
The locks both ways must be booked in advance & are only open & manned 12noon until 2pm after which they’re padlocked! Only 12 boats are allowed down daily and once a quota of 1250 boats is reached (annually) the canal is closed to traffic. Another point to bare in mind is the speed limit of 3mph which is enforced for conservation reasons.
Quidditch & Tagine were the last 2 boats in the 12 so a 90 minute wait gave us both time to catch up on the gossip. After emerging thru’ Frankton locks we completed the remaining 4 locks together & made the 7 mile navigable passage to Maesbury in around 4hrs. In the evening we visited The Navigation Inn which was directly opposite our mooring and had an excellent meal as the thunder once again rattled in!
Wednesday 20th.. After turning at Gronwyn Wharf, which is the limit of the navigation, we had a leisurely 4hr cruise back to Weston Wharf around a ½ mile from Frankton Junction, where the plan was to moor in position for the lock up at midday.
My impressions of the Montgomery are mixed. The canal is quite pretty & well serviced for elsan, bins & water but really nothing out of the ordinary & is straight & long for good periods of the 7 mile stretch. The moorings are poorly tended & un-inviting, they are overgrown & there are none after the Graham Palmer lock until you reach the ‘Queens Head’ (full on our visit) & Maesbury. Disappointingly the Maesbury towpath was full of dog crap and I have to say that Frankton Locks also had its fair share! The lock keeper who lives at Frankton is a really helpful chap and very chatty. In conclusion it was nice to have completed the section and well done to those who have restored it but it’s not the ‘Oh! you have to do the Montgomery’ a lot of people have raved about.
Thursday 21st.. You wouldn’t think it was midsummer’s day! Always fun to see ‘I wanna be 1st at the locks syndrome’. I could see by my strategic viewpoint, (and binoculars), from around a ½ mile away that the 1st lock back up had a queue of 4 boats by 9am, pointless really as the locks aren’t open until midday and the lock mooring is shallow & insufficient. So we had a leisurely breakfast and walk along the Weston Branch disused arm and were then treated to several card tricks aboard Tagine by the ultra-talented John.
At around 12.30pm we sauntered up to the locks and made a slow transition through, emerging as the last boat of the day at around 2.15pm only a ½ hour behind the 1st boat which had been queuing since 9am. At the top we moored for a cuppa with John & Joan before heading our separate ways, NB-Tagine back down to Ellsmere and Quidditch up to Llangollen which we should hit by Saturday.
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