Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Dawn colours

I woke up this morning at 5.30am and noticed the light coming through the curtains was quite sensational. I got up and stood on the stern and sure enough it was a cracking sun rise:


























We went up to the Lake District today to visit some friends who own the boat next door to us. They use it as a weekend retreat and have a beautiful house with fantastic views over the mountains. They are quite elderly now but related stories over lunch of how they would climb Coniston Old Man on Christmas morning before heading home for lunch. We thought that we were serious walkers, but that shows real committment!!

I am desperate for a walk but Phil has pulled a ligament in his leg and it is taking time to heal. He has promised that as soon as we have a fine day (not had one of those for ages), he will take me somewhere nice and throw me out for a walk while he sits in the pub and waits for me (now there's a hardship!)

We are also planning a trip on the boat in a couple of weeks, spending a few days travelling north where the scenery is supposed to be spectacular, so watch this space!

Al :)

Friday, July 27, 2012

Holidays and Bills

This week I have at last been able to just relax and do very little and it has been fantastic.

We are just about the only boat on the narrow boat jetty here at the basin because so few boats venture down as the locks are hard work. We helped T and Jack back to their mooring at the beginnning of the week. Because the locks are so heavy there is no way one person can operate them, but I absolutely love doing it, it is such a good work out and great fun, even though it did start to rain when we were halfway along and we all got soaked.

We have a superb view of the basin and as I now have time to sit and gaze, I have seen some fantastic wild life. A comorant decided to pay a visit yesterday;


I saw him dive and come up with something ...

On closer inspection it was this large eel!



He had quite a fight with it


But finally managed to swallow it....

Last night I sat out on the back of the boat. The water was like a mill pond and there always seem to be lots of ducks about in the evening:


The starlings were starting to roost:


I watched the sun setting:





And the moon come up ....


..... and it was all so quiet and peaceful, just what I have needed.

Today there was more drama played out on the water as the moorhen who had been nesting on a neighbour's boat had hatched two chicks. She decided to take them straight out for a swim, but one soon became separated and it looked so small and lost out there on its own:









Mum just didn't seem to care and went back to the empty nest and left baby squeaking and swimming around. I was assured that if we left them to their own devices they would find each other, but it was sad to watch.

Having completed the transaction on our little boat, we have some money in the bank ( for a change!), so decided to do a complete financial review this morning. We worked out all of our fuel costs for the year and here is a breakdown which you may find useful:

Diesel -     £310 (for the central heating as well as propulsion)
Coal -        £273
Gas  -        £  52
Electricity £115

This makes a total of £750 for the year, which I don't think is bad in the scheme of things. Add to that our mooring fee which is £2850 and the British Watersways license which is £770 and that grand total of £4370 is pretty much the cost of living on a boat for the year if you own your boat outright. Of course this could change depending on many factors (age and length of boat etc,), but that is what it has cost us for a new, 57ft boat. There are other incidental costs such as toilet fluid for the chemical toilet or pump out fees if you have a waste tank, but these are really just part of normal household costs and I wouldn't put it in with the main utility costs.

One of the other spin offs of living on the boat over the last couple of years has been our fitness levels which have risen considerably. We have always been quite active, but I am really strong now, with all the carrying and lifting and chopping wood etc. and I also feel much better for spending so much more time outdoors in the fresh air.

Now I am going to 'slob out' in front of the telly and watch the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in London - should be a good show :)

Al

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Two boats minus one

We have sold our little boat ... we feel quite sad about it really because it is a beautiful boat with much character, but it has gone to a lovely family who we took to immediately and it means money in the bank for us. It wasn't really being used much, son number two has too many other distractions to be out sailing it as he might have done during the first year of his degree course. He is now working at two jobs until he applies for the career job in the Autumn when the big companies do their graduate entry schemes.

The people who bought it were just blown away by the peace of sitting on it and watching the world go by. We then invited them to come and have a cup of tea on our boat in the basin and when they saw the scenery up there I think it sold itself!

Phil got up at 5am this morning to go and do some bird watching and here are some of the pictures he took:

View from the stern of the boat

View from the bow of the boat


Early morning mist

The Estuary







Today was the first reasonably warm and sunny day for a long time. I took the opportunity to do some washing and hang it off the boat - you can buy special drying frames which hook onto the boat. I also had some left over tomatoes, so put them in egg cartons on the roof to dry them. When the sun is really hot, the top of the boat becomes like an oven and you can 'sun dry' tomatoes on it. They are great mixed with a bit of olive oil and chillis.

I enjoyed spending some time sitting on the back in the sun reading, with Jack lying at my feet, (tired after having had a good walk). It was lovely to chill for a bit,but I still have lots of things I need to do, like sorting out our storage which has become a tip and a dumping ground. We also still have some stuff left over from the house which I am going to put on ebay.

 
Al

Friday, July 13, 2012

Bills

I returned from Birmingham (in the rain) at the weekend and am now finally having some time off. I really enjoyed working in Birmingham because it is the absolute centre of the canal network and it felt like home from home. I was able to walk along the canal every evening and chat to other boaters.

Now I am on catch up with chores etc. I think I have finally sorted out the damp problem. I cleared out both wardrobes and have taken a lot of clothes I don't wear very often up to our storage unit, so there is now some breathing space and the cupboards are not jam packed. I have bought loads of damp collecting tubs and have put three in each wardrobe as well as an air freshener in each. If you try to buy the damp collectors at specialist caravan or boating shops, they cost about £5- £6 but our local 'pound' shop stocks them for £1 each and they last several weeks, so it doesn't work out too expensive.

I was again accosted in the town centre today by a gas provider trying to get me to change my supply. He looked quite distraught when I told him I don't use mains gas as I live on a boat. I felt sorry for him, it must be a hard job trying to get people to change to another provider and I bet he only gets paid on a commission basis.

Talking of gas etc. I thought it might be useful to give some sort of breakdown of costs this quarter: -

Our gas comes out of a bottle which we keep in the locker at the front of the boat. We have two bottles in there so if one runs out while we are in mid flow of cooking a meal, we just get a spanner and switch the supply over to the full one! We last got a full bottle about 6 months ago and it cost £26. We checked it the other day and there is still plenty left. I would say that at the very most you would use two bottles a year.

Our electricity bill for this quarter was £25. We have mostly used the wood burner for heating this last few months and have generally used wood, because coal produces too much heat at this time of year. We get our wood free, either by foraging, or from friends. The central heating uses diesel and again we haven't had to buy any recently. We have two jerry cans full which our neighbour gave us to say 'Thankyou' for cooking him so many meals over the last few months. They contain 20 litres each which will see us right for fuel to move around and heating for many months.

As you can see it is a very cheap way of life as far as utility bills goes. However, it isn't so cheap for other costs. We pay £2900  per year for our mooring and £700  per year for our waterways license which entitles us to have a boat on the water ( a bit like car tax). In addition we pay £26 for storage every month. If you own your boat outright that wouldn't be so bad, but we have a small mortgage on ours which puts our rental costs up to the equivalent of renting a very nice flat in town. We know this because we are helping son number two to get a flat with his girl friend and we were in the estate agents yesterday and looking at some very nice properties which were the same or less than we are paying now.

This looking closely at things has partly come about because we are dissatisfied with where we are living. Although it is a nice spot we don't seem to get a lot for our money and as I have intimated before there are problems with some personalities there. For me it is to do with one particular boat whose occupants I consider to be anti-social and there are also problems with people not getting on together and, although we keep out of it, it spills over and affects the general atmosphere of the place.

We have seen lots of lovely Marinas advertised in the boaters magazine 'The Towpath' which seem to offer better value for money and we are considering going onto the main system and moving to another area. I love the boating life and would be unwilling to let it go easily, but I can see the argument that we could live much more easily and peacefully on dry land at the same cost, so ....... are we going to 'swallow the anchor'? I'm really not sure.

At the moment we are in our favourite place and have peace and quiet away from the marina, but we can't stay here forever - watch this space, I will keep you posted ......

On a more positive note we had a nice day yesterday when T came up to join us and we helped her through the locks. We are looking after Jack next week while she is on holiday, so it made sense to have her boat up here with us so that he can feel at home if he needs to.


The Lock gates are heavy!


Time for a tea break!


Coming into the basin








Moving towards our boat to moor up



The basin has fantastic wild life and the swans ambush us every time we open the duck hatch:










a Grebe


The Tufted Duck has had babies



....   and the sunsets are amazing:


My next priority has been to weed the allottment, it is looking good but is quite overgrown



We have already had some produce from it - 2 cabbages, some raspberries and gooseberries!



So all in all I am very happy with my life style - we do need to sort out the wrinkles though - keep watching this space for what happens!

Al

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Weather!

I am now on the final stretch of my long work stint. Phil calculated that I have had only 4 days off in the last 8 weeks!

I am just off to Birmingham for the week and I must admit I am really tired. Last week I had a horrendous journey from Glasgow to York. I was on the train from Edinburgh to Newcastle when a landslide caused by flash floods happened at Berwick. It washed away all the ballast from under the track and it was a very wierd sensation sitting on the train which felt like it was floating. They managed to reverse back up the line and chucked us all off onto the platform. From then on complete chaos ensued! Eventually they put most people on a train back to Edinburgh, but I was determined to get to York somehow as I had to be working there the next day.

British Rail said that they couldn't put a bus on as all the roads were blocked due to floods because the rain had been so heavy. I must admit it felt like Armageddon with thunder and lightening all around and the rain coming down in sheets. Myself and three others managed to persuade a taxi to take us beyond the blockage into Newcastle, but it was a long and tedious journey with the taxi having to turn around and take different routes on many occasions due to flooded roads. It was an unbelieveable sight with some floods several feet deep and many roads being transformed into rivers.

I got to Newcastle to find no trains were running there either and every hotel was booked. The roads were gridlocked with traffic and people were fighting with each other trying to get into taxis. The price of getting from A to B was going up by the minute!

To cut a long story short, I sat it out and eventually got on a specially laid on train in the early hours of the morning and arrived at York in time to grab a couple of hours sleep before starting work at 9am.

I am so tired now but buoyed up by the fact that I only have one more week before I can have a break and the news that son number two has achieved a First Class Honours in his degree.

As soon as I got back on the boat I noticed that smell of damp again. It has been so wet this summer that I suppose it is inevitable, but it is seriously starting to bug me. Before I left last week I put new damp collectors in every drawer and the wardrobes and they are all now full of water. Onto my next strategy ...... I think I am filling the drawers too full, so I am going to half empty them and take a lot of clothes up to our storage and will keep you posted on how I eventually get on top of this problem.

It was so cold last night that we lit the fire - I just don't know what is happening to our weather. I have never known anything like it!

When I finish next week I am going to get on to some boaty things, such as working out how much it has cost us since we moved onto the boat and will try and calculate everyday costs and outgoings. I am also going to really address the damp problem and come uup with some radical solutions, so watch this space!

Al