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.
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….
7:40 am and we are the first to the bottom lock and off we go, the first few locks are going fine, then a CRT person on a bike warns us that lock 36 had been closed and the pound had been drained for an emergency repair to the lock gate, so could we hold where we are, it will take about an hour to refill the pound and check the repair.
As the repair was at the next lock up, I walked up to get some pictures, as you can see there is not much depth at the sides.
About an hours later, the pound is full and we were back on our way.
Sonia was at the helm and I was working the locks, the next time she catches up with me, she reports the engine is playing up, so I take over for a while and all seems fine except it is not settling down after changing gear.
This slowly gets worse over the next few locks until it stalls when trying to leave lock 49 and so we pull over to take a look.
While doing this the next boat coming down the TB seem to drain the pound leaving us at an essessive angle with most of our worksurfaces cleared and cupboards emptyed. Luckly a CRT crew member jump to our aid and refilled the pound and kept us safe while we diagnosed the problem.
We can hear a ticking from the fuel pump that lasts for a 45 seconds, after that the engine will start, but soon boggs down and stops.
Sounds like fuel starvation, I know we have fuel, and I have a spare filter so we whip to the old one off and replace it, now nothing, luckly a very helpful man traveling on his own stops to take a look and thinks we may have an air blockage in the diesel lines, much tinkering later we are running, but very erratically.
Note: We later discover this engine will automatically clear any airlocks in the pipes/injectors.
Bravely we decide to continue and see what happened as we only have about 10 lock to complete to the top of the Tardebigge.
At the top things are going OK’ish and we decide to push on the Birmingham or as close as we can make it. We can manage about 2-2.5mph but the engine is not run stready. All the advice we got was the pump was on it way out, lots of phone calls and we cannot find one… We call supplier after supplier all of whom send us onto someone else, who either has not got or heard of our engine (Isuzu 42), but may know someone who could help. We give up for today.
After 3 tunnels, including the Wast Hill Tunnel at 2,492 m, which is worrying with a engine we don’t trust. But we carry on as at least in Brum I should be able to get parts delivered or hire an Uber to go and get some.
It is slow progress but finally make it to Birmingham and find a mooring just outside the Lego centre. We have been chugging for about 13 ½ hours now and are all greatly relieved to stop.
Doing some final checks before stopping for the night, both our batteries banks seem low, the leisure batteries are below 90% and the engine battery is showing only 11.3 Volts.
We are all too tired to think so it’s time for food and some to sleep before I start looking at the engine tomorrow.
Today we have completed 17 Miles and 29 locks in about 13 ½ hours
We only have about a week with all the family on the boat and we have decided to do a quick trip to Birmingham. Sonia, Mary, Obi (The Dog) and I arrived at the Droitwich Spa Marina on Sunday about 8pm we left home after Mary had finished her Sunday job working in the café of a local garden centre, Antony and Ellie arrived form Reading at around 10:30pm.
With the team assembled the plan was to get the boats waste tank pumped out at about 10am on Monday when the marina office opened, before heading off up the Birmingham and Worcester Canal.
Monday morning arrived and we started late, lazily then decided to send Sonia and Mary off to McD for our breakfast, then we needed to head to Waitrose for supplies, and when we finally got to the pump out we had to wait for another boat. In the end somehow it was noon before we set off, we then had a little fun against the wind in the marina trying the back out away from the pump out dock and then turn around to exit onto the canal.
Nearing the end of our first day we passed our boats original home at Black Prince (Stole Prior) where we could see their new look Classic and Signature colour schemes
After a quite and uneventful trip and 4 ½ hours of chugging we had traveled just over 4 miles and completed 15 locks, our team had got the lock procedure well sorted.
But after the later than planned start we decided to get to started on the Tardebigge in the morning and so stopped for Pizza at The Queens Head, this seems to be becoming a tradition (They have a 2 for 1 deal on Pizza’s between 5 and 6.30pm Monday to Thursday).
So we set the alarm for 7am so we could get an early start up the Tardebigge.
We are a little later getting away on our adventure, but just after noon we set off from the marina and by mid afternoon we are at the bottom of the Tardebigge ready to start the climb up the locks.
At about 7:30am on the 21st August we start at The Tardebigge Botton Lock, it is a nice day for working hard, not as hot has it had been the week before, so by 12 noon we had reached the Tardebigge Top Lock, we are getting experts at these over the last few years we have been up and down them so many times.
There are a couple of tunnels between starting with the Tardebigge Tunnel, 530m long, usefully there is a water point at the Tardebigge CRT yard just before the tunnel. Just a few bends later is the Shortwood Tunnel, 560m long, then back past Alvechurch Marina.
By 4:30pm we where just exiting the much longer Wast Hill Tunnel, 2493m long, it is one of the longest canal tunnels in the UK and it is wide enough for two narrow boats, you can see oncoming boats a long way off in the dark, but is is very hard to estimate how far away they are until the last new minutes.
An hour later we moored up by a park, not sure exactly were, but Obi our dog needs a good run around before it got to dark.
The next morning, 22nd August, we moor up at near Gas Street Basin for a couple of days investigating Birmingham.
26th July – A Late start today, a few jobs needed doing before we left Droitwich Spa Marina, first of which was a coffee and cake at Muffin Break, then some shopping in Waitrose.
Everything packed away in the cupboards and fridge, and we are off for a pump out and refuel. Oddly, after all this time, this is the first pump out we have done by ourselves, all be it with a little bit of helpful instruction, we are now truly boat owners.
It is now 2pm and we are heading to the last three locks on the Droitwich Canal and up onto the Birmingham and Worcester. Our plan was to get to Stoke Prior and try the Boat and Railway Inn, as this had been recommended by fellow Droitwich Spa Marina moorers Gillian and Steve (Hope I have the names right).
The beer and food was good with a table available by the canal.
27th July – Today was a much earlier start at 7:30am as we wanted to complete the Tardebigge Lock flight. It is a tough set of locks but we have completed it a few times before so we know what to expect, but before we got to there we had the six Stoke locks to complete.
Most of the locks went without much problem until we reach lock 52 where a canal boat had become grounded at the edge of the pound. Lucky for us there was enough water for us to get into the empty lock and then once we had exited the lock we released the water into the pound and they made their escape.
For the last five locks our daughter Mary decided she would have a go at locks, and she was a bit of a natural, hardly a bump on the way in. My reign as lock supremo my be fading fast.
After that she stayed in the helm for the Tardebigge Tunnel and the Shortwood Tunnel. Then we moored and I cooked a Green Thai curry from a kit we got in Waitrose.
28th July – A completely lock free day! Mary with her new found skill guided us through the Wast Hill Tunnel, the longest of the trip at 2493m, and she made it look simple.
We continued along and I nearly missed the Kings Norton Junction, we would have been in Birmingham tonight, but at the last second Sonia mentioned the sign said Stratford was a right turn.
Sonia navigated the Brandwood Tunnel, then we had some spectators, watch us at the Shirley draw bridge. They had seen it on Robbie Cummin’s TV series and the grandma had walked the children down to see it.
We paused at Dickens Heath for a bit of shopping and a coffee and toastie at Cloud Coffee, and almost made it back before the thunder, lightening and downpour kept us undercover just a few hundred yards from the mooring.
The evening was spent at the Blue Bell Cider House, not al a carte, but it is all good when you are hungry.
29th July – A late start today, but after breakfast we got away by 9:30am leaving the mooring outside the Blue Bell Cider House then under the M42 it is quite away to Lock number 2 Lapworth Top Lock.
Then they seem to come very quickly and we find ourselves at Lapworth Junction and lock 21, this is a very popular place as you have the option to go down the Lapworth link and onto the Grand Union Canal, we did that a few years ago, or as we have done stay on the Stratford Canal.
Front this point on the lock are a little more worn and delicate, with some of the paddle gears slipping and the locks leaking quite quickly. We where very luck that we saw a couple of boat returning from Stratford, so a lot of the locks where set for us.
I think I have walked almost the whole distance today, and after Lapworth junction, we finished the day just before Lock 31 and the Fleur De Lys Pub, which had been recommend to us by a passing boater earlier in the day.
30th July – Today started with breakfast at the Fleur De Lys for me, we needed to hang about and use the pubs WIFI to complete a video Dr’s appointment. I do recommend the breakfast, great sausages, the coffee could be a little more generously sized, but tasted good.
The rain was pouring as we returned to the boat, but we wanted to get moving, so we headed off into lock 31. Today I wanted to do the locks while the girls handled the boat; the locks on the Stratford were not the easiest with the gears often slipping.
After lock 33 we traversed over the mini Yarningate Aqueduct, which passes over a small stream and at just 42 feet long our boat easily straddled it.
Seven locks later we moored up just past lock 38 and dried off, we kept the engine running for a bit so we could put the wet clothes through the washing machine on the 30 minute quick cycle.
We had in mind possibly going to the local pub, The Crabmill but we where all ready for an early night.
31st July – Nice long chug to lock 39 which included traversing the Wootton Wawen Aqueduct and then another over the much longer Edstone Aqueduct as we chugged to Wilmcote Top Lock, Lock 40. Ten locks in quick succession and we had reached Lock 50, Wilmcote Bottom Lock, then we chugged into the outskirts of Stratford.
We stopped for water at Western Road Wharf, and a fellow boater told us there were spaces in the basin and also outside the Red Lion Pub, so we decided to continue into town.
While we waited for lock 52, Mary collected our lunch from the McDonald’s. I do like their coffee. On to the final push , we were only delayed at lock 55 which was leaking excessively, but a couple of very helpful CRT volunteers guided us through and when we turned the next corner there was one space left outside the Red Lion pub.
We did walk to the Basin, just a few hundred meters away and it had a few spaces, but as we where not sure how long we wanted to stay we remained outside the pub.
So far we have travelled over 41 miles and been through 98 locks.
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