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Wussername

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Posts posted by Wussername

  1. 2 minutes ago, dom said:

      

    Fair comment, but if you hired from the same yard year in, year out, should they still have to insist on a trial run every time? Even when they know and recognise you and recall how often you've hired?

    Why not?

    It is the trial run driver's responsibility to make that decision. I have. On very rare occasions, I have refused to sign off a trial run. 

    I do not wish to go into any detail and neither will I. 

    However, suffice to say  that I have had to make a decision in certain instances. The last holiday on the Broads in particular.

    The last holiday. 

    • Like 2
  2. The Ranger (BA), the Trial Run Instructor (Boat Yard). 

    Some walk the walk. Some talk the talk.

    Very few do both. Who is qualified to have the accreditation of delivering the necessary , and may I add a consistent, defined, constructive, recognised and disciplined induction to the so called Trial Run.    

     

  3. What is meant by "Charter" moorings? Presumably the hire fleet, if so why not say so. Or does it imply a better, more sophisticated boat (read posh hire boat.....expensive) for a clientel that can afford it and willing to pay. As seen on the Southern rivers.

    • Like 1
  4. I joined a forum about the rivers, broads, marshes, fishing, boating, sailing, walking, bird watching,.

    It seems to have degenerated in a bit of waving of Uncle William.

    A bit boring to be honest. 

    For those who have an interest in The Norfolk and Suffolk Broads.

    I could list my cars, but are you really, really intersted?

     

    • Like 1
    • Sad 1
  5. Stop moaning. Norfolk is windy. Boggy. Floods. Stuck out in the middle of the North Sea like carbuncle. Wherever you live draw a circle, in that circle identify a radius. Within that radius, just a few miles is the sea and it is the sea that determines where we live and the life we live. Has been so for many generations.

    Climate change. Climate changes. Now and again people in Norfolk dig up an elephant. They do, an elephant or a woolly  mammoth. A bit of a sabre tooth tiger.  

    What caused their demise. Could it have been climate change?

    What caused that climate change?

    Not my diesel car, not my central heating, my coal fire, my wood burner, my holiday in the Costa Plenty. 

     

    • Like 11
  6. 30 minutes ago, kpnut said:

    As usual, as soon as there is a stunning sunrise that I’m actually awake for, I’m not on a mooring that’ll do it justice. 

    I woke to a colourful glow coming through the curtains at Neatishead, but the trees and house next door got in the way. I should have quickly got up and taking the dog up to the field, but was too snug in bed! 

    You missed a wonderful dawn. It was magical. However, red sky in the morning, shepherd's warning.  

    This time of year, the sunsets are memorable, every now and then a dawn which has a beauty of its own. No large hills, no mountains, just a large sky. As illustrated by Seago  a Norfolk landscape artist who captured the very soul of the county. From his home in Ludham, visited by the Queen Mother on many an occasion, his paintings vividly enraptured the dawn, and the end of the day.

    • Like 4
  7. 7 minutes ago, kpnut said:

    Gracie, she’s going in for a repaint in the new year and I think it’s going to make a few people happy that she’s staying orange😂

    Orange? I don't like Orange. We need a forum re-think. I think a subtle change to brown, a light coloured brown, complimented by a lighter colour brown. 

    Who am I to suggest the colour of your boat. Pink might be good. You cannot please everybody but you can upset everybody.

    Only joking.

    Old Wussername. 

    • Haha 4
  8. 2 minutes ago, NorfolkNog said:

    What a lovely tale! Thank you Andrew. Had the pleasure of sharing a beer with you in the Maltsters a while back but not now sadly! 

    I remember it well. I look forward to February. I can feel a pint or two coming on.

    With kind regards.

    Andrew

    • Like 2
  9. When you arrive Howard I know that winter is nigh.

    Your visit in February will endorse that realisation that we may have to endure one of the harshest months of winter. And then, and only then, you visit in May. A spiteful month.  Do not cast clout until May is out.

    When you depart, all is well. Our Norfolk Nog has gone with our sadness. We look forward to the advent of Spring and hope for a summer, a wonderful summer.

    Thank you for your story.

    I have been privileged to have been "boating" on the river so to speak in mid winter. Moving boats from South to North. A flask of hot soup, a sandwich, freezing cold on a boat with no heater. 

    Then a winter cruise with my wife from Stalham to the end of navigation at Coltishall one weekend. To the very end of navigation. A sad and delipidated sign stated at Coltishall "hire boats not allowed" I carried on to the locks, the water meadows at Horstead Mill all those years ago. The mill had gone, a few years past. The mooring at the old dilapidated lock gates was memorable. A place that few people visited by boat. 

    In the morning we awoke to the sound of geese, huge numbers, hundreds in skeins which seemed to fill the sky, a cacophony of sound which reverberated throughout the Norfolk landscape.

    On our way home, back to Stalham on our approach to Belaugh we entered a reach which held hundred and hundreds of geese just floating, resting on the river, from bank to bank. There was no way through, but they just parted, these wild birds as I went through so very slowly, very quietly. Feeling somewhat guilty of intrusion. 

    I have often felt that I should ask you why you come midwinter. However I think that I know from my brief experience. 

    For me, sadly boating has become a challenge. I have to leave winter boating to those of sterner stuff. 

    Not so long ago I used to help the grandchildren onto the boat. Now they help me. 

    As Shakespeare said " Sans eyes, sans teeth, sans everything. 

    Sometimes, on the river, they will say, "ask Grandad" It was not all in vain, was it?

    Thank you once again Howard.

    Andrew.

     

     

    • Like 17
    • Love 2
  10. 2 hours ago, SwanR said:

    We do like to support local businesses where we can. We shop quite a lot at Roys … both sides of the road 🤭 … and also over at Meale’s farm shop where of course we usually end up in Vera’s coffee shop as well. 

    Friday evening we had an excellent meal at the Granary at Ranworth. They’re serving their Christmas set price menu now on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday evenings as far as I know. It was well worth it. Lovely food and friendly service. 🎄

    Roys support local businesses and farmers, I believe that the Kings Arms at Ludham/Womack, support the local butcher at Ludham. who in turn support local farmers. The Granary at Ranworth, what a successful new venture! A great venue, focused, and now in a short period of time, a go to place.

    I have identified a few who have confidence in The Broads. There are others, some need guidance, lack a degree of busyness acumen.

    This is where the BA needs to assist, not in planning, not in marketing, not in ecological matters, plenty of them about.

    They need to be identified as an organisation that is able to act as an advisory body to, basically help, those who need professional experience. Not for the BA to provide that help, but to  use their knowledge and experience to direct those with a specific requirement towards those who have an expertise with regard to a  specific issue or problem.

    A Broads Authority that cares.

    Old Wussername    

    • Like 7
  11. An amazing photograph. I have never witnessed the like. However when I was a young boy we were never told, or would see photographs. No TV, no internet, of little importance. It happened and had no impact, presumably they just got on with it. 

    It was a natural phenomenon throughout Broadland. The Thorpe marshes, Acle marshes, Beccles marshes, Geldeston marshes.........flooded. 

    • Like 5
  12. 40 minutes ago, rightsaidfred said:

    If only, sadly you can replace the bright lively staff with disinterested underpaid youngsters in to many cases now and that's been one of the problems here.

    Fred

    Sadly with no training whatsoever. 

    • Like 2
  13. 1 hour ago, rightsaidfred said:

    Arn`t we all, good old days when you could spend a week playing darts for pub teams or following local groups in a different pub every night.

    Fred

    It was the way of many men folk in the day.

    The wife stayed at home. In her place.

    Not so different in that we witness in this very day in some of the deprived areas of our age.

  14. 5 minutes ago, Vaughan said:

    Before the Watneys monopoly, Norfolk folk reckoned that the best mild was Bullards and the best bitter was Steward and Pattesons, both brewed beside the Wensum in Norwich.

     

    I'll be heven a pint of two's, thank you kindly master. 

    • Like 1
  15. 45 minutes ago, kpnut said:

    You are doing a sterling job trying to support him. Don’t even give guilt any chance of taking hold. 

    Helen. No one, will ever understand.  My wife and I have had to experience the love and attention being rejected by a person who we have loved and respected.  

      

  16. If Breydon and the river Yare is no longer considered a commercial waterway then the Port of Norwich presumably in their definition no longer exists as a port. 

    How does this reflect on the Broads Authorities position with regard to the the rail bridge which crosses the river at Trowse  and of course Carrow Bridge with regard to navigation rights?

    • Like 3
  17. On 22/11/2023 at 10:09, Hylander said:

    Well obviously something is just not as it should be.   Without your health you have nothing is the saying and it is so true.  Let us hope and pray that Richard improves and can sort this out.   It does seem such a shame that a wealth of information from over the years could be lost.

    The site has been down for some considerable time. 

    I have had my differences with them over the years. In particular one or two of the moderators. 

    Who seem sadly lacking with regard to the issues regarding this particular  forum.

    Richard made an enormous contribution with regard to the introduction of the first meaningful forum with regard to the Norfolk Broads. l

    There were differences, difficulties, not insurmountable, but able to be recognised. To be resolved.  However such was the intensity of these issues perhaps, forgiven, forgotten.

    Who am I to judge. 

    Richard. I know. I have trod the path. Done the journey. Many of us have. Many before us have yet to  experience  and will take comfort from the majority of those who like yourself will have overcome all adversity.

    Respect, and good wishes from the other side.   

    • Like 3
    • Love 2
  18. 14 minutes ago, marshman said:

    Small niche pubs, even offering consistent high quality food, now struggle and the Ship will never make it now - been closed too long and little or rather nothing, to attract passing trade, sadly.

    I agree MM. At one time several years ago now, they served really good food. However the dining area was small and could not sustain the numbers required. 

    So many public houses have been lost during the past ten or fifteen years. 

    Some survive. The Shoulder of Mutton in Strumpshaw, miles away from civilisation,  rivers, main roads,all there is to see is fields of sugar beet and yet the place is rammend several nights a week. It is a "sweet spot". Some days/afternoons the car park is full to overflowing. Cars line the road outside the pub. 

    And yet so many pubs wither on the vine.

    • Like 6
  19. 13 minutes ago, Ray said:

    Managed retreat is no management at all. When a home or any other building, is close to falling into the sea the owner must pay demolition and clearance costs themselves (and are forced to do so) and then have to find themselves new homes (premises) . No wonder that this is the policy adopted, no one helps at all!

    How can people possibly afford this imposition. 

    Is there no compassion.

    • Like 2
  20. Dredging? Where Ian, I presume out at sea.

    Hemsby is an enourmous concern which should require more focused attention. A disaster happening, now, today, tonight, and for tomorrow. 

    If there is no consideration for the NOW. What hope is there for the future?

    • Like 1
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