Monday, 27 August 2012

Journey to Brighton- Part 2, Maiden Voyage


We bought Enid from the Fish and Duck Marina (also called Pope's Corner I believe) where the river Cam meets the Great Ouse. Right in the middle of the flattest, windiest, bleakest part of England, the Fens. The few weeks that we spent there impressed upon me the true vastness of the earth and sky, showed me some mind-blowing sunsets and gave me more than one wind-blown ear ache. It also demonstrated that with minimal electricity/cooking implements and reading material you will become so mind-numbingly bored that walking 3 miles in a gale to the nearest charity shop and buying Robot Wars the board game becomes THE MOST EXCITING THING EVER. It is a good game, like chess but not as hard and with more opportunity to shout ‘ACTIVATE!’ 

At the Fish and Duck. This was before we renamed her and she was still called 'Slow Progress'

The people who lived at Fish and Duck were very friendly and helpful, as river dwellers usually are, and gave some very good tips. I think they could see we needed all the help we could get as scruffy, excitable, wild-eyed twenty year-olds. We went into living-aboard with essentially no prior boat knowledge, and there was a lot to learn very quickly.

The main challenge we had before us was moving the boat from Cambridgeshire to Brighton. Transporting a boat 150 odd miles is no mean feat. After some logistical calculations with a map of the inland waterways we realised that we would need to move the boat mostly by road. But before we could do that we needed to drive the boat to somewhere it could be lifted by crane out of the water. Luckily for us the nearest place was 20 miles downstream, and we were pretty excited about cruising there! 

The other issue was neither of us had really driven a boat before. Just before we set off on the maiden voyage there was a strange buzzing coming from the region of the engine which made us panic, obviously fairly noisily because the nice man in the boat next to us popped his head out for long enough to tell us the water pump was humming because our water tank was empty (absolutely nothing to do with the engine it turns out, and definitely nothing to panic about). He chuckled and pointed us to the hose. We had invited a few good friends over to see the boat and also help us by standing on deck and pre-empting any boat crashes. River boats don’t move very fast and collisions can be avoided with the use of a long pole and a gentle push in the other direction. But the marina we had to navigate out of had a few very sharp turns and was filled with very lovely and probably very expensive house boats.

Alex decided to tackle this issue by grabbing the bull by the horns and setting off with no prior warning to anyone else (we were still eating breakfast).
‘Aaaah I’m driving the boat!’ he screamed ‘Everyone come and help me… Get on deck!’
Our good friend Henry was pulling his socks on urgently, cup of tea still in hand
‘No time for shoes Henry!!’ Alex shouted

The element of surprise paid off, and we steered out of a marina for the first time with no incidents. This was followed by much whooping and beer opening, the boat slowly veering towards the riverbank before we remembered to stop celebrating and start steering again.

Success!

Our first port of call was Ely, it wasn't really on route but we really liked the idea of mooring the boat up outside a lovely pub and having a bit of a jaunt around before, the cruising got serious, or as serious as it can be!

We met more friends in Ely, went to the pub, cruised up and down the river singing songs and generally having a lovely time. I saw the rest of my life stretching out in front of me, full of Wind in the Willows-esque picnics and afternoon G&T’s, it was joyous. I’d like to say I wasn't mistaken, but I was little bit, the boat hasn't been all plain sailing as they say. I do still make time for afternoon G&T’s though. The next day we were woken by twenty-odd Canada geese staring through our window. It was time to drive the boat across Cambridgeshire.

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