Summer 2024 Cruise Part 3 – Birmingham by the Canal

Monday 19th Aug 2024 – We are moored up opposite The Distillery on the CRT 14 day moorings, it is Monday morning and all is quite, so we take Obi our Sprollie (Springer/Collie Cross) to Snell Park to throw a ball about, he loves chasing a ball. Unfortunately, as we are leaving we can see he has cut his front paws, we did not see anything sharp, and it seems nor did he, so it is a slow walk back to the boat to clean his paws and spray on some disinfectant.

Obi is then left to catch up on his sleep, we have active monitoring on the boat, so we can see him and monitor the inboard temperatures.

We walk over to the The Bull Ring, it is tradition when we visit with our daughter, she is not with us this time, but it is a tradition. I have been watching a YouTube channel called “Floating Our Boat” and they mentioned a Indian restaurant called Tamatanga and we happened to pass it on our way back to the boat.

What a lovely lunch, we both went for the before 4pm special of a curry with either rice or nan bread and a soft drink. We did add some tama chips, we did not need them, but I wanted to try them, they were delicious.

The food was excellent, the meat was very tender and the sauces full of flavour. I had the Keralan Lamb curry and Sonia the Chicken Khurana, Sonia is milk intolerant, and they even had vegan nan bread. We will definatly be back.

After our late lunch it is back to the boat, via a small Tesco Express at the mailbox, to see how our dog Obi is doing, from what we can see he has been curled up asleep the whole time.

Tuesday 20th Aug 2024 – Today we are planning a walk along the start of the Birmingham Canal Navigations – Newhall Branch till we reach Lock No4. There we go up the steps to Saturday bridge, cross the main road and walk down Fleet Street to Newhall Lane. Our target is to find ‘The Holdout Building’ from our book ‘111 Places in Birmingham that you shouldn’t miss’ – we are working our way through this book, ticking off each place we visit.

On the way we pass The Coffin Works, which is currently open Wednesday to Sunday, so will be a subject of another blog post on a future visit to Birmingham. At the end of Fleet Street, we turn right onto Newhall Street and then cross Lionel Street and we are opposite our target, 83 Newhall Street. If you have seen the Disney Film ‘UP’ then this is kind of what we are looking at, each side of the building is a large far more modern 11 & 7 story building.

Holdout House
Holdout House

From here we wandered along Newhall Street to the end and turn left onto Colmore Row to visit what was in 1715 the Parish Church of St Philip’s , which then in 1905 became St Philip’s Cathedral Birmingham, the third smallest in the UK.

Birmingham Cathedral

Outside the Cathedral you find the statue of Bishop Gore (1853-1932) the first Bishop of Birmingham.

Inside the Cathedral are four spectacular stain glass windows designed by Edward Burne-Jones and William Morris. The Nativity (1887), The Ascension (1884), The Crucifixion (1887) with the final Window The Last Judgement being added in the west wing thirteen years later.

After this we headed to down Temple Street towards New Street Station, where we found the new home of the Birmingham Bull, which we had last seen outside the Birmingham Library after the Commonwealth Games in 2022. What a great place to display it!

Leaving the station we then walked along New Street towards the Town Hall and then towards the Birmingham Library, which we visited a few years ago, there are some spectacular views from the viewing gallery.

Then back to the boat via Costa for a coffee, Obi is recovering well, paws still a little tender, so light duties for him for a few more days.

August 2023 – Lost dog and diner out at Ju Ju’s Cafe

I know this is not very special, but another late start and after some coffees from Nero and 4 of us showered we finally managed to emptyed our water tank. But before we refill we decide to head to McD’s for breakfast, just making it before the 11am cut off (its relatively cheap and you have to love the hash browns).

On the way back Mary and I found a DJI shop ( 2-6 Corporation Street, B2 4RN) with lots of interesting gadgets, I could not resist the Oslo Mobile 6 Smartphone Stabiliser (Approval was sort from the boss before purchase, I’d not that stupid). On the way back we stop off for a quick photo on the Black Sabbath Bridge, it is not often clear of tourists.

Black Sabbath Bridge, Broad Street Birmingham

While the rest of the group then headed to The Birmingham Sealife centre, which is just the other side of the canal, I decided to stay, write some of the blog and then have to hunt for the dog who has taken himself off for a walk. He does not get far, I am told he visited the Lego centre and then was captured by the kind people at  Sommar which is a microbrewery just above us, they found my number on his collar and call me, but in my panic I had left my phone on the boat, but I soon returned and got their voicemail. Obi (The dog), is very please with himself having been well looked after, but is pleased to see me and follows me back to the boat then under my stern glares he quickly falls asleep in his favourite place under the table.

When the others returned, we start the engine and reverse with the assistants on some crew on the lines to the canal roundabout, before chugging to the water point, just opposite The Cube and just outside Noel’s Bar and Restaurant and we moored while we waited for another boat to complete filling up.

After we had filled our tank, we then reversed back and moored up again at the 4 day moorings.

I did notice that the leisure batteries where a bit lower than I expected, but as we were going out tonight and as we planned a ½ days chugging tomorrow, I hopped going to be a problem.

That evening we had wanted to go to Dishoon, an Indian restaurant highly recommended by Jason (Sonia’s No.2 son) who was joining us that evening, unfortunately we could not get a table booking at a convenient time. I then did a quick dive into trip-advisor and somehow found a small restaurant call Ju Ju’s Cafe that looked interesting, most of my family seemed think I was nuts, but we had an truly excellent meal, which did contain an extraordinary amount of garlic, but we are all family on the boat , high recommended.

Mary on the boat roof, I was playing with the Oslo Mobile 6 Smartphone Stabiliser

August 2023 – Part 1 – A little adventure, Droitwich to Birmingham
August 2023 – Part 2 – A really Tardebigge adventure
August 2023 – Part 3 – Birmingham Engine Lows and Highs
August 2023 – Part 4 – Lost dog and diner out at Ju Ju’s Cafe
August 2023 – Part 5 – Screwfix almost saves the day

August 2023 – Birmingham Engine Lows and Highs

Not a very early start this morning, we walked Obi the dog, then get a coffee from the local Nero before the family leave me and Obi to work on the engine problem. They all head to the Bullring for some much-needed retail therapy.

We are on a 4 day mooring, but we need to get back at Droitwich Spa by the following Sunday (4 days time). Hunting online for a fuel pump is proving a little difficult, I cannot seem to find a part number for what we have got and the pictures I find look nothing like what I have?

Then I have a little inspiration, with the engine battery so low, maybe the pump, which I am told is electromechanical? may be not getting enough power to keep the pressure up. Also why is the engine battery so low.

Not my Isuzu 42 engine, but on this you can see the two belts driving the alternators

A quick check of the engine and one of the belts, the one it is hardest to see and get to has worked a little loose, in the image above it is on the right hand side, in the boat this is very close to the bulkhead. I have spares belts, but my hands (poorly thumb joints) are not up to reaching behind and below the alternator to release the bolts, unfortunately I have some tools, but had left my main tool kit at homeland at this point I could really do with a set of normal spanners. All I have adjustable spanner and a universal ring spanner, but it is too large to fit well behind the engine and my hands by this time are painful.

I did search on google maps for a local tool shop, but everything was well outside the centre of Birmingham, I could have got an Uber, but luckily when the family returns Antony (Son) after much effort manages to tighten the belt with the adjustable and we then start the engine and the battery start charging.

Things now run smoothly, the volts are increasing rapidly, it is relief all-around, now we leave the motor going for an hour to get some charge back in the batteries.

Happy now with finding and fixing the problem and while writing this things can seem obvious in hindsight but there is more to come in the next few days….

August 2023 – Part 1 – A little adventure, Droitwich to Birmingham
August 2023 – Part 2 – A really Tardebigge adventure
August 2023 – Part 3 – Birmingham Engine Lows and Highs
August 2023 – Part 4 – Lost dog and diner out at Ju Ju’s Cafe
August 2023 – Part 5 – Screwfix almost saves the day

The Summer Adventure 2022 Part 4 – Birmingham to Wolverhampton

22nd – 25th Shopping, Books and food

We decided to spend a few day investigating Birmingham, the Commonwealth Games had just finished the week before, so there was still lots to see.

Birmingham Library

Mary, our youngest has a fascination with books, and we had moored within a stones throw of the Birmingham Library, a stunning building both inside and out with some great view over the city from the viewing areas, not good for my vertigo.

The Amazing Bull from the opening of the Commonwealth Games 2022

Just outside the library was the Birmingham Bull from the opening ceremony at the Commonwealth Games 2022, you should just be able to see it obscured by Sonia and Mary.

For the next few days we just seemed to spend our time walking and shopping, there is so much to see in Birmingham, Large open Markets, and the Bull Ring shopping centre a must visit for a teenager but we will be back for a better look soon.

On the 24th we headed off again towards Wolverhampton, when we reached Smethwick Junction, we decided to take the road less travelled and joined the Old Birmingham Canal as we had plans on visiting the Black Country Living Museum, in the end this had to be saved for another day.

Under the M5 in Birmingham

The canal does many twists and turns through much of the back of industrial Birmingham including traveling under the M5 Motorway, which is one of the few time we saw another boat moving.

After a long day chugging we got to the CRT Broad Street Basin Facilities, which is now just a water point everything else was locked up and looked very rundown.

Mooring in Wolverhampton

We moored up just after the next bridge ready to start Lock 1 of the Wolverhampton 21 lock flight the next day.