – not one he’s ever going to win but very entertaining.

Archie and his human like to pose…023

Just as well really when in such demand…024

I’m not being camera-shy by the way, just that I’ll be in all the shots taken by the others that I haven’t yet seen. Maybe they’ll send them on..?

We head back for the long walk along the estuary and to the bridge. There’s no other way round.

Apart from the ferry…029

…which seemed like a bloody good idea for those with bursting bladders or sore feet or a boatbird – always being up for a boat ride. That’s a plan then.

One lovely, very strong young lady…025

…who took this on from her father, I understand, operating this service from 10 til 5 every day.

Walking ahead, Jose and Kay hadn’t heard our plans or seen us sneak off and were obviously struck by guilt…028

…when they finally noticed we weren’t tagging along and stopped to see where we’d got to, no doubt wondering if we’d got lost/expired along the way.

More giggles.

Back at the caravan for tea, cake and finally fond farewells.

It was a lovely, lovely day. Good to be by the sea and great to see “my gherills” again (spoken in the style of Miss Jean Brodie).

And, as said in my school reports… must do better.

As in don’t leave it so long next time – let’s do it again soon. The more the merrier.

Saturday’s Child

7 Jul

Boatbird’s been a bit boring of late. No adventures. Nothing to rant about.

Not even a boat trip – and that’s unforgivable, the weather having been so glorious. Still, watch this space, I can feel a move coming on.

I blame being born on a Saturday. You know the old rhyme…

Monday’s child is fair of face (not me then)

Tuesday’s child is full of grace (sadly not me either)

Wednesday’s child is full of woe (gladly not me)

Thursday’s child has far to go (er..nope)

Friday’s child is loving and giving (well…)

Saturday’s child works hard for a living (yep, that’ll be me then)

But the child who is born on the Sabbath day

Is bonny and blithe and good and gay (thankful for small mercies then..)

It’s true, I was born on a Saturday and, whilst I don’t work that hard these days, I do still have to work. Back in the day though, I lived and breathed work – couldn’t get enough of it. Glad I got over that.

I’m from a generation that was brought up on the promise of retirement and a state pension at age 60, a bus pass and winter fuel money. Sod’s law came into play though: the rules were changed and goalposts moved. As it stands now (and I’ve no faith that it won’t alter again) I shall have to wait another six or seven years.

Hey ho.

Lucky for me, I am still in touch with a lot of my old buddies from school, who also fall foul of retirement rules, so some consolation in all being able to bitch about it together.

We’re planning a bit of a get-together in Southwold very soon, which I’m really looking forward to and hope to record our antics here, so look out for pics of all us old dears. To be fair, and I may be a little biased, I do think we’ve all fared pretty well – have to see what you think.

We have done some of this though…001

And this…002

And harvested some of these from the roof garden…006

You know, they taste like real strawberries. Funny that. I suppose it’s the lack of a billion air miles and hours of chilling as they travelled.

I’ve really enjoyed the sunshine, the heat and being able to unbatten Hobo’s hatches, open the boat right up to catch a through breeze. Can’t beat it.

But otherwise I’m back to scratching my head and devising get rich quick schemes once again. I don’t even want to be rich – just have enough to keep me accustomed to the manner in which I wish to live.

As in not having to go out to work. Which allows more spontaneity, more fun, more adventures, gives me more time to do more of what I want to do.

Write/paint/draw/play music/read and generally mess about on the river.

And, more to the point, not having to drag my sorry arse out of bed in the morning until I’m good and ready. I like to take my time getting into the day, nice and easy.

And I’d like to pay a lot more attention to Hobo. OK, she’ll never be one of these shiny, highly polished, tidy, really smart boats – she’s lived in 24/7 and not a weekend/holiday boat that gets lavished with attention just after she’s taken out of the cotton wool for her annual airing.

That said, Hobo is a great boat and I love her dearly, but she would benefit from some time spent on her.

001 (8)

Time. What no-one ever seems to have enough of.

Could be worse…

I could be living in Greece or – heaven forbid – be living in a house.

Riverbank Robbery

20 May

I was busy with the internet ablutions earlier; catching up with the e mails/favourite blogs/facebook and so on and came across a post from blogging buddies of mine on NB Tumbleweed. They wrote of a boat trip to Ely, which evoked memories of the time, five years ago now, when John and I had just started out on our mission to move Hobo from Hartford Marina to destinations unknown.

We’d unplugged…Unplugging the Umbilical

Negotiated that awkward reverse…That awkward reverse..

And headed for the river…That I'm on the River Grin

Sooo exciting.

Anyway, It brought back the time that we stayed at Ely…Ely-feeding the black swanEly-black swan

A funny thing happened while we were there and I thought I’d share this with you on this sunny Wednesday morning.

Back in 2010, John and I set off to explore Britain’s rivers and canals on my 47ft narrowboat, Hobo. Our aim was to gradually chug our way around the waterways network as we continued to work. This entailed a little logistical ingenuity in the transport department but we figured we could hop the van along with the aid of a bicycle, thus enabling John to travel back to his home and work base on the fens after each few days of cruising. I could continue to work from the boat, which is my home wherever it happens to be.

Pike and Eel on the Ouse…

Ouse-Pike and Eel 5

Puncture repair.

Streatham on the Old West…Old West-StreathamTen Mile Bank, where the postie has extra duties…Ouse-Ten Mile Bank's Posties extra choresWansford-in-England on the Nene…

Wansford in EnglandPaddington Basin…

Hobo in the City

To name but a few. She gets around.

It was fun. Naturally it was important that we found secure places to leave the van along the way, which generally meant we had to invest selflessly of our time in order to research likely waterside hostelries. We endured many evenings of drinking and eating as we sweetened landlords into granting permission for us to make use of their car park for a day or three – hard work but it had to be done.

Some days we cruised for hours and hours on a long winding section of the river to find that John could cycle to the van and drive back to the boat in less than twenty minutes. Other stretches, however, would see him gone for the best part of a day when the actual boating hadn’t lasted above a couple of hours. It was the nature of the beast and the further afield we ventured, the more interesting these manoeuvres became. One cycle trip was over forty miles. Sometimes the towpath was the best option, others the road or a combination, but whatever the terrain John loved it…

Ely-3

It was working well.

In May we arrived at the delightful city of Ely on the Great Ouse in Cambridgeshire and found a super spot along the waterfront to moor. We wrestled the bikes off the bow and John set off on his mount in the general direction of the most recent pub car park to retrieve the van. On his return we propped both cycles against a tree, which was no more than a couple of yards from the boat, and locked them together…

Ely-1

Ely doesn’t strike you as a hotbed of hooliganism but you can’t be too careful can you..?

At silly o’clock the following morning, John duly set off in the van for work…

Ely-2

I happily slumbering on until a more sensible hour. Come mid-morning I was ready to saddle up, peddle off and explore the city. I was looking forward to it. Making sure I had the keys to the bike lock, I secured the boat, closed the canopy and headed for my rusty steed. But it was gone – they both were. I did a double-take, scoured the riverbank in case I was being particularly blonde, but no bikes to be seen anywhere. They were gone without a trace.

The boat moored next to us was being repainted so, after recovering my composure, I asked the man wielding the paintbrush if he had seen anything. Indeed he had. It seems that the woman who owned the boat he was working on had clocked the bikes, thought they were abandoned – like you always lock up bikes that you dump – and phoned the local council. She asked that they be removed as she feared they might attract troublemakers. My painter man had witnessed the arrival of the bin lorry early that morning and saw the driver toss them onto the back of his truck.

OK so they weren’t the latest model super shiny mountain bike variety, both being resuscitated from the tip, but they weren’t that scruffy either, having been subjected to the odd spate of TLC. They were a tad long on years, had seen plenty of action but full of character. They suited us well. They were, also, essential tools for our new way of life so I was not prepared to let them go that easily and besides, we were very fond of them.

I did a recce but saw no lorry sporting the reported “Recycling Partnership” logo about so returned to the boat and did some telephone sleuthing instead. Eventually, after bouncing between various departments of Ely City and Cambridgeshire County councils, I was pointed in the direction of the contractor responsible. I left a message for the manager to ring me, he being out.

I deliberately waited for his call before I relayed events to John in the hope that I would be able to do a “bad news/good news” sort of story. And when it came it was good news – they had the bikes and he would return them, personally, later that afternoon. He was as good as his word and did just that, apologised and explained how it had come about – Mrs Boat next door’s request. They were still locked together.

He had no satisfactory answer when I asked why no-one had queried this, they being locked, neatly parked by the tree close to the boat and clearly not abandoned. I suppose a quick knock on my roof to check if they belonged to us was out of the question…?

Oh well I thought, all’s well that ends well.

Not so, sadly. On close inspection, John discovered that the back wheels on both bikes were buckled. He was not amused. I was cross with myself for not having looked more closely when invited to check them over on their return. So the next day I was back on the phone; the receptionist recognising me instantly, which was a bit of a worry. “It’s that crazy bike woman again” I imagined her calling to the boss. But he behaved impeccably and agreed to cover the cost of the repair, on receipt of evidence of outlay naturally. Fair enough.

It turned out to be a fairly hefty bill, John’s bike having large, racing wheels, which made my contractor man baulk. I tried to soften the blow by pointing out that my more modest but natty little “Shopper”…

My Rusty Steed

would be fixed at no cost by cannibalising its twin, which we had acquired for spares. We finally agreed to go halves and his contribution was subsequently paid into our bank account. We decided, however, that in future we would leave the bikes stowed on the boat.

Given the current emphasis on recycling, going green, the cycle paths that now sprout along the roadside and high profile TV anti-obesity campaigns, it all seems somewhat bizarre. We’d got on our bikes to become fit instead of fat, only to have our recycled cycles nicked by the recycling wagon. And, it seems, at the behest of a random member of the public. No questions asked, no checking, just carted off. Would they be so swift to remove “abandoned” items elsewhere on request?

I wonder…

What If…?

16 Apr

This age-old question has once again popped into my mind after reading a letter in the April edition of Towpath, which was written with reference to the C&RT’s new rules for boaters without a home mooring.

…There are the CCs who move a couple of hundred yards back and forth. And there are the genuine ones who do cruise around the country. My question to the Canal & River Trust is: If only 50% of all these CCs want a home mooring, where are they? There are not enough home moorings available in my area of the Leeds & Liverpool Canal for a quarter of these…

Good question. And in no way limited to the Leeds & Liverpool.

You can be sure that this applies to many parts of the network; not least the London area. And this is where I’m at these days. So yes, where are these home moorings?

Strikes me there’s plenty of potential in and around the capital – I’ve spotted many likely sites when passing through the city. Old disused wharves that have fallen into disrepair, silted up basins that are chained off and now collecting junk and all manner of derelict industrial sites – a landscape resembling that of the post-apocalyptic…

google image

google image

Frankly, it seems such a waste when they could be utilised for the purpose of creating a place for an affordable home – a floating home is still a home – without major expenditure.

So I too have a question… Do new home moorings count, within the realms of Westminster/local councils, as providing new/affordable homes? I somehow doubt it.

But what if they did?

Would this not be a massive incentive to the powers that be to provide more home moorings – if it counted towards their targets? If I know anything about officialdom, it is that it performs much better when there is something in it for those with the necessary sway to make things happen.

It’s all over the news; how far short we are falling in the provision of homes in the capital but no-one seems keen to build them – especially the smaller homes that singles and couples so desperately need. A floating home (in my view preferable to the bricks and mortar variety) in the London area is an affordable option – possibly the only one.

And boat homes can be very green/eco-friendly, with many now using solar/wind power, so a smaller carbon footprint. They require little – if any – additional infrastructure, with occupants disposing of their own waste/rubbish to one central point and generating their own power. I may be naive… but could the rules not be changed so that one new (sensibly priced) home mooring = one new affordable home? Why not?

Why ever not?

The Disappearing Desk

24 Feb

I knew when I embarked on this watery lifestyle in a 47ft x 7ft metal tube, I would have to make the odd sacrifice. (That’s doing without something, not slaughtering a child in a white frock on an altar at midnight.)

And these are the external dimensions so, in fact, I have probably only around 264 square feet of indoor living space in total. Any fixtures and fittings on board therefore really have to earn their keep and need to be functional, preferably with multi-use capability. There is no room for ‘passengers’.

Not that I’m complaining. OK, so I miss the bath and the sofa sometimes but a small price to pay to be able to live the way I do. There is of course no reason I couldn’t have the above – it’s mainly aesthetics that stop me adding either or both.

More recently, I’ve hankered after a desk/table to work at…

100_0525

Google image

It is, after all, essential equipment for a writer. I’ve managed to date with the laptop on the lap but now I’m getting into proofreading/copy-editing, I need somewhere to spread out the paperwork.

I’m lucky that John is good in the making things department so I designed a desk that works in the boat and he has made it.

John likes to work in 3D models and, having established mk 1 would do the job, he set about making mk 2. It’s a good system that works for us and, when I saw the first prototype, decided the boat could take something a little bigger. Easy peasy, rip it up and start again. (There’s never any waste when you have a wood burner.)

He started with good old potato box ply to make the framework and shelving and then we went shopping for the desk top itself. It had to be big enough but foldaway-able, smart enough but nothing that would break the bank and something that would sit well within Hobo’s ageing mellow and lived-in interior. Something we could up-cycle then.

We took a trip to  the ECCO shop in Harlow to see what was about. There’s a few of these outlets around here (2 in Harlow, 1 in Bishop’s Stortford and 1 in Epping) and they’re brilliant places for a bargain – if you have your creative eyes in focus. Lovely and jumbly. Nice and cheap.

This headboard spoke to me, made of good solid ply with an oak veneer… IMG_20150207_072108

Just the job at £2.

We also bought strip hinges to enable the folding away of and another clever little design feature that means I can have a medium desk…002

With the extension doubling as a supporting leg when in half-size mode, which is rapidly becoming the default position as is also proving to be useful as a table to land one’s drinks, dinner plates, newspapers – you name it, the possibilities are endless.

Or for those big jobs, just pull up to make a massive working surface…008003

As big as many an office desk I’ve worked at.

The really clever bit being that it folds away to next to nothing…005006

Genius. Now you see it now you don’t..!

It sits unobtrusively under the gunwale, getting in no-one’s way, when I don’t feel like working.

So now it’s back to me for the cosmetics. It needs a little refining, sanding and staining and general titivation but otherwise job done. Apart from re-organising my clutter that is.

Now of course I need a chair that works with the desk so it’s back to ECCO, this time the Stortford store. I really liked this…002 (3)But of course it won’t go low enough. John suggested an entry level typist chair like this…003 (2)Could be used as the base, fitting the top of the barstool to it. I admit I had my reservations but at £3 for the blue jobbie and (after much haggling) settled on £5 for the black leather one (marked up at £15) there wasn’t a lot to lose.

We pointed out the seat was very broken…002 (4)Nothing the John couldn’t fix of course, making what I think is a mighty cool stool…002 (2)

But is it a stool? Or is it a chair?

We’ve decided it’s a hybrid and are calling it a chool.

Whatever. In this position it lets me get my knees under the desk but will also raise up if I want to look out of the window at the river. It’s the perfect spot to watch the sun go down.

I suspect the little boat may gain a chrome based, blue seated driving seat.

As my life evolves, so then does the space around me. I’m busy now working on a design for a unit to complement the new desk to fit on the other side of the boat. I’m thinking something modular, multi-purpose and sleek.

I’m a lucky boatbird to have the John, who actually enjoys turning my designs into real storage solutions. He’s really quite talented and, when he isn’t busy doing stuff for me or fixing up the little boat, he loves to make these…010

Want one..?

PS: You should see the owl boxes…

Snowshots – Now and Then

5 Feb

There is one definite advantage to being an occasional extreme early riser (that’ll be Boatbloke not Boatbird) and that is unusual photo opportunities…IMG_20150130_022121

Snowing polar bears at 03.00 hours, as seen from the little boat. Ragetty Ann catches the yard light while other hulls are seen in silhouette.

It settles on the roof…IMG_20150130_034756

Wonderful white fluffiness.

And just before it turned to mucky, muddy, mushy slush and sludge…IMG_20150131_122330

Dogdirt Alley in all its splendour, still looking pristine before the temperature rises and the march of everyone’s welly boots takes its toll, depriving us of that delicious crunch beneath our feet.

We’ve seen nothing (yet) this winter though. Nothing like one I remember when living at Hartford Marina in Cambridgeshire – I think the winter of 2009/2010 – when we had weeks of serious sub-zero temperatures.

Which meant the water taps on the pontoon froze for days on end…12

And the lake had ice an inch thick all over.

As I walked about inside the boat, I’d hear the ice around the boat cracking and, once I’d identified what it was, a strange yet fun experience. Even more odd was the sound of someone across the water breaking the ice around their boat with a pole – a kind of echoing noise, almost like an underwater explosion . And this one took me quite a while to figure out.

We get so used to familiar noises, knowing each and every one from ducks nibbling the hull (weird and worrying till you work it out) to a flight of swans (unmistakeable), a skein of geese flying homeward (noisy), the dismayed whimpering of a neighbour’s cat that has taken an unexpected dive into the drink (pitiful) or a neighbour topping up his coal scuttle (frequent).

Each with its own distinctive signature.

The wildlife were fun to watch…3 10Swans and their cygnets walking on water

So comical as they nonchalantly went about their daily routines.

I learned how to eke out my water, often using the marina showers so as not to deplete what remained in my tank as topping up would not be possible until the outside taps thawed. It was a good lesson in water conservation that has stayed with me. Here at the farm the hose and or tap will freeze – as will the water points on canals and rivers – when a cold snap snaps.

The surroundings became beautiful…15 1613Serene…Iced in at the marina

Austere beauty at the marina

But despite outward appearances…Winter in the marina-but cosy inside

We all stayed warm and cosy inside our boats.

These are a few of my pictorial reminiscences of a previous life. What were your memories of that winter..?

The Lister Lives..!

2 Feb

Remember this…?100_3101

Our first look at the little boat, which was full of water and floating debris. And a three pot Lister that was obviously somewhere one stored one’s junk.

John pretty soon removed the junk so he could see what he had…
077It’s a Lister SL3 with round cylinders, producing 12.5hp at 1800rpm. Last made in 1958; after that the cylinders were square and produced more hp at a higher rpm.

Not sure about the carving knife and steel though.

He’s finally been able to throw a bit of time at it…

IMG_20150129_105117

So, that said, let’s see if the old girl will run…001

Scary moment.

But one I wanted to witness, though I stayed on the back deck just in case.

Here goes…002

Not yet…003

Nope…004

Start again…005

Not quite…006

And there she blows – cor Blimey, what a noise…!

007

Where’s John gone? The smoke has swallowed him up!

The exhaust isn’t rigged up so no silencer. In fact nothing is properly ‘plumbed in’ as yet but well enough for these purposes.

Seems the back deck might not have been such a good idea. I am right in the line of fire – well smoke to be more precise. Of which there is A LOT. (You might have spotted that but I have a degree in stating the bleeding obvious and like to make use of it occasionally.)

Some of the immediate neighbours are looking concerned. Not sure if that’s because of the deafening decibels or the dense, choking smoke. Or simply amazement that the Lister is actually running.

Is this the look of dejection…?

008

Surely not.

Nope, there it is. The grin…009

The Lister lives..!

Of course, there’s a long way to go but at least we now know it runs and is worth more time and effort. And probably money will need to be thrown at it too. It’s a boat thing.

There will be injectors for cleaning, new gaskets (all cork), leaks to seal, timing issues to address and on and on.

Proper ‘plumbing in’ too/deciding where to mount the starter button/how and where on earth to route the exhaust pipe – in fact make the exhaust pipe.

But it’s a labour of love for the John. I can’t tell you how utterly shocked delighted he was when she finally fired up but maybe the little boy grin in the last pic says it all. Quite something on a freezing cold winter’s day when it hasn’t run for a very long time that we know of and probably a lot longer than that.

I am well pleased too – despite the black face and sooty nose. This means we are one tiny step closer to getting her in the water.

And that will be a day…IMG_20141126_0002

“Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow – but soon.”

Can’t wait..!