Wednesday 27 May 2020

Bank Holiday Weekend ...




Saturday (23rd May) started a bit cloudy and although we were able to sit on the deck we had several short sharp windy showers throughout the day
On Saturday when the Canadians came by with their young family the lambs were most interested but Mr/Mrs Canada Goose kept a wary glare on them
Out for a walk to the marina to collect some post we passed this crop growing in lots of fields - can't find what it is - anyone know - David Lewis?
At the marina we noticed that after the rain of yesterday the water was overflowing the weirs unlike it was when we left a week ago.






Back at the meadow (about midday) we were amazed at the amount of people around.




There's a dead, skeletal  tree just behind the boat and pair of pied wagtails were busy flying in and out of it all afternoon
7:20 on Monday morning and a hot air balloon rises in the clear blue sky ... it's going to be another hot one.
Both the river and the meadow was the busiest we've ever seen  with water birds, dog walkers, family outings and picnickers...

canoeists and paddle boarders ...

rowers and cruisers, both big and small ...
and wild swimmers ... lots of them ... from early morning until late afternoon

Later in the afternoon this lady came along telling George (I was currently on the phone to my eldest granddaughter) and said that she had a very good friend who I used to work with and who followed the blog so knew that we were moored here on Medmenham Meadow.  This is Glenys and our mutual friend is Catrin Morris who I used to work with at Dolgellau Hospital.  Thank you Glenys for calling by and saying hello and I apologise for not being able to have a proper conversation with you.  I'm sure you'll understand, my granddaughter is a deputy sister on a covid ward in Stockport Hospital and our conversations are very precious.
We whiled away the rest of the afternoon on the deck watching the world go by until ...
it was bbq time ... yeah!



As we were packing away along came these folk carrying ....  swans?
no motor, no paddles, no oars ... just swanning about!


And a magnificent sunset to end the day.

Sunday 24 May 2020

Day one in our new location ...

2:30pm Friday (22nd May)
7pm



8pm
8:30pm
8:45pm

9pm


Day two was very windy up to 67kph and squally showers and not very warm!

Saturday 23 May 2020

For the very first time ...

The days before we left ... Wednesday (20th May) ...
We took a walk to Medmenham Meadow to see what space there was like ... plenty and 'our' space was free too ... goody, goody!




When we were sitting on the deck later we were surprised to see swimmers coming up the weir stream and even more surprised when one of them stood up on a sand bank ... so we knew to be wary of that when we moved off.





We thought that they would have turned back once they saw the strength of the water coming over the weir, but no, off they went round the island into the lock cut

First cygnets too this year ...
and a pretty evening scene at 9 o'clock

Thursday (21st) was as the title states ...
I have always been very envious, even a little jealous ...
of other folk seeing the sight of cygnets riding on mum's back ...
let alone getting a photo of this event ... so I am so thrilled to have witnessed this.

Friday 22 May 2020

Escaped?

We've been thinking hard about what we should do after the missives from both the Environment Agency (EA) and Hambleden Marina a week ago.  Wherever we decide to go there are a few problems we have to try to overcome first - food deliveries, post (especially Pharmacy2you) which we both use on our travels and that we need somewhere we can stay (in our own isolation) for an extended period and when to leave.  EA guidance states that live-aboard boaters can only move if essential which our move would be and if we didn't need to use a lock we could leave as soon as we had sorted everything out.

Where to go? - we had already made provisional arrangements to stay at Medmenham meadow (SRB Moorings) when it was uncertain as to the date we'd have to leave the mill stream but cancelled the arrangement when we were told that we could stay  at the marina until the river reopened, hence the move into the weir stream.  We could see if Steve (SRB) would be willing to provide us with a temporary mooring and is there a space for us?

We need first though to solve food and post.

Food - getting over my initial panic anxiety that if we were on the meadow we couldn't get a food delivery (and after a face to face call with daughter Sharon, thanks sweetheart), I realised that the situation really is no different from when we're normally cruising.  

There are houses in Ferry Lane at Medmenham ('our' meadow mooring would be just to the left of where the lane reaches the River Thames on this map).  I could use the postcode of one of the houses as the address for my order and put direction instructions from there to the slipway at the end of the lane from where we could transport our order in rucksacks and shopping trolley the quarter mile to our mooring.  Fingers crossed that this works ok ... it normally does.

Post - is there a 'community' for Hambleden Village?  Lovely daughter Sharon helped with this one too by finding a facebook community via the Dog and Badger (top of Ferry Lane) but didn't get a reply from her message to them. Anyway, yesterday morning I rang the pub ... no reply, so went into another of their fb pages and a chat window opened so I explained our predicament and asked if they could help.  Result! I was given a telephone number for a lady who lives nearby who has very kindly offered to take any post for us and will leave it in a safe place so that we can collect it without personal contact.  I am so grateful to her for her kindness.

George checked with SRB moorings and we were told that we would be welcome at the meadow mooring until initially, the end of July ... great news!

Our original idea was to wait until May 29th after a Tesco delivery to us at the marina but having spoken to Peter (owner) of our plans he offered to pick up the order (if we wanted to move sooner) and bring it round to us by boat!  Another result from another very kind person.

So ... yesterday it was all systems go ... water tank filled, nasties emptied, mains electricity cable removed, people informed of what we're doing, lunch taken and at 2:20 we let our mooring ropes go.   George bow-thrusted Still Rockin' out of her space and into the weir stream, a turn of 360° through lines of plastic cruisers.

Looking back as we cruise through the weir stream ... there's no water at all coming over the weir ... we've never seen that before!

Looking back again and forward as we reach the open channel and turn left downstream.  We're only going about half a mile ...
Canada Geese and their nursery of goslings
Lots of people enjoying the sunshine and water







Another first ... a narrow boat moored on the Flower Pot hotel pontoon.

canoeists on one side of Still Rockin' and paddle boarders on the other ... they're all out today

Approaching and passing Culham Court ...
we arrive at the lower end of the meadow
That's 'our' mooring ... we winded (turned) in the channel and moored up ... the whole journey took just 35 minutes!
Windbreak out to deter passers-by from ignoring social distancing ...

and our views up and down the meadow.

Not sure that the title is quite how I feel.  George says we've escaped but I feel rather that we've just moved from one isolation to another ... apart from the view ... nothing has changed ... I hope that it stays that way for us now and for the foreseeable.