Sunday 28 August 2016

The River Saone - Part 2



Southwards we go, stopping at Verdun sur Doubs for lunch to try the local speciality of fresh water fish stew - it was actually OK, perhaps not to be rushed back for!


Verdun lunch stop 


100 km to Lyons!!




That night was at Chalons sur Saone - our second most expensive night at €21 - but nice place to be and very secure. Fabulous cathedral with a square in front of 14c buildings.  Great wildlife watching right in the heart of the city too.



Chalons cathedral square was lovely


Leaving Chalon


This heron had its own boat!




We keep seeing Charolais cattle by the river and they are always in the water.



We stopped at Tournus because we stopped here when we drove up from Alicante with a load of kit off Blue Horizon for the new boat, Half Moon.  It was also another milestone as we were able to remount the radar post.  We’ve had it laid across the after deck since leaving Stavoren so we could get under the bridges - but from here to the Med we have enough air clearance to put the post back up and let us promenade across the aft deck again.  Much better.


Deck with the radar still down



Final fitting of radar - a real milestone - the FM aerial took a beating on the journey though!




The weather is still hot and dry letting us swim and BBQ for lunch, the current is slow enough for us to swim upstream fairly easily and then drift back to the boat.




B-B-Q  lunch stop

We dropped a sausage in the river!


After more anchoring and swimming we eventually made it to Macon, nice work-a-day town with a great atmosphere.  We had a coffee in a building that was constructed in 1465! - look closely at the carvings and you’ll see that toilet humour hasn’t changed a bit!
The wooden house - supposed to be the oldest in Macon.
Love the name of this hotel (Hotel D'Europe et D'' Engleterre) - a 1950's hotel looking to the future - and its a Best Western!







The lovely 11c chapel - maybe not the ladder though.

Today we stopped at Montmerle, another free Halte with water and electricity, we walked up the hill to the 11c chapel, really atmospheric place with a tower behind surrounded by 60 different grapes vine varieties - we are now in the Beaujolais region - must find a vingoble soon.  Great view of the river across to the vineyards from the top of the tower.


Carole did her fishing bit whilst we were moored here - she put her rod back in its holder only to catch a bungee strap and watch the rod catapult up and then down into the Saone.  After much hooking and dredging she finally retrieved the rod by diving under the boat - top effort - kept us and the boat next door amused for ages.



Horse fix




Carole's Interesting Facts;

No. 16:  On a hot day Charolais cattle love a day on the beach; just chilling and paddling.

No. 17:  The km from the start of whichever river you are on are measured out with PK signs which stands for 'Point Kilometre".










Monday 22 August 2016

The River Saone - Part 1

The River Saone - Part 1

Getting onto the Saone, and back into some reasonable water depths was a milestone for us, we were quite sad to see the end of the canals.  The river though is beautiful - apparently the best fishing river in France - Carole saw a “monster” fish jump near the back of the boat - the catfish can get to 300lbs - reputedly! And there are prehistoric Silure fish in the river that get to 3m long as well.

We stopped in Auxonne for a couple of nights to get chance to take a train to Dijon.  Auxonne is a 15c and 16c town but made more famous by the arrival of Napoleon in 1788, who trained as an artillery officer here. Still a garrison town too.




Statue of Napoleon in Auxonne




Took the train to Dijon - 20 minutes and €7 each way - what a fabulous city - a world heritage site with the most fantastic 15c to 18c town centre - amazing buildings.


The mustard isn’t too shabby either.
Park in Dijon


Square in Dijon

so many nice buildings in dijon

Mourners - Duke of Burgundy tomb

The city is full of lovely buildings

Sunday 21 August 2016

Champagne and Bourgogne Part 4 - the end of canals



We did the tunnel, all 4850m of it.  The channel was only 5.05m wide all the way, we’re 3.8m wide, but it was fine until the all the lights went out - resulting in a quick scrabble to get the search light out while making sure we didn’t hit the stone walls of the tunnel.  Sorted ourselves out and then the lights came back on.  The bloody thing did this twice to us - and can we say when you’re 1km or two into a tunnel it gets pretty dark! - Still all good fun.



Entrance to the Balesmes Vault



Inside the tunnel before the lights went out



It turned into a longer day than planned as the locks after the tunnel were all linked together and once you started the sequence you had to keep going to the end of the 12 locks (got told off for stopping for lunch by the VNF!).  We eventually stopped at a pretty place called Piepape, had great, impromptu chilli night with the crew from Tychy and then had two short days to Dommarien and Cusey. 

At Dommarien we BBQ’d on the tow path and watched a family of muskrats/coypu playing and eating in the canal.  Not too sure what the correct name is for them.



Muskrat/coypu swimming near our mooring


Junior 

About 10km from the halte at Cusey was a vignoble - so off we went on the bikes and found we could fit 1/2 a case into the Brompton’s front carry bag - usually called The Manbag - that clips onto the handlebars of the bikes. Sat in the sunshine that evening drinking vin cassis with the crew off Ettie - very sociable this cruising lark.

The following day we had a late start, it was pouring with rain, and ended up getting stuck behind a fully loaded perniche - a small commercial barge, one of the very few using this canal.  It was painfully slow, so after a couple of hours we stopped at a lock - moored between two dolphins and found a fab rustic restaurant - all local food from the little village, served in a wooden shed by the side of the canal keeper’s house.  What a find, great food and a great price too. Opposite the restaurant was a goats cheese fromagerie - heaven - bought loads of goats cheese and now have to eat it before it stinks the boat out!

Moored on a dolphin


Our restaurant by the lock
The engine started to get too hot the next day, several futile filter cleans but we’re still not happy.  Parked the boat against a bank and checked all the pipes from the seacock to the cooling water pump.  We eventually traced the blockage to the seacock being blocked under the hull.  We took off the pipe to the seacock itself and opened the seacock - in theory a fountain of water should flood into the boat -but it didn’t, merely a trickle.  Carole found the spindle of the kitchen roll holder was the perfect diameter to fit inside the seacock.  Poked the spindle up and down through the seacock until a fountain of water did finally start to flood the boat! After retrieving the spindle, which very nearly slipped out of my grasp and would have headed to the canal bottom, we shut the seacock and stopped the flood. connected the pipes back up and started the now much happier engine - all good now, but I’m slightly paranoid about the amount of water cooling the engine now!




Scrumping apples

The next day, at Oisilly, we met up with Ian, Jilly and Lola and their way back from the south of France - didn’t envy them their long drive back to the UK.

It was pouring down the next morning, so waited until it eased a bit, but not by much, and then headed towards Maxilly, at the end of the canal but only stopped briefly - too much mess and dog poo around for us - first time at a Halte Nautique.  Two more locks, the last of of the second leg of our journey before we headed out onto the Saone - managed to mess up both of them! Got on the wrong side of the lock to our ropes and had to push the boat across - embarrassing after 250 plus locks to date - luckily no witnesses.

On the last few yards of the canal we spotted several kingfishers - stopped for photo session but it’s tricky!



This lovely butterfly took a shine to Dave's thumb



Kingfishers are common on the Soane

Leaving the canals

Our very last lock on the canals.



Met up again with Julia and Richard off the barge, Ettie, and invited round for meal.  Good night!


Headed out onto the Saone and actually had 2m of water below the keel -  big, big, big cheer - first time since the Netherlands. Parked at Pontailler sur Saone for the night - pretty little town with a great patisserie.

River Soane ahead


Carole's Interesting Facts:

No.  14.  Steel posts for mooring against are called "Dolphins".  They are called Duc D'Albe in France as legend has it the Duke of Albe was hung from a post in the canal.

No 15.  Apparently the Belgians eat coypu.

Sunday 14 August 2016

Champagne and Bourgogne Part 3



Stopped at a couple more halt nautiques, (got stuck at one lock and had wait for it to be fixed - improvised a way of getting urgent tea supplies to Carole who’d jumped off and climbed up to see what was happening).


Tea- I need tea!


Then on to the manual section of the canal - here the VNF send a college student to operate the locks with you, winding the gates shut and opening the sluices - Carole got to be a dab hand at climbing up the lock ladders and helping with the sluice paddles. 








One section was really shallow, the water level had dropped 30cm, the VNF were fixing the problem but that led to a couple of kilometres with very, very little water under the keel.

Never thought I’d get to the stage where I thought 20cm of water below the keel was a lot!

Heard from the VNF that a group of 10 commercial peniches are due to come through the canal - apparently this is rare but they should at least clear out some of the weed and silt - hopefully!  It seems that these canals are too small for most modern commercial traffic and so don’t get a lot of attention from the VNF - a pity as it’s extremely pretty.







Stopped today at the end of the manual lock section at a place called Langres - apparently one off the top 50 prettiest towns in France - situated on top of an escarpment - completely surrounded by defensive walls from the 16c to the 18c.  Great place, well worth visiting. Decent hill walk up from the canal at the valley bottom though.

We cycled to the lake





Some of the building are from the 16c, fantastic interiors and architecture.



Acrobat showing a bit of backside.  Good to see humour never changes.





A commercial barge - don't see many of these on this canal.


 Tomorrow we head off to the 4.8km long Balesmes tunnel - the middle section is called the Vault, apparently after that there are about 4 days of nothingness! - few halts, no shops.Stocking up with pate, cheese and wine.

The tunnel is the highest point of our trip - downhill all the way to the Med after this!



Apparently the canal route from the English Channel to the Med is closed at Briare due to the flooding in May and June damaging the canal banks, looks like we were lucky to decide to start in the Netherlands rather than sail down the channel at little way first. The route from the Channel now means heading up to Paris and then going further east to join the route we’ve taken.


Carole's Interesting Facts:

No. 13    A moments inattention on a boat can lead to lots of bruising.

Friday 12 August 2016

Champagne et Bourgogne Part 2

Champagne et Bourgogne Part 2

More weed! Our boat normally does 6knts at 2000rpm, but at times yesterday and today at 2000rpm we were doing 2.7knts ploughing through the weed, the depth sounder just gave up and read 0.00m below the keel for long periods despite the fact that we were definitely afloat.  

The term 'plough your own furrow' is taking on a whole new meaning.





The afternoon was better and by teatime the canal, and the skipper’s mood, improved somewhat.  


Beautiful bridge but the canal is getting choked with weed - and this was a good section.




Only had the clean the water filter three times today- but we have got it down to a fine art - we find a straight stretch and kill the engine, Carole steers whilst we drift forward, I clean the filter and before the boat comes to a halt and we loose steerage, Carole restarts the engine.  


Typical entrance to a lock




Stopped at a small town called Froncle and decided that we deserved a meal out but both restaurants were shut for three weeks at the same time! Just why does the whole of France shut at the same time?  The campsite and Halte Nautique were all full with tourists too.

Monday 8 August 2016

Into the Canal Champagne and Bourgogne


We stopped and extra night in Chalons, as we found a tourist trip into the medieval tunnels and canals under the town.  They’ve sorted out a sound and light show at night through the tunnels showing off the structures and some of the towns history - it started at 23.20 - late night out for us!
Bizarre floating elephant near our mooring.

French cakes are a work of art.

The night trip - fascinating .



Dave's coffee and fishing after a hard locks day - perfect.



This moth pretending to be a leaf



Our latest lock remote control - we are going down so dark blue button needed.  Pale blue  pressed when inside and safely tied on.








The following day at Pogny we met up with Ian, Jilly and Lola, friends from England who were driving further south in France for their holliday - great to meet up.










Dave worked with Ian.

Short siesta needed after lunch with friends (wine included).

Take away pizza night1
Onwards, eventually stopping at Orconte Halte Nautique and them continuing to a really pretty stop at Chamouilley, it was Sunday night and everything was shut and as we cycled around Dave said that if we find any restaurant open we’re stopping,  seconds later we came across a take away pizza oven van - great pizza and red wine night back on the boat.














These locks have filled right to the very top - tricky for the fenders and getting back on to leave but the Fender Queen reigned supreme!!





The water overlaps the side on these locks - makes fendering interesting!


Then the start of the weeds.

We did 14 miles the next day to Joinville - the weeds were horrendous - had to clean the water filter every couple of hours as the poor boat ploughed its way through this forest of weeds - hard slow going.  Lots of weeds wrapped around the keel, then the prop, then the rudder, then all three.  The boat handled like a barge - not a happy skipper.



We cleaned our water filter out 4 times in one day.  This was the  average contacts.



The stop at Joinville was good though - lovely town criss-crossed with our canal, the river Marne and several smaller canals and rivers.



Joinville

Next Stop Foncles - possibly

Horse fix.