Today is one of those days that makes winter cruising pure pleasure. We’re in the Pennines and all around us the high hill tops are coated in a generous dusting of white, under a clear blue sky and bright sun, and with not enough of a breeze even to waft a flag. There’s a light crusting of ice on the canal, hardly enough to worry the bitumen but that didn’t matter anyway because, having not seen another moving boat for weeks, one came towards us as we set off, leaving a furrow for us all the way.
Freyja and Christina attract interest wherever they cruise and may be your opportunity to escape the rat race and enjoy a less expensive more relaxed lifestyle without the responsibilities of a classic pair. Their liveaboard configurations provide motorcycle stowage, spare backcabin, workshop, shop, greenhouse, storage and a chicken coop. So, space and freedom, on boats that fit comfortably into the short locks of the L&L and the singles of the Macc and the Peak Forest. A go-anywhere pair.
Saturday, 28 January 2012
Wednesday, 11 January 2012
The brew cupboard
We’ve finished the last of the sloe wine that we had saved for the year-end celebrations; the Bloke picked them in November, 2010, when we were on the Bridgewater . It’s hard to believe that we managed to keep some wine for that long. I’ll need to remind myself in a few months’ time how worthwhile it was. And now it’s back to the summer’s elderflower wine, which was disappointing this year.
This year altogether was a lean one for hedgerow pickings, so we’re looking out for cheap deals on swedes or parsnips. When the elderflower has been consumed, there’s a gallon of tea wine almost ready in the brew cupboard over the calorifier, and another of sage. Sage we can grow in the greenhouse and on the boats’ roofs and tea wine we make from all the left-over herbal- and flower teas that were bought on a whim and now take up space going stale at the back of the cupboard. They make an acceptable stand-by wine, but generally we don’t like to have to buy the main ingredient; the finished product always seems to taste better when you’ve picked it yourself.
Saturday, 7 January 2012
Bright Nights
The little conifer tree that we keep from year to year on Christina and bring into Freyja around the 21st December to provide a waft of freshness and to mark the lengthening days, is now back in the greenhouse; the seasonal decorations of holly and ivy have served their last function by providing some energy in the range for a mid-morning cup of coffee; and all the shiny things have been packed away. Their glitter is welcome on the dark evenings, so two years ago we didn’t pack away two strings of battery powered led lights, instead the Bloke arranged them in the display cabinets, where they make the crystal sparkle. I know, that sounds hugely naff, but the brightness makes me smile.
Thursday, 5 January 2012
Stuff of Dreams
The Bloke was up-top enjoying a late afternoon drink – dusk comes early at this time of year. A cyclist stopped – he’d seen the For Sale sign in the greenhouse.
“Is that fifty-five thousand for both boats ?” he asked.
“Yes” said the Bloke.
“Why two then ?”
So the Bloke explained the layout, benefits of the butty, not restricted by single width locks as wide-beams are, half the licence fee, blah blah.
“Cor” said the man. “… But I’ve got a house.”
“Sell the house” said the Bloke, “and invest the left-over capital to give you an income, to live off.”
“COR. The ex-wife wouldn’t know where I was. … And I wouldn’t have to pay her alimony … an’ I’ve got other debts too …” Then, “these are expensive to rent aren’t they ?”
“Fairly.”
“I could live on that one”, indicating the butty, “and rent that one out in the summer. Cor.”
He won’t be back, but I bet he has some happy dreams, about the possibilities.
Sunday, 1 January 2012
Day One + the Boats' Details
At this most – how should I put it – interesting time in the affairs of the world, the Bloke and I have decided to plot a leap into the unknown and are putting our homes up for sale. We join the many millions, though few homes are as unusual as ours: Freyja and Christina are a pair of narrowboats on which we continuously cruise the canals and inland waterways of England and Wales . Now into my fourteenth year afloat (longer than some, not as long as others), this is by far the longest episode of my sixty-three years on this earth, and that can only have happened because this lifestyle has been immensely satisfying.
We’re not holding our breath for a quick sale, most people are hunkering down, waiting to see what happens next, besides, we have no real plans for our own next, yet. All I know is that all the-road[s]-less-travelled that I’ve taken over the years have been intriguing, and I have no reason to expect a cul-de-sac at the end of the next one. I accept that we are probably leaving the canals at the wrong time: licence fee, insurance and maintenance notwithstanding, life afloat is less costly than life ashore, and the sense of freedom is incalculable, here you can be a contradiction, a respectable drop-out.
FREYJA
57’ all steel narrowboat, semi-trad stern with full cover hatch, and tug foredeck
Built Stoke on Trent Boatbuilders 1986
AMC marinised BMC 1.8 engine, PRM gearbox
BSS certificate to October 2014
LAY-OUT
From the stern:
Semi-trad cockpit, with full covering sliding hatch
with shoreline socket, alternator battery manager, in-line Sterling battery charger, battery locker for one starter- and three domestic batteries, gas locker, storage, and engine access.
Steps down to living accommodation
To starboard, alcove and shelves for television etc., 600w inverter, 12v radio and c.d. player, 6’ settle (or side bed) with storage under.
To port, coat cupboard, under-gunnel shelving, space for dining table or free-standing furniture.
To starboard, 8’2” pine work surface, with inset four-ring gas hob, built-in gas oven and grill below, plus cupboards, shelves and fridge space. Dresser-style shelving above.
Bathroom and dressing area
Narrowboat bath with shower, inset hand-basin with cupboard under, portapotti, additional small hand-basin, two wardrobes 2’3” & 2’6” wide.
Bed-sitting room
To starboard, Morso Squirrel solid fuel stove with back boiler.
To port, built-in bulkhead book shelves, and desk unit.
Space for free-standing furniture. 4’ double bed (accessible from both sides and with storage under) can be slid under front deck, the foot of the bed doubling as a sofa. Built-in unit each side of the sofa, and display cabinets above. Further storage in bed-hole.
Outside, the tug deck is cratched and tarped and makes a suitable motorcycle stowage under canvas. Storage locker under.
These details do not form part of the sale agreement.
And:
CHRISTINA
53’ steel hull, butty conversion with new wooden superstructure
Registered with BW 1971
BSS certificate to April 2014
LAY-OUT
From the stern deck-well:
Step and coal-box down to
Backcabin: traditional lay-out and decoration, boatman’s stove, 4’ bed-hole, wardrobe.
Bathroom with narrowboat bath, washstand and portapotti space.
10’ Workshop, benched and shelved.
9’ Storage space under tarps. Has been used as a shop.
7’ Greenhouse, benched.
The 6’4” space forward of the greenhouse to the cratch is tarped and currently houses an arc-style chicken coop, with storage under.
Gas locker in the bow.
These details do not form part of the sale agreement.
To view please telephone +44 (0)77 8023 9781
or email catcrept@gmail.com
And the price for this whole new lifestyle ?: Well, I've removed a figure from here because it keeps changing, so, if you're even just hesitating about the boats, as a pair or separately, please do contact us and I'm sure we can agree a favourable price.
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