Just after setting off |
Marston Doles - Napton Top Lock |
As with yesterday, some the pictures included in today's blog do not really add to the story except to rub it in just how great the weather and scenery are!
Mozarella Machine |
Just before the bottom lock these proud parents were carefully looking after their rather new brood.
We used the sani station immediately below the flight and then moved across to the opposite side for the water point - we had not filled up since leaving Lower Heyford.
Napton Windmill |
The clouds in front of us were beginning to take on different forms - although this did not last for long.
Brickyard Wharf |
Brickyard Bridge was once alongside, guess what, a brick yard! It has long since closed and been demolished and only a few clues to the past can be seen in the limited remains of the wharf. Behind we could just make out where the clay had been dug out of the ground. See here for an interesting photo when in full working order. This link also reports that the derelict house was once the manager's house and office.
Napton Junction |
Napton Reservoirs |
Below the locks, just after the first entrance to Ventnor Farm Marina we pulled in to the towpath to have a good lunch break. After some time we received en email from Andrew who thought that we were having a long break! (Today was the first time that he had been able to monitor our progress remotely using the new facilities that Mike has been adding to his CanalMap application. Later he also expressed concern that we might have sunk as the satellite image of a lock had no boat in it!)
Moored Boats at Hire Base |
We had not planned on going down the Stockton Locks today but as we were so early and we also believed that there was a shop selling newspapers at the bottom, we carried on.
Stockton Locks |
Again, a steady supply of boats coming up meant that we progressed remarkably quickly. It took just over an hour for the eight Stockton locks followed by the two called Long Itchington even though they are barely separated and more than the locks in the flight.
Blue Lias Pub |
Above Long Itchington bottom lock is the Warwickshire Fly Boat Co which seems to specialise in converted old working boats. Scenes like this line of bows would have been commonplace at one time.
As Mike worked the boat through this last lock of the day, Christine followed the sign to the shop, a genuine 'pop-to' shop as she was back by the time Mike had tied up so that he could close the gate after him. She not only returned with the newspaper but also a couple of choc ices and a report that it was an especially friendly shop.
A short while after we spotted a good stretch of bank (already well occupied by other boats) and pulled in for the night, not yet even four o'clock! hence this blog will appear rather earlier than usual.
Later, Mike took a walk along the nearby old railway line towards the former cement works at Southam. The tall chimney is an important landmark which we saw many times yesterday. He met two people walking a dog. One used to be an employee at one of the cement works - he suggested that the chimney here, together with that on the Cherwell north of Oxford, were used by German bombers on their way to Coventry.
Back at the boat and Mike looked up some of the history via the internet and it turns out to be remarkably fascinating - the works closed in 1999. We will not repeat the detail here but these are some links for anyone interested:
link link link link link link
9.3 miles - 22 locks
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