Blog 123 Namur to
Holland Meres
Sorry folks! It’s
been a long time since we wrote our last blog and we have met so many
people and discussed so often what we’ve all been doing during that
time that we actually thought we had posted another blog!!!!
So here goes, to make
amends. We left Namur with a kind donation of a map of our next
section from Sean and Lynne on ELLE but we failed to get their
contact details. Do get in touch S and L so we can return it!
We made good progress
down the fast flowing Meuse but after a couple of locks we came up
against a long queue of commercials waiting at the next lock.
Suddenly a voice came over the radio on Channel 10 saying “RICCALL
come forward to the front of the queue; you can go in with the next
commercial in front of me”. This came from the captain of a
commercial who had assessed the situation. So up we went and just as
we were about to enter the lock we got the red light. Wot! Again?
The lockkeeper didn’t think we could fit in with the other boats.
Actually, there was plenty of room but we waited and went with
SINBAD and Captain Hank (who had called us forward) on the next
lockage.
We arrived at Lanaye
lock a few kilometres before Maastricht and turned into the Meer just
downstream (Waterrecreatiecentrummere!!!!) We had been told of a
little mooring behind the island and with some trepidation nosed our
way round, keeping a watchful eye on the depth meter. All was well
and it was so nice and peaceful we spent 2 nights there – unable to
get off to go anywhere, but so quiet and delightful with just the
occasional passing rowing boat.
We had contacted our
friends Jeroen and Anja of DA CAPO II
who we had moored with 8 years before and who had been so kind to us. They said there were just upstream of the John F Kennedybrug in Maastricht, but we missed their turning and had to turn upstream to get back to them. It took ages against the strong current going nearly flat out, but we made it into their quiet and calm mooring and moored on their 39m barge.
who we had moored with 8 years before and who had been so kind to us. They said there were just upstream of the John F Kennedybrug in Maastricht, but we missed their turning and had to turn upstream to get back to them. It took ages against the strong current going nearly flat out, but we made it into their quiet and calm mooring and moored on their 39m barge.
A lovely couple of
days’ catch-up with them and one of their delightful now-grown-up
daughters Marijn (unfortunately Janne was away) then a late start for
Maasbracht.
Another lakeside mooring that night but the level dropped overnight so a bit aground in the morning - but no problem pulling away and off.
(More borrowed maps for our travels – thanks J and A.) |
The view from our mooring on Da Capo II - the Mastricht Treaty building |
Another lakeside mooring that night but the level dropped overnight so a bit aground in the morning - but no problem pulling away and off.
A few days later we
arrived at the Niewesluis Shijndal. An 80m commercial was moored up
on the ‘sport wachtplatts’ (mooring for pleasure craft) and a
110m waiting for the 135m lock on the commercial side opposite. We
moored behind him as we couldn’t see any mooring bollards for sport
boats. We were gearing up to ask the lockkeeper if we could use the
lock with the 110m when a 125m container carrier MISIKO arrived
behind us followed by another 85m barge. MISIKO just kept coming on
and on, and the two boatmen on the front told us to move (never mind
that we could have gone in with the 110m barge in front) “Go to the
other side, there ARE bollards” they said. We still couldn’t see
any, but we just had to move as this behemoth kept coming closer and
closer. So we started our move across the canal, but at that moment
the lock gates opened and THREE barges started to emerge. Alex made
a quick decision and in the face of the emerging barges swung RICCALL
in a circle under full power to the opposite side facing back the way
we had come, then we both frantically tried to secure our 80 tonne
barge to tiny pins 20mm in diameter and 100mm high with a minimal
taper towards the bottom, most of which had been broken off!
So we just stayed there until everything had calmed down and all the barges had gone, then asked the lockkeeper if we could just moor for the night at the very front end of the commercial mooring. “No problem” he said, so we did. (He had clearly seen the mayhem of our dismissal from the left bank to the right and took pity on us!)
MISIKO - our bete noir!! |
So we just stayed there until everything had calmed down and all the barges had gone, then asked the lockkeeper if we could just moor for the night at the very front end of the commercial mooring. “No problem” he said, so we did. (He had clearly seen the mayhem of our dismissal from the left bank to the right and took pity on us!)
We got to ‘S
Hertogenbosch (Den Bosch) where we were due to meet up with Alice and
Bea coming for a long weekend, and finally met Michael and Susan of
NAUTILUS who had been there for a few days (vet visits for their
lurcher Elvis).
It was a great mooring but a shame about the weather which has been pretty variable ever since we started out this season and that weekend was no different.
However we managed to catch an hour or so of sunshine on Sunday morning for a trip through the canal tunnels UNDER the city of Den Bosch with A and B, a visit to the cathedral statues and then into a café just as the heavens opened.
It was a great mooring but a shame about the weather which has been pretty variable ever since we started out this season and that weekend was no different.
However we managed to catch an hour or so of sunshine on Sunday morning for a trip through the canal tunnels UNDER the city of Den Bosch with A and B, a visit to the cathedral statues and then into a café just as the heavens opened.
Lock 0 in Den Bosch
only opens 3 times a week at 3 o’clock in the afternoons, and of
the 4 lift bridges on the section only the first, into the lock, is
raised. The one out of the lock is only 3.4m clearance when down and
the other ones are a bit higher. So it was going to be roof off for
us to go through and that would depend on the weather.
And then at 2.30pm the
sky cleared, the sun came out and we said right, we’ll go for it.
Our new friends on NAUTILUS have a fixed height of 3.4m so they were
going to ‘test the water’ as it were and come into the lock too,
the low bridge being on exit.
NAUTILUS in Lock 0 |
From the lock it’s
about 2kms to the next mooring and we could see a black cloud coming
towards us. Could we make it before the heavens opened again? Alex
gave it full speed ahead quickly onto the mooring, full reverse to
stop, the front rope missed the bollard but Alice jumped off and
popped it on, then the back rope, then we managed to get the roof
back on. It settled into position just as the first drops of rain
began to fall and before another absolute deluge!
Alice and Bea left on
the Tuesday and we set off again the next day. The first hurdle
would be the Egelen Sluis just before entering the fearsome Maas
(Dutch for Meuse). In we went with no problem alongside an 85m barge
on our right and a cruiser in front of us. Then as the gates started
to open to let us all out the 85m engaged his propeller and just sat
pushing against his front rope while the gates opened fully. We are
not sure why he did this but it set up quite a circulation of water
in the lock. Then he left and the cruiser left and we started to
leave – ropes off, kick the back end off, bit of reverse to pull
the front end off, then a VERY loud bang from the back of the boat.
Alex dashed out to see what had happened. The steering ram and the
rudder had become disconnected. Blimy!! Back to the radio, warn the
lockkeeper, try and rope a bollard. No chance. Riccall was being
spun round in the lock by the whirlpool set up by the commercial.
Well, that was lucky really because we ended up on the opposite wall
facing the other way and Louise just managed to get a rope on at the
front and with a touch of reverse the prop walk brought the back end
in and Alex could rope a bollard at the rear!! Phew!!
So now it was all out
to fit the emergency steering. It’s so long since we did this that
everything that had to be moved was jammed, and in the meantime a
HUGE pusher and dumb barge had gingerly entered the lock (having been
advised of our problem by the lockkeeper) and the lock was filling
back up.
Finally, just as the
gates opened again, we had the emergency tiller set up and with
Louise on the throttle and Alex on the tiller we set off back out of
the lock behind the pusher and his cargo.
“Just give it a quick
burst of power”, said Alex, with the tiller set at about 45o
to get us pointing the right way – whooommf, Alex was catapulted
across the deck by the force of the tiller. We had no idea what the
back forces were like as we had only ever used the emergency tiller
once before when being towed with no engine. So it was, “Easy on
the power Louise” and hang onto the tiller for dear life Alex!
It turned out that the
clamp bolts had come loose and the end bolt had sheared so Alex fixed
it during the afternoon and we returned to Den Bosch for another
night and a short ‘road or river test’ of the steering before
going out onto the raging torrent of the Maas (only about 3kph
actually as it turned out).
Whilst at Woudrichem
Historic Harbour on the Maas
we had heard from Nicci and Peter that there was the possibility of a good mooring in the historic barge port of Vreeswijk, a couple of days’ cruise away.
And sure enough, we were welcomed by Dick the Havenmeester and slipped into the mooring space vacated by Jeremy and Carol on ANTHONIA.
Snuggling up against some REALLY old ships in the historic harbour at Woudrichem |
we had heard from Nicci and Peter that there was the possibility of a good mooring in the historic barge port of Vreeswijk, a couple of days’ cruise away.
Vreeswijk historic harbour |
And sure enough, we were welcomed by Dick the Havenmeester and slipped into the mooring space vacated by Jeremy and Carol on ANTHONIA.
We decided
that perhaps a trip back to the UK would be useful to tick a few more
boxes vis a vis our move south. As it happened Nicci and Peter were
also returning to the UK and could give us a lift as far as Bruges
where our car was parked. So that was excellent and thanks very much
to them for that.
About 10 days back in
the UK, a trip north to check on the Newton Aycliffe house and to
bring another load of stuff down to Hawkinge, the usual appointments
with doctor, dentist and hairdressers, then back to France on the
14th. We were hoping to do a quick shop in a French Lidl
for the stuff they don’t stock in Holland – but we hadn’t
clocked that it was JULY 14th - Bastille Day in France -
and everything, but everything was tight shut.
Back at Vreeswijk we
stayed another few days (aware that we needed to leave before the
Historic Boat Event coming up) for some socialising (including a
lovely surprise visit from our Dutch friends George and Suzannah in
their campervan – who we’d met in Dordrecht 8 years before on
their tjalk AEOLUS: they had just got married after more than 15
years together) and a couple of evenings with John and Hilary of
ISKRA who had moored in the adjacent port while we were away, then
headed north again and onto the lovely, winding Vecht.
There we came across NAUTILUS again and had yet another boozy time catching up! It’s no fun this boating, but someone has to do it!
Lovely weather for our Vecht trip too |
There we came across NAUTILUS again and had yet another boozy time catching up! It’s no fun this boating, but someone has to do it!
A couple of days later,
we were out onto the southern end of the Markermeer which feels like
being at sea without the swell, which it is, I suppose, but it’s
quite hard at first to spot the buoyed channel. PC Navigo helps of
course, but quite often seems to guide us to the wrong side of some
of the buoys!
We risked going into Almere Haven for lunch and managed to moor up on a super quay next to a huge party boat called SUCCES.
It was so nice there that we asked to stay the night hoping against hope that the party boat wasn’t operating that night!! It wasn’t, and our mooring was fine with the Havenmeester.
We risked going into Almere Haven for lunch and managed to moor up on a super quay next to a huge party boat called SUCCES.
It was so nice there that we asked to stay the night hoping against hope that the party boat wasn’t operating that night!! It wasn’t, and our mooring was fine with the Havenmeester.
Since then we have used an excellent ex-industrial quay and two or three island moorings on our way to our present position which is a canal-side ‘ligplatts’ – a boat mooring place provided and often free – just south of a lovely town called Blokzijl.
From here it’s
onwards into Friesland proper and then to our lift-out in Harlingen
for our hull check and repaint. More of that later.
2 comments:
Hi Alex and Louise,
I hope you are okay. I couldnt find your private email therefore I am writing through here. I wanted to contact you about Anja and Jeroen from Netherlands whom have sailed to Cyprus with dacapo around 1990s and had a very good friendship with my father, Harun. He doesnt remember their surname unfortunately and they have lost contact through the years however, my father has been trying to reach them ever since. I am visiting Netherlands at the moment which reminded my father about his old friends that made me start a search on the internet and thankfully came across to your blog. Do you have their contact information by any chance for us to get intouch? Please email me through meliserhun@me.com and i would share more details if you would like as old pictures and cards. Thank you for your help. Looking forward for your reply. Best Regards Melis
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