It has been quite a few weeks since our last blog and what a
few weeks it has been! We did at one
point contemplate not carrying on with blogging but having re-read some of our
earlier stuff and the memories they kindled, we decided that we just had no
option but to keep on writing.
So, we left Tonnerre after waiting a few days for the
weather to improve (the very first bridge was going to be a ROFF – Alex had
been up and measured it). Our first
attempt at mooring at Tanlay was rather hampered by a land and aquatic fun day
for the village youngsters. The best
moorings were full of kids in canoes but we managed to squeeze in on the
opposite side in the shallows – only 2ft from the quay. The chateau at Tanlay was pretty impressive
with some amazing trompe d’oeils. Our
very next mooring in the middle of nowhere left us so far from the shore even
our 8ft gangplank wouldn’t reach, but we had no passing boats thankfully and
enjoyed a spectacular thunderstorm overnight.
Another ROFF to start the next day but around lunchtime the
day looked a bit overcast so we put the roof back on. Lucky we did, because as we travelled up
through the next few locks together with a hire boat full of lads, the rain
began to fall in earnest and suddenly blew into a minor hurricane. We all got absolutely soaked, as in ‘up’
locks we have to be on deck holding and adjusting our ropes, and while we all
had a good laugh about it, the fat Madame Eclusiere couldn’t crack a
smile. She was of course soaked too but
. . . miserable cow!
On exiting the lock and before the next suspect bridge Alex
spotted a lone bollard. We moored up for
the night and there was even plenty of depth – a rarity on this canal. That evening as the sun came out again we
walked up to the local village. But in
the morning, the approaching hotel boat had one hell of a job getting past us
and lining up for the lock: not that he seemed over concerned: all part of the
job I suppose.
In due course we got to a mooring at Pouillenay, where the
notice board offered us two delightful and historic villages and towns to
visit, Flavigny at 5kms or Semur at 10kms.
Flavigny won for obvious reasons, but we didn’t realise that 3 of the
5kms was steeply uphill, and the rest steeply downhill. The village itself was just great, totally
unspoilt and complete with its protective surrounding wall intact. We sat in a café in a square having drinks
and pouring over our map for a better way back – longer but flatter –
definitely better!
We also noticed that there was a bus to the town of Semur which also passed
through our next proposed mooring at Marigny.
So the next day we moored up for the night and asked our kindly
lockkeeper if the bus was still running to Semur. (We had given him a jar of Riccall chutney
for his efforts that day in working the locks.)
And he said (all in French of course) “Be ready at 12pm and I will give
you a lift”!. So he did just that in his
lunch break, and collected us again just after 5pm – so kind. We had a nice day in Semur but got soaked
again when we ran into another rainstorm.
This time though we were trapped on the Petit Train, with no hope of
keeping dry.
Our next mooring at Port Royal
has to rate as another one of the best.
The moorings were adjacent to a beautiful Chambre d’Hote village house
which operated them (water and electricity included) in what had once been a
thriving village with charcuterie and boulangerie, now sadly all closed, but
mine host happy to provide baguettes and croissants in the morning. The restaurant across the road run by Basil
Faulty’s French cousin did excellent Charolais steak and chips, with massacred
French beans as the side veg! - surprisingly common in France .
A few days later we were finally at Pouilly with the 3km
restricted-dimension tunnel to negotiate ahead of us. Alex spent the day installing lengths of
split plastic pipe over the handrails at the front to protect them from the
tunnel walls (a good use of time as it turned out) and fixing some old 4 foot long
8” x 2” baulks of wood which we had once used as glissoires years ago, through
the bollards front and back. He used
luggage ratchet straps to fix the wood at an angle between the bollards so that
each protruded about 50cms each side to keep us near the middle of the
tunnel. As it turned out it all worked
well, but the handrails only cleared the roof of the tunnel by about 6” each
side so it was slow but steady as you go.
At Vandenesse we had to leave the lovely moorings after just
one night as the town was about to hold a firework party, so we moved on a
couple of kms and moored between locks on a post and a makeshift G clamp on the
armaco just behind the barge IBAIA. We
met the new owners Richard and Lynda and we all walked up to Chateauneuf in the
warm sunshine.
Our descent of the Bourgogne Canal
from the tunnel went without many incidents, most of the bridges being JUST
high enough, and with the number of hotel barges on this side, the depth was
absolutely fine.
We did come across one unexpectedly low bridge between two
locks near Epoisses, which were being worked for us by an eclusier and had to
do an emergency stop. The lockkeeper
came scooting back on this VESPA and we explained we just had to take 5 minutes
getting the roof off. “Pas de problem”
he said, and watched as we did it giving us a thumbs up when the job was
done. The fisherman beside this said
bridge never raised his eyes! (Of
course, he’d seen it all before!
Yeah! Typical!)
Finally we got down to St Jean de Losne and a long wait in
the basin waiting for the lock out onto the Saone . The town quay moorings were predictably full,
but the ‘secret’ hidden ring on the sloping wall of the launch ramp which Jill
and Robert of DANUM had told us about, was free so we hooked on there.
We had now completed the Canal de Bourgogne, one of the
jewels in the crown of the French canal system, and we would be travelling
north again by the Canal du Marne à Saone, now called the Canal entre Champagne
et Bourgogne (we prefer the old name).
There is much to commend the Bourgogne with isolated stretches and few
boats but the manual locks, operated by roving eclusiers make it difficult to
make unplanned stops, as the VNF like to know what your movements are at all
times, and you don’t know what you might like to do or see if you haven’t done
that particular canal before!
At Auxonne we stopped for lunch on the town quay and Alex
fashioned an ingenious (Louise says) system to get water from the push and hold
tap close by.
Then at the next lock just before our turn on to the Marne à
Saone , the rain started again. We took pity on a middle-aged couple of
cyclists, who were sheltering under the bridge over the lock, and invited them
on board for a warming cuppa and shelter.
They gratefully accepted and we took them with us through the next
couple of locks to our mooring at Maxilly.
We managed quite a good chat with our limited French and they were
delighted to have spent a short time on a barge for the first time in their
lives.
The next day the first thing we met was a fully laden
peniche. Crikey! We thought they had pretty well stopped using
this canal! But it was one of very few
we met up with on the canal.
That night we moored in front of an Australian couple on a
cruiser, who had seemingly moored right in the middle of the long quay, leaving
us just enough room to get in in front of them.
The guy took a rope for us, as the moorings were rings and that is
helpful, and we motored forward on that to get the stern into shore and our
other rope on, whereupon Mrs came out very flustered and said in no uncertain
words, that we were too close to her boat.
Fine! We’ll move back a bit to
give you 2 metres clear instead of one – not a problem, if that’s what you
want. No need to get your knickers in a
twist!
She was just as twitchy the next morning when we left,
convinced that we would scratch her precious cruiser. Needless to say, we didn’t fraternise with
them, but thought it unusual behaviour for Ozzies, who are usually so friendly.
We now had more of a target for meeting Mary and Martin who
were due to visit us for a few days’ cruising.
There was definitely a station at Joinville, where two trains a day
still stop on the line that runs down this canal. We had plenty of time to get
there for their arrival, but in the meantime we found ISKRA at the Chaumont
mooring, together with a South African boat called SEA HAWK. We had kept in touch with John and Hilary
since we met them 4 years ago on the Canal du Centre and had even visited them
at home near Nottingham , so it was great to
catch up. And we also got to know Alan,
Liz, Richard and Lorraine of SEA HAWK and had drinks with them.
We spent the next few days leapfrogging with these two boats
till Friday when we got to Joinville at lunchtime. We knew in advance from them that there was
room for us on the quay so that was a relief.
Louise had been longing to have her hair cut and on Friday
afternoon went into town and had the job done.
Liz and Lorraine
coincidentally had also gone into town for the same purpose though to a
different hairdresser. Seeing Louise’s
new short hair, Alex decided he had better try on Saturday morning for a ‘coupe
normal’ too. Having ridden all round the
town twice looking for the best deal (!) he suddenly saw a little coiffure on
the corner which looked his kind of place.
‘C’est combien pour un coupe normal?’ €11. Great, and she could do it now. Best haircut he’s ever had so when he got
back to the boat and told John about it, John set off hotfoot for the same
place. A great deal for Chaumont – 12
boaters and 5 of them had spent money on hairdressing in the town!!
Mary and Martin duly arrived late on Saturday night and the
next day we set off for the mooring at Bayard which only had room for one boat.
Unfortunately SEA HAWK had beaten us to it so we motored on to Chamouilly. The next day was a short one into St Dizier,
though this did require a quick ROFF at the railway bridge (not unexpected) and
a treat for Mary and Martin who had never seen the procedure before.
St Dizier is not a bad place despite the rather dilapidated
moorings, and we had a nice amble round and lunch courtesy of Mary and Martin
(another thank you to them) in one of the pleasant squares. It is the birthplace of Hector Guimard who
designed those famous cast iron entrance porticos for all the Metro stations in
Paris in the
20s, and also many balconies, gates and other functional or decorative ironware
in St Dizier and elsewhere. Much of this
was evident, not unnaturally, in the town and we waited till 9.30 the following
morning to have a look at the town museum where some of his work and other
artefacts are held.
Apart from ISKRA and SEA HAWK, we saw only a handful of
other boats on the canal, so we were not surprised to see them at Orconte when
we arrived. What did surprise us though
was that by 7pm that evening another FOUR boats had joined us on the quay and a
hotel barge which had wanted to moor up had to decide to motor on a couple of
kms up the canal for his mooring spot.
Weird! Amongst those four boats
was another we knew of old - AILSA - with Mike and Sally aboard.
Finally we got to Vitry-le-Francois and managed to moor
behind a VNF workboat above the lock into the town. This was an excellent spot as it was close to
the station for Mary and Martin to catch their return train next morning and
peaceful being away from the town centre, the only downside was the loss of the
sun behind a huge silo in the evening.
Vitry marks the end of the Canal de Marne à Saone and we had loved it. In some ways it is better than the Bourgogne partly because
all the locks are automated and therefore don’t need roving lockkeepers
watching your every move, and also because the canalside vistas of countryside
seem wider and more spectacular.
From here we are on the Canal Lateral a la Marne
- a more industrialised waterway – but attractive nonetheless.
We gave Chalons en Champagne a miss, as since the last time
we were there, the moorings have been updated with a new capitainerie, finger
pontoons, water, electricity, and of course costs, and much less quay space
suitable for barges. SEA HAWK and ISKRA
had managed to squeeze in but there was no room for us, so we carried on to one
of our favourite moorings at Condé.
At Condé we were joined by Hubert on his barge DEWAALST whom
we had first met at Auxerre and later at Clamecy, and he came for drinks with
us. We saw him again a couple of days
later when he pulled in to our mooring north of Reims
just before we set off for a morning shopping trip. His new inverter had stopped working: so Alex
had a look and managed to get it going again, and also suss what had caused the
problem. One very happy Hubert went on
his way, and we went off and did our Lidl and Leclerc shopping.
We are now about to join the Canal Lateral à L’Aisne to
Compiègne, another new canal for us, and then head north for our winter
moorings back in Seneffe.
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