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kpnut

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Posts posted by kpnut

  1. 2 hours ago, dom said:

    instead incorporate a "garage" for full size bikes or kayaks?

    I wouldn’t say the current Brooms bikes are full-size. The family did look to be working hard, peddling 10 to the dozen to make much forward progress. But enjoying themselves and that’s the main thing. 

    • Like 2
  2. It’s just such an awkward shape though if you go on the ‘back’ mooring. I need to have the stern up against the quay to let the dog off as I don’t like him going off the bow - well I don’t like him bringing muddy shakes in through the bow door more to the point - and to get the stern into the quay there, the nose has to stick out into the river at an odd angle, especially as a Horizon 35 bows out in the middle herself. 
    Boats that are either shorter or that can have their stern hanging over the end of the quay look much more snug on that second spot. 

  3. I woke early and stayed in bed watching the river flow past. Not one boat passed me. Eventually I stirred and took the dog out before his breakfast.
    I was the last boat to leave which isn’t unusual!

    I firstly went down to the other moorings to take a look at a potential wild mooring on the opposite bank. I’d seen a boat moored there last night. It looks pleasant but will soon be full of tall stinging nettles. But the key to using a wild mooring like that when overgrown is to know it has solid ground under the trash. Now I know that, I wouldn’t mind mooring there in future and trampling down the nettles. 

    I set off towards Horning with three possibilities in mind. Horning staithe, Horning church mooring or Cockshoot?

    Horning staithe - electric, sociable but busy with boats and busy with people. Anyway, it was full. 

    Horning church - beautiful, quiet, good walks, but can be noisy with bow slap when windy.

    Cockshoot - sheltered, pretty but no good walks and can be busy with boats. 

    Horning church was empty so that won. After my late breakfast, we walked up to the church, along the path to the right of the carpark, onto the road and back along to the crossroads. Along the lane onto the main road and along the verge to walk down the track to the side of the radio mast. Following the well defined paths across the fields we came out on the lane to the Radar Museum. And then took the diagonal path to Neatishead Rd just up from Ropes Hill crossroads.
    I can’t quite believe how quickly the surface soil has dried out in this wind. Certainly the ploughed fields I walked across are just right now for rolling and harrowing to break the clods down to a seedbed.  
    In fact, one path was decidedly dusty in places! 
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    We stopped at Horning staithe for a while before walking along to the New Inn  I haven’t been there for quite a while so thought I’d have a glass of Fullers London Pride while sitting next to the river (see photo in previous post). The tide was still rising and as I sat there, the puddle in the garden grew noticeably bigger.

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    Another 5 minutes and I reckon people would be paddling through to get out of the garden  

    I helped a couple of dayboats having difficulty with the fast river and the gusty wind.
    The second boat was missing a mooring line on the port stern cleat and the starboard one was extremely frayed. I can’t see any sensible reason why a boat would be hired out in that state.  

    On arrival back at the boat, Finlay settled onto the sofa for a snooze while I sat on the bench in the sun eating the gooseberry icecream I’d bought yesterday. A couple on an HPC boat called across to ask if they could moor there, so I helped them in too. And a bit later a family walked down to do a spot of magnet fishing, so my observation of Horning church mooring being quiet wasn’t totally true.
    There were also plenty of boats this afternoon going past more speedily than is polite, fast enough for the quay heading to get wetted by waves a number of times and the boat to be bounced around somewhat. All seems quiet now. 

    • Like 11
  4. 2 hours ago, dom said:

    £4 in and of itself isn't a lot of money - but it's the cumulative effect for both private and hire boaters which is the issue. £4 for water, £30 for a pumpout, £10-15 per night to moor. Add that lot up over a week or two and it can be a significant sum on top of the cost of an already costly holiday.

    I met someone in Horning this afternoon in a very smart Broom boat. He lives in Southampton and is here with wife and teenage son. 
    He said he’d come four times before, the last time 15 years ago and he feels it has changed for the worse. Fewer moorings altogether, more charging for moorings beyond what he felt was reasonable to store up a fund for maintenance, and far less friendly. They’d just had lunch out at £16.50 a head for something that was nothing to write home about with poor service. 
    He said he won’t bother to come back again as the shine had been taken off it. 

    He did like the bikes that Broom had provided so they could go and explore the lanes though. 

    • Like 4
    • Sad 1
  5. 1 minute ago, catcouk said:

    Has anyone ever noticed just how much Oby Drainage Mill looks just like a giant Dalek?

    I think that’s its nickname. I’m so pleased to see it has a new made to measure tarp cap to try to stop any further deterioration. 

    Have fun tomorrow. 

    • Like 2
  6. 18 minutes ago, catcouk said:

    Not at all. I think we all have a responsibility to help each other out and keep our community safe. I apologise if my reply had sounded uffish - it wasn't meant to. The limitations of the written word!

    Don’t be daft, I’m happy you got over Breydon. 

    Last time I did it, I was the last boat across before it was shut for storm whatever. We literally bounced down that stretch between Berney Arms and Reedham, the fenders seating themselves up on deck at one point and one trying its best to come in the helm window. 
     

    And you are certainly not alone with that scenario of the stern wanting to stick itself to the bank in windy conditions. I think Ludham Bridge is one of the worst places for it, no matter that we think about it and do all the logical stuff. 
     

    That photo of all the food looks like you were at a party!

    And a beautiful reflection indeed. 

    • Like 2
  7. I’ve just completed a round of the marsh footpaths. It was beautiful, but hard going in places when the wind caught me. Pretty mud free though and unless my memory is playing tricks, the riverbank path is in more usable condition for this time of year than it was last year. I had spotted in the winter that it had been cut right down so the bank was visible from the river. 
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    St Benets moorings were  pretty full with sailing boats. They’d all come past me up Fleet dyke earlier.

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    The views across the marsh are lovely and clear today, not that my little phone camera can really do them justice.

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    Just by the electric pumping station with the generator parked up next to it, were some willow trees just coming into flower. I hadn’t realised before that the flowers have a very delicate hint of lemon, very pretty and a wonderful fragrance (I just wish the damn trees didn’t shed leaves all over my boat). 

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    The photo below shows the outcome of drilling winter barley on an area liable to flood. Compare the first photo, on the marsh, with the second of a field nearer the village.

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    I suppose getting some sort of yield for winter feed for the cattle is better than leaving it, but I’d be inclined to grow a cover crop to reduce nutrient loss over winter and then drill with spring barley. 
     

    I stopped off at the staithe on the way back. There are a pair of ducks with a nest in the bushes at the far end, so we quickly left them to it once I realised why they were shouting at us!

    And then to round off a lovely walk, the icecream boat (the ice float) turned up just as I was coming back to the boat. She moored up for me to buy a ‘blackcurrant swirl’ and a ‘Norfolk gooseberry’ (for the freezer). What a treat. 

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    • Like 7
    • Love 1
  8. 1 hour ago, catcouk said:
    4 hours ago, kpnut said:

    Be careful with this wind today and check with GY yacht station that Breydon is open to hire craft before venturing too far down there if that’s planned for today. 

    Expand  

    I have been keeping a very keen eye out for any updates about Breydon being closed. We're just about to depart Stacey Arms and all seems okay at the moment so fingers crossed!

    Oh good. I haven’t seen any either. Bumpy crossing ahead 😄

    I realised after I wrote it that it might have come across as being very condescending. My apologies, certainly not intentional. 

  9. I’m looking forward to your tale of your week afloat. I don’t often venture down south, but will be during the second half of April so any up to date date info would be most welcome. The tide times won’t be brilliant for us so it might be late finishes or early starts and not as long down there as I’d have ideally liked, but it’s do-able. 

    Have fun. Be careful with this wind today and check with GY yacht station that Breydon is open to hire craft before venturing too far down there if that’s planned for today. 

    • Like 2
  10. I had a quick trip from Womack dyke to Fleet dyke this morning. The wind on the bend moorings was swirling around in all directions which made mooring up difficult.

    We took a walk up the riverbank and inspected the wild mooring spots, which now look pretty good and ready for the season. Hope they get used well to keep the vegetation down. 

    And then we walked to Ranworth to support the Maltsters with a glass of cider. It was lovely to have the company of the Amber Gem crew again, Finlay is MOST taken with their husky, who at 15 is well past giving out hormonal attractants. They were like lovebirds, nuzzling each other!

    • Like 6
    • Love 1
  11. 9 minutes ago, Wussername said:

    And then, and only then, after due process, it comes back into the river. Exactly the same as it entered it.......as raw sewage.

    May I suggest that we cut out the middleman, what is the difference, what are we paying for? 

    A very good point. 

    • Like 1
  12. 7 hours ago, dom said:

    think if I do ever manage to get to a better position, I'd probably opt for a cocker. They're just that little bit calmer, and I'm not sure I've got the energy to keep up with a springer!

    I’ve met some pretty crazy cocker spaniels. ‘Pocket rockets’ they call the little ones that work like fury.
    Cockers are maybe that little bit less independent though, desperate to please, whereas a springer can often have a slightly more ‘I know better’ attitude when working - and they usually do know better.

    I’ve eventually learnt to let Finlay get on with his work, rather than trying to dictate to him where to go. It’s not so pleasing to watch as his quartering isn’t a windscreen wiper pattern, but it’s fruitful. 

    • Like 1
  13. 6 hours ago, YnysMon said:

    Loved the video of Finlay. He was so quick to pick up on the whistle. What a good boy!

    Not so sure Helen. If you watch carefully, he took no notice of the first whistle, probably because his head was stuck underneath a tussock. I shouldn’t have had to blow twice. 

    • Like 1
  14. 8 hours ago, Broads01 said:

    Have I understood correctly, the folks on Amber Gem 5 have bought the boat and kept its hire fleet name (which seems to be a common choice)?

    Yes, I should have made that more clear. Another ex Richos boat that gets a lot of use. Being orange, with blue canopies we often get mistaken for each other, but they have 2ft more space than me. 

    • Like 1
  15. I decided not to go far today, just up to Womack dyke. I stayed on the PH moorings long enough to heat the hot water with the immersion heater after my shower and hair wash this morning, and turn on the electric heater to dry the towel. What I forgot to do was to dry the insides of my wellies which I had presumed got wet yesterday from my feet overheating. So on arrival at Womack dyke I had to turn the diesel heater on for that job.
    It was only then that I discovered both wellie soles have splits right across. That explains the wet feet! I’ll just have to grin and bear it till my next trip as I don’t want to muck up my trainers. My wellies are ancient and have done me proud having a new role helping me to walk the Broads after being retired from allotment work. I expect the soles split in just the place where I used to push the spade into the heavy clay during 7 years of my kitchen garden job. 

    Soon after mooring up, Amber Gem 5 came along, so there we were, 2 orange boats being the only boats on the mooring. We had a bit of a catch up as I hadn’t seen them since packing my boat up for the paint job.

    The walk I chose was by far the cleanest, driest walk so far this trip. I went down the riverbank and along towards Potter Heigham, turning onto the causeway at the first cottage on the left. After having big issues with flooding over the winter months (in fact, the caravan parked on-site as accommodation while the house is being gutted was an island at one point) the owners have surface dressed the causeway and it was completely clean of mud - wonderful. 
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    Then up Fritton Road/Lane and we turned left onto the footpath that heads towards Ludham. 
    With a lack of much else to take photos of, I did a little video of Finlay exercising himself. I really don’t have to do these long walks. I reckon I could just leave him to it while sitting and watching. 

     

    (Not sure it’s working correctly, sorry)

    He got his reward a few minutes later, ferreting about in a thicket and flushing a pheasant. He is a good boy though as he doesn’t chase after flushing, just carries on looking for more. 

    We stopped in at the Kings Arms for what I thought would be a quick half (of Wherry), but I met the crew of Amber Gem 5 again, including their gorgeous husky, and didn’t leave till gone 6pm. What a joy to walk back down to the boat in the evening sun.
    Two things of note at Womack staithe

    - there were only 5 boats moored up, and the public WCs are closed at the moment due to the high water levels. 
     

    • Like 7
  16. I walked past a Melody yesterday on the moorings at Potter Heigham and was quite shocked by how high she was to get on, with the very high water levels. 
    If not too late to consider, I’d suggest bringing some sort of step or a stout wooden box to help, especially with littl’un. 

    • Like 2
    • Thanks 1
  17. So now I’m going to have be really, really, really careful about typing about are (my and Finlays) jollies. And just when I was thinking ‘you no what, its like getting real boring to read all this f* stuff from that dog and it’s owner.’

     

    Mind you, while typing those its and it’s, the predictive text kept putting in the apostrophe before I had written the rest of the sentence. Therein lies part of the problem! 

    • Haha 3
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