We’ve followed the canals through Manchester
and we can now see the Pennines from where
we’re moored this evening. The next few
days we will spend climbing up and over to the East side of England.
Our route to Manchester
took us through Macclesfield on the canal of the same name. We passed this huge mill which was where
Hovis was originally made. The building,
which had its own entrance from the canal, has now been converted into
flats.
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Hovis Building, Macclesfield |
The Macclesfield Canal comes to an end at the top of the Marple flight
of locks heading down to Manchester, but before
we tackled these we followed the Peak Forest Canal
to its terminus near Whaley
Bridge in
Derbyshire. We actually spent the night
at Bugsworth Basin, which sounds terrible but was in
fact a wonderful example of industrial archaeology – like mooring in a
museum. The basin was where limestone
brought down from the hills by tramway was loaded into canal boats for transport
all over the North West. There are several basins for loading stone
and lime and all these are now open for mooring pleasure boats. Here is where we spent the night:
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Bugsworth Basin |
That afternoon we climbed a nearby hill a thousand feet
above the canal which itself is at over 500 feet above sea level. We enjoyed fine views of the Kinder Scout
plateau, despite the drizzly weather. We
timed our return from the walk so that we were able to meet Sue (Victoria’s Mum) at Whaley Bridge
station. Sue stayed with us for a couple
of days into Manchester
and had great fun helping to operate the locks.
We enjoyed a meal that night at the Navigation pub at Bugsworth which
was having a beer sale with some ales at £2 a pint.
On Thursday we retraced our outward journey along the Peak Forest
Canal which hugs the side
of the steep Goyt valley with fine views across to Kinder:
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Kinder plateau from Peak Forest Canal |
A passing duck paid us a visit
and left a few deposits on the roof as mementos of her
visit!
We then dropped down the 16 very deep locks of the Marple
flight. These were amongst the most
difficult locks we’ve found so far. The
paddle gear was very stiff, the gates difficult to operate and the bywashes
(these take the excess water around each lock) below the locks were fierce
enough to throw the boat all over the place.
This flight of locks took us to the outskirts of Manchester.
From there we’ve had two very hard days into and out of Manchester. The problem is that the Ashton
Canal into the city and the Rochdale Canal out of it pass through some very
deprived areas where passing boaters have had problems in the past from some of
the local residents. The advice is to
start early in the morning, to get through the lock flights by midday or soon
after and not to moor overnight in these areas.
So on Friday we set off boating at 5 am and descended the
Ashton flight into the centre of Manchester,
arriving about 12:30pm. And on Saturday
we set off soon after 7 am to ascend the Rochdale
flight of locks heading out of the city, arriving at a safe mooring by around 4
pm. The Rochdale
locks are pretty difficult with the canal full of rubbish, gates that don’t all
open properly and a multiplicity of mechanisms for opening gates. Normally a long beam provides the leverage to
open the lock gates, but the Rochdale
Canal has been restored
after years of disuse and there was not always space to replace the balance beams. Here is an example of one lock using a cog
and gear wheel to open the gate.
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Cog driven gate opening mechanism |
Others used chains which were wound with the windlass normally
used to open the paddles on the locks.
And all the locks have anti-vandal devices which must be locked and
unlocked each time. The rubbish in the
canal gets sucked into the propeller housing and we had to continually duck
down into the weed hatch, not an experience for the faint hearted. We pulled out much of a child’s bicycle which
was wrapped around Leo’s propeller and later also a bath towel, not to mention
a whole bag full of supermarket plastic carrier bags. Later and more seriously David and Victoria’s
propeller hit something very hard coming into a lock and now has a chip bent
out of it the size of a 10p piece. Not
surprisingly there is more vibration and the boat does not go as well as it
did. David is investigating whether this
is covered by his insurance policy.
So what did we think of Manchester?
Well we had decided not to stay more than one night, so perhaps we
didn’t do the city justice. We did visit
the Museum of Science and Industry (known as MOSI)
which was brilliant. It is built on the
site of the oldest railway station in the world serving the Liverpool and Manchester railway that
started the railway boom. I think we
need to stay longer to appreciate the city and we were very tired after our 5
am start, but good secure moorings are in very short supply. Birmingham
has made a great commercial success of its canals: Manchester sadly has not. Here is a picture of a tram taken as we walked
through the city.
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Manchester Tram |
Coming out of Manchester
we operated this vertical lift bridge, stopping the traffic and even a bus in
the process:
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Vertical Lifting Bridge |
We passed a number of cotton and other mills, now either
derelict or used for other purposes:
And here finally is a picture of the delightful cottage at
the top of the Slattocks flight of locks above which we are moored
tonight. The owner is also a
narrowboater and we think that we saw their narrowboat (there is a picture by
the house) at Ellesmere, but can’t be sure.
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Cottage at Slattocks Top Lock |
The next few days will be more relaxed as we climb gradually
over the Pennines and start to drop down towards Halifax
and Wakefield.