
The Pontcysyllte is easily the most famous & most spectacular feature on the whole canal system. Apart from its great height of 126ft above the River Dee and its length of 1007ft, the excitement to be derived from crossing this structure by boat is partly due to the fact that, while the towpath side is fenced off with, albeit widely spaced iron railings, the offside is completely unprotected from around 12inches above the water level, hence a sheer drop. I have to say that unlike Dee, who was unfased by the whole event I found it slightly daunting steering Quidditch across and looking straight down 100ft. We completed our epic by mooring in the Llangollen Basin at around 7pm.
Saturday June 23rd.. After our epic yesterday we took time out to enjoy the Llangollen visitor moorings and the added benefit of shoreline electricity. After breakfast we visited Llangollen town centre for shopping and took a trip on the Llangollen Steam Railway.
Sunday June 24th.. We walked the 2 mile remainder of the un-navigable section of the canal, which culminates at the well known Horseshoe Falls where the Llangollen Canal originates and then set off from the basin at around 3pm. The plan was to complete the Llangollen – Trevor section and after taking the return trip across the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct mooring just prior to the Whitehouse Tunnel.
I would say that the Llangollen – Trevor section is one of the most difficult sections on any canal, narrow & shallow with several sections only wide enough for 1 boat to navigate. Just the place you don’t want to meet total incompetents!!
One example was a hire boat that proceeded against us despite plainly seeing us, a clear BW sign informing you to stop & send a crew member ahead to check the section is clear & Dee actually telling them to wait. Another was a group of 3 guys ahead of us the whole stretch who instead of allowing us to pass were more intent on fishing & boozing & were totally incapable of navigating. Hitting every bridge and stopping dead, resulting in grounding, every time a boat passed the opposite way, it was like watching the ball of a pinball machine and not very funny. Despite having great patience with hire boat crews who are in general quite competent, helpful & willing to learn, I don’t believe I’ve seen as many useless individuals as we encountered today. I would simply ask anyone planning to hire a narrowboat to please do their research and use their common sense, it ain’t rocket science!
Monday June 25th.. Today we moved from our overnight mooring at Whitehouse Tunnel, 9 miles & 2 locks, to Frankton Junction in the most appalling weather we’ve ever experienced on a canal. With driving rain and strong winds it felt like the middle of February not the end of June. I must say that we felt totally sorry for a couple who we passed on a ‘Day Boat’ hired from Maestermyn Marine who were being blown & buffeted across the canal as the wind crashed in over an open field. We finally moored at around 4pm and within 10 minutes the fire was lit & the wine was out. Best place to be in winter…… I mean summer!!!
Saturday June 23rd.. After our epic yesterday we took time out to enjoy the Llangollen visitor moorings and the added benefit of shoreline electricity. After breakfast we visited Llangollen town centre for shopping and took a trip on the Llangollen Steam Railway.
Sunday June 24th.. We walked the 2 mile remainder of the un-navigable section of the canal, which culminates at the well known Horseshoe Falls where the Llangollen Canal originates and then set off from the basin at around 3pm. The plan was to complete the Llangollen – Trevor section and after taking the return trip across the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct mooring just prior to the Whitehouse Tunnel.
I would say that the Llangollen – Trevor section is one of the most difficult sections on any canal, narrow & shallow with several sections only wide enough for 1 boat to navigate. Just the place you don’t want to meet total incompetents!!
One example was a hire boat that proceeded against us despite plainly seeing us, a clear BW sign informing you to stop & send a crew member ahead to check the section is clear & Dee actually telling them to wait. Another was a group of 3 guys ahead of us the whole stretch who instead of allowing us to pass were more intent on fishing & boozing & were totally incapable of navigating. Hitting every bridge and stopping dead, resulting in grounding, every time a boat passed the opposite way, it was like watching the ball of a pinball machine and not very funny. Despite having great patience with hire boat crews who are in general quite competent, helpful & willing to learn, I don’t believe I’ve seen as many useless individuals as we encountered today. I would simply ask anyone planning to hire a narrowboat to please do their research and use their common sense, it ain’t rocket science!
Monday June 25th.. Today we moved from our overnight mooring at Whitehouse Tunnel, 9 miles & 2 locks, to Frankton Junction in the most appalling weather we’ve ever experienced on a canal. With driving rain and strong winds it felt like the middle of February not the end of June. I must say that we felt totally sorry for a couple who we passed on a ‘Day Boat’ hired from Maestermyn Marine who were being blown & buffeted across the canal as the wind crashed in over an open field. We finally moored at around 4pm and within 10 minutes the fire was lit & the wine was out. Best place to be in winter…… I mean summer!!!
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