It was good to pass a church that goes out of its way to welcome canal visitors - the church itself is hidden amongst the trees in the background.
Double Arch Bridge |
The pound between Greenberfield locks and the start of the Banknewton flight is very bendy - so much so that one mile length along the canal covers barely a third of that as the crow flies! However, whilst in the days of working boats this was no doubt a frustration to boats that had deadlines to keep, today it adds to the picturesque qualities of the canal.
Banknewton Top Lock |
Banknewton Bottom Lock |
By the time we completed the flight there was a pleasant amount of sunshine and we were all beginning to feel it warm enough when working locks!
There is not much more than a long straight between this flight and the next at Gargrave. We were paired up again but this time with the boat we shared with last night! Gradually boats were mooring up for lunch and so there was a continual swapping of partners!
Priest Holme Aqueduct |
Alongside one of the locks is another of the flow measuring installations which had intrigued us on the Rufford Branch.
Views of the surrounding hills continued to provide the backdrop to the canal.
Three locks down we found a gap in the line of moored boats - others had already pulled in fore their lunch break. This also gave Christine a chance to pop down to the village for a few supplies and a newspaper. last year, Mike went down with the girls.
Lock 31 |
Another view . . .
Gargrave Bottom Lock |
The section between Gargrave and Skipton has a number of swing bridges. We were pleased to find that they were very easy to operate (once the handcuff keys have been removed - they can be a bit of a Chinese puzzle at times). One even had a notice citing the telephone number to call if it is found to be too hard to open. Perhaps some special maintenance effort has been applied to making them much better balanced. Once started to move, they now almost move by themselves.
On the approach to Skipton, the bypass road bridge is a quite spectacular form of modern engineering (box girder bridges: well only introduced when Mike was doing his original PhD!)
We moored close to the railway station as tomorrow we have a car shuffle day - Christine also plans to visit a launderette in Skipton which she has checked out. Mike contacted the marina in Greenfield where he had hoped to move the car and where we will leave the boat at the end of this trip but alas they do not have room. Some time then had to be spent re-planning but Andrew and Mike still expect to be off on the 9am train to Lancaster tomorrow.
Here are some more views from today.
10.5 miles - 12 locks
2 comments:
Mike your photos are not coming up on feedly or on blog. I am on v fast broad band at the mo so it isn't the connection. Any ideas?
Is that for all of them? There is usually a few minutes delay between posting the text and adding the pix (it's just the way I do it!) But the ones from previous days seem OK to us . . .
Your posting came in the middle of that process so ,please, can you let me know if they are visible now.
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