Other PicoMicroYacht

Wednesday 21 February 2018

CASPA , London's Lost Route and the Pet Shop Boys

The PicoMicroYacht blog was started in 2012 to keep people up to date about preparations for a charity row across the English Channel.

It was kept going and, since then, the voyages have been mainly linked to raising money for CASPA, a charity in South East London that helps support children, young people and families affected by autism.

How can the work of the charity be explained? I cannot do better than refer to this video, which explains it all.




From the CASPA website: https://caspabromley.org.uk/

There are not many opportunities in life to literally transform the lives of young people in our communities, as CASPA does, and I am so glad to be a small part of this.

As indicated in a previous post, the running group 'Fourdaysrunning'  that does charity fundraising for CASPA, has decided this year to run along the South Downs Way for 100 Kilometres.  Starting at Arundel, they will run  through south Sussex.

PicoMicroYacht will join them after exploring London's Lost Route to the Sea, rowing along the Sussex coast to their finishing point, Eastbourne.


The Lost Route to the Sea encompasses the countryside between London and Sussex, with the Wey and Arun Canal the focal point. Various people have written about their experiences voyaging this canal.

This includes a charming waterways travelogue by J.B. Dashwood, written in the Victorian era. Dashwood reduced the mast of his cat rigged sailing boat, Caprice, and had it towed by a horse up the river Wey and then down through the Wey and Arun canal, using the river Arun to reach  Littlehampton.


Dashwood's book: Note the difficulty with his horse who was refusing to go through a towpath gate

His aim had been to get to Portsmouth.  However, because the canal link via Chichester had long since disappeared, he eventually daringly ventured out into the English Channel and sailed westward round Selsey Bill into the Solent. Despite rough seas and having to bail his boat out, he arrived in Portsmouth safely.




His book was published in 1868 and shortly after a closure order for the Wey and Arun canal was made. Although the canal had become nonviable for commerce,  many regretted the canal's closure, including the writer P. A. L. Vine, who was inspired to write the book, London's Lost Route to the Sea, published in 1965.


This book drew on the sentiments of a poem by Rudyard Kipling called 'The Way Through the Woods.' Vine has reflected on the manner in which the canal wound through the gently wooded landscape of the Surrey and Sussex border and quoted from Kipling as follows:

They shut the road through the woods
seventy years ago.
Weather and rain have undone it again,
and now you would never know
There was once a road through the woods.

(the Way Through the Woods, Rudyard Kipling, published 1899)

Over the years, following the writings of Vine, a sense of saudade about the canal has mobilised people to form the Wey and Arun Canal Trust, with  over 3,000 members and volunteers  restoring it in sections.



PicoMicroyacht will traverse the length of the canal, rowing where it has been restored and running along the Wey South path when it is not possible to row.


The Way Through the Woods - Pet Shop Boys version



They shut the road through the woods
Seventy years ago.
Weather and rain have undone it again,
And now you would never know
There was once a road through the woods
Before they planted the trees.
It is underneath the coppice and heath,
And the thin anemones.
Only the keeper sees
That, where the ring dove broods,
And the badgers roll at ease,
There was once a road through the woods.
Yet, if you enter the woods
Of a summer evening late,
When the night-air cools on the trout-ringed pools
Where the otter whistles his mate,
(They fear not men in the woods,
Because they see so few)
You will hear the beat of a horse’s feet
And the swish of a skirt in the dew,
Steadily cantering through
The misty solitudes,
As though they perfectly knew
The old lost road through the woods.
But there is no road through the woods.

Words: Rudyard Kipling
Music: Tennant / Lowe














Wednesday 14 February 2018

PicoMicroYacht's Sartorial Interlude

I am indebted to the advice of Roger Barnes's book, The Dinghy Cruising companion, full of sounds advice for those venturing out to sea in small boats. He is a real enthusiast as indicated by the following quote:

'You will venture into the fringes of the wildness with the minimum of simple gear, to live with it on its own terms. You will know that one of the sure ways to contentment in this life is a small boat, a fair wind, and a new coast to explore'



For PicoMicroYacht I don't even need a fair wind to make this a reality, although it can be pushing it to find the fringes of the wildness on the south of England.

Roger Barnes also has advice about what to wear. His preference is for a woollen base layer, with a wool sweater and cotton oversmock. He then does not bother with modern fabric sailing jackets but goes for polyester fishing gear, which are completely waterproof and dry very quickly.

I have been using a merino wool base layer. The advantage this is that it is light and warm. But if you sweat, it does not 'pin' a damp and cold material to you. It soaks up moisture and releases it outwards. I have a blue wool crew cut traditional sweater. I also wear blue cotton Craghopper trousers, these having very useful pockets for sailing, including a strategic zipped up one for keys.






I have to admit, with a blue peak cap, I may look a little like Herge's Tintin character, Captain Haddock.

Last year for the Irish row, I bought a light padded  long length fishing jacket, which is very comfortable and warm, the  length ensuring the back is covered when I compress forward at the start of a rowing stroke. This jacket breaths well and does not seen to restrict movement too much. It also has an plethora of pockets.

When I set off from Greenwich Yacht Club, one concerned sailor told me that I might get hypothermia due to the cold air temperature. It turned out that with all that gear on I was toasty warm and had to take the jacket off. I covered my exposed feet with the jacket and, together with gloves, everything was comfortable.


A fishing jacket strewn across my feet to keep them warm



Here Captain Haddock goes rowing. He is quite clumsy but a courageous character.







Monday 12 February 2018

PicoMicroYacht takes the Queen's Highway

The next stage of  PicoMicroYacht's discovery of London's lost route to the Sea was to go through central London. In the days that this route was active this part of the Thames was busy with all manner of craft, and steam power was mixed up with sailing and rowing.


The Pool of London in 1842

 Now there are less ships but the Thames narrows considerably, the banks filled in and the embankments built up in the last century to accommodate modern London.

The river flows rapidly as it funnels and the proximity of the bridges and piers makes the ride up the Thames a nautical helter skelta for the unwary. Surprisingly, you do not need a licence to go boating on this part of the Thames since the tidal Thames is known as a King's Highway and is free for the general public. Historically,  a King's highway is defined as a public passage for use of the sovereign and all his or her subjects.



The gateway to the ride is Tower Bridge and PicoMicroYacht was careful to go through the right hand archway to avoid a fast moving Clipper catamaran ferry.


The wash of the ferries kicked up rough, accentuated by shallows that caused close to overfalls


After a succession of legendary bridges PicoMicroYacht was opposite the London eye and it was hard to keep the camera steady and level


Very soon the Houses of Parliament were on my right as I looked round. The route up the Thames took me close to buildings parliament and under watchful eyes.


The Union Jack flew proudly over the parliament main tower


As PicoMicroYacht moved off upstream a sand barge was creating a large bow wave

I had been worried about running out of light before reaching Putney, not wanting to be on the river in a small boat as it got dark. However, the last ten miles to my destination went quickly and the incoming tide kept me moving on. As the sun set, golden scenes unfolded with the light reflecting off the buildings.




New Buildings in Chelsea bathed in milky golden light that characterises winter in London


Finally the light was fading and PicoMicroyacht passed under Putney Bridge and crossed the river to the rowing boat launching area where a few crews were finishing their outing, marshalled by their coaches.

The 14 miles had been covered in around two and a half hours, the tide helping to make rapid progress.

Postscript:

More about boating through central London is provided by the Port of London Authority (PLA) in this handy video:



As the PLA writes:

Rowing safely on the tideway demands a sound knowledge of the effects of the tidal stream, including the resultant currents and variable depths which may be unfamiliar even to extremely competent rowers who have not previously visited.


Friday 9 February 2018

PicoMicroYacht begins London's Lost Route to the Sea

PicoMicroYacht started London's Lost Route to the Sea to the east of the O2, at the Greenwich Yacht Club, to voyage 14 miles up the Thames to Putney.


In the days when barges transported goods to and from the South Coast via the Wey and Arun Canal to get a barge through central London it was not possible to tow from the river bank. So the barges either had to use a special purpose sail, a spritsail, or they used large oars called sweeps.

Whatever the method, it required considerable skills.  For rowing there might be two oars pulled individually and a further oar used for steering. Rowing through the centre of London has a long history and involved experienced watermen.


A scene from the historic barge driving race  in 2017
(from the Port of London Authority Website)

As I discovered in 2014, rowing a small boat (yacht) through London it not to be considered lightly. This time I picked a day when the wind was forecast to be from the northeast, in amongst other February days when it would have been gusting against me from the west. The plan was to set off in the middle of the day at low tide from the Greenwich Yacht Club slipway .

At the club I met a working party who were using the low spring tide to work on their tidal moorings. 


It looked like hard work, with the temperature close to freezing and digging into the mud to check the anchorages. The party were very friendly and helpful but somewhat sceptical of my voyage given the cold weather and the strong spring tide river current. I was reassuring them I would be alright but also respecting their extensive experience of the river. My thanks to the club for looking after the PicoMicroYacht trailer and seeing me off with a friendly wave.


The working party pause their work to see PicoMicroYacht off

I realised that although I had planned for a following wind, the arching shape of the Thames in London and the wind backing to the north meant  sometimes I was rowing into a head wind, which was about force four.


PicoMicroYacht crossing the Thames to the north bank to be on the starboard side of the river for going upstream. I was keeping a good lookout for where the river craft were going


Soon I was passing the Canary Wharf financial centre and the West Indies dock.


The Red Ensign was keeping me visible as I looked over head and saw three Chinook SAS helicopters on patrol



This policeman base before getting to Tower Bridge


Soon PicoMicroYacht was approaching Tower Bridge, as a welcome sight and the start of London's Lost Route to the Sea.



A video of the Thames Barge Driving Race in 2015






Wednesday 7 February 2018

PicoMicroYacht to discover London's Lost Route to the Sea

As the winter passes, plans are being made for PicoMicroYacht's next adventures. This year it includes discovering one of  England's most picturesque waterways.


The River Thames is the UKs most iconic river, passing through the nation's capital, London. Although it provides a natural link with the sea through the Thames Estuary, in the 18th and 19th Century it was realised there could be a much shorter route from London to the South Coast of England using rivers and canals, this being London's Lost Route to the Sea.


The barge route as illustrated in P A L Vine's London's Lost Route to the Sea

The full route starts at Tower Bridge in London and passes up the Thames to Weybridge turning left into the River Wey. It then goes beyond Guildford until it reaches a small gunpowder wharf at Shalford, continuing along the Wey and Arun Canal to the river Arun near Pulborough. This strongly tidal river helped transport barges down through Sussex to Littlehampton on the South Coast. A subsidiary canal was also used to take traffic to Portsmouth, a large UK naval centre. 



Ford Lock on the Portsmouth and Arundel Canal from a water colour by W. H. Mason

According to Paul Vine's London's Lost Route to the Sea, when the Wey and Arun canal became fully operational in 1823  it was possible to travel from London to the South Coast in three days. The canal came in over budget and was expensive to maintain, eventually abandoned due to competition from the railway making it commercially not viable. The canal decayed until the mid 20th Century when enthusiasts have started restoring it in portions, their vision to re-establish it completely.



Approaching Tower Bridge on 6th February at the start of the voyage

PicoMicroYacht has already started to discover the lost route by setting off from Greenwich in London and reaching Putney (I will be blogging this journey in the next post). The voyage will involve rowing up the river Wey to the Shalford Gunpowder wharf and then, because the canal is not in full operation, running 20 miles to Pullborough, stopping off to explore the parts of the canal that have been opened. 


The Fourdaysrunning event, taking the CASPA runners along the seven sisters and then past Beachy Head

PicoMicroYacht will go down the Arun to Littlehampton and enter the English Channel, turning left and going up-channel to Eastbourne. The aim is to join the FourDaysRunning group, who are doing their sponsored run in aid of  the CASPA charity. They will be going from Arundel to Eastbourne along the South Coast. As they run 100k over the South Downs and along cliffs and sea promenades, PicoMicroYacht should have the easy task of rowing up the English Channel with the prevailing south westerly wind.


The Wey and Arun canal history is described in this short video: