Saturday 6 February 2010

Tuesday 1st July 2008 Toulouse to abv Vic lock 6. C. du Midi.

Very hot and sunny, cloudy later in the evening with distant thunder, but no rain for us. Up early as the chef was coming to let the water back into the dry dock at nine. I did a quick vacuum of the carpets before Mike reeled the electric cable in, and then I got off with the camera to take a few photos. A scruffy looking péniche houseboat had arrived the previous evening and had moored by the dock, had a suspicion he was waiting for the now nicely painted, but prop-less, péniche houseboat to come off the covered dock. First the chef read the water meters and I checked the numbers with him, then he wound the paddles up to fill the dock. 
Mike had forgotten to knock out the wedges under the bows – they floated free as the boat came off the steel bostocks (the chef fished them out later). The gate floated and the chef poled it, gondola-fashion, along the bank. Bill untied his ropes a little too early and Mike made comment to him that he was coming to knock our paint off before we’d even got out of the dock! The chef wanted the boats to be pulled out rather than use props to get out of the dock. He explained afterwards that there was a lot of mud just beyond the gate which gets swirled in by reversing props. Mike took ours out of gear until he’d cleared beyond the cill to avoid pulling mud into the dock. After we’d left they put the gate back in place and started emptying the dock, confirming our theory that the other boat was waiting for the covered dock. We went to pay for the docking (we’d withdrawn enough cash from the CCP a couple of days before).  A different Madame was in the office, (a short, middle-aged lady with blonde curly hair, the other one was about the same age but had dark hair and a crooked jaw) she told me they didn’t accept cards or cash, only French cheques. I told her that cheques were being phased out in the UK, big shops wouldn’t accept them now as everything was going plastic. She said she would recommend that to their bosses. We asked what we would have to do if we hadn’t got a French chequebook. A trip to the Post Office to buy a mandate, in other words, give them the cash and they give you a cheque but charge you for the privilege! Our bill was 295.66€ and Bill’s was 292,97€ - we later realised we’d run the kärcher for both boats on the tap that we’d paid for. We’d sort it out later. I made out two cheques to pay for the docking and Mike asked Madame not to cash the cheques straight away as there was only 150€ left in the account - we’d have to put ours and Bill’s money into the CCP later. She was quite OK about it and said she’d wait ten or fifteen days, no problem. Mike learned that a “rubber” cheque in France is called a “wooden” one! We untied and set off down the basin. The chef operated the towpath footbridge again for us (another 50€ in the VNF coffers) and we turned right, heading uphill on the canal du Midi, as we had agreed to accompany Bill to help with the locks up to Le Ségala. Mike had checked our plumbing and found a slight leak below water level on the new loo pipes. We arrived at the first lock, Castanets lock 4, just before lunch. We tied next to two VNF dredging pans and tugs. Mike remade the joint on the loo pipes while I made sandwiches for lunch. At 1.20 p.m. a VNF van arrived and dropped off the tug steerers so we had to move. One went uphill through the lock (the full pan to the tip) and the empty went off downhill to the dredging site. 
I went up to the lock with the camera and took a few photos while the tug and pan went uphill (he did use a rope!). The lock keeper worked the lock using a yellow handheld zapper. I went back down to the boat as he started emptying the lock and got back on board. There were useful bars in the straight sided lock walls of the extension at the tail end of the lock. Easy. The majority of the boat stuck out into the oval chamber but was held secure by the rope round the bar amidships. A curly pound lead to lock 5, Vic, and we went straight into the empty chamber. I tried throwing a bow rope up from the front of the roof. It wouldn’t fly right! Mike threw one from the centre of the roof which the young lad working the lock put on the bollard for him. I transferred the rope to the bow and Mike backed off into the tail end of the chamber. The young keeper helped Bill with his ropes, a centre one and one from the bows. We moored in a gap between the residential boats above the lock (after Mike and Bill persuaded an uninhabited small blue steel cruiser back a bit to let Rosy get alongside the bank and we moored on the outside). It was getting really, really hot. The thermometer said the roof (under the planks) was over 40°C and it was 35°C in the cabin. I put reflectors in the windows on the sunny side and we waited until it was a bit cooler to get the fizzer off before Mike went to retrieve the car from its city parking spot. When he returned he put all the stuff back in the car that had been sitting in bags on the front deck just in case someone did break into the car. Tool box, jack, reflective vests, extinguisher, first aid kit – it would cost a few bob to replace them. Then there were the irreplaceable odds and ends, the log book with fuel consumption figures and all the repair details, plus prescription sunglasses, glasses for driving at night, etc. Our SFR telephone mysteriously stopped working, no calls in or out!

Thursday 4 February 2010

Monday 30th June 2008 Toulouse on the dock

Hot and sunny. Up bright and early to finish off the odds and ends. I rigged up the hosepipe and found our spray nozzle to fit on the end so I could rinse the front deck cover after I’d scrubbed it. Mike did the green on the oaks back and front plus the black on the dollies, hinges and rings for the fenders. At lunchtime we had a few hours off out of the sun. Mike painted the gunwales with some sand coloured floor paint. All just about finished. Refilled the water tank and I made a salad for dinner as it was much too hot for cooking (apart from hard boiling a few eggs)

Sunday 29th June 2008 Toulouse on the dock

Hot and sunny again. Up early again and straight out to work. Mike put the wire brush over the oaks on the back and front decks, then I did a second coat on the colours around the stern again while Mike started on the second coat of antifouling. I helped him to finish that then made some lunch. We sprawled and dozed in the afternoon heat. Got up and went back to work. I emptied the wardrobe so Mike could replace the loo pipes. I connected up the hosepipe and added a spray nozzle to jet wash the gunge out of a short section of plastic pipe which we weren’t replacing. While Mike was doing the plumbing I painted the black bands around the stern. He did the blacking on the weed hatch plate. Bill asked if we’d go up to Le Segala with him on the summit level of the canal du Midi to give him a hand with locking. He said he wanted to take us out for a meal before he set off downhill to go to Agde where he would sort out the crane at the marina on the Herault while waiting for the transport guy, Garry, to get a delivery down to the Med so that Rosy could go back to the UK as a back load. He told us he was going to be taken to Napton on the Oxford canal. Helen phoned. She and George were at St Jean-de-Losne with a load to collect from Beaucaire on the end of the Rhône, they wondered if we were wanting a tow back up the river yet. A lovely gesture on their part, but we should be able to make it back up the Rhône under our own steam. We told them about Bill and said we were thinking of going back to the UK too. Helen said that as George was now seventy they were going to pack up soon and move back to the UK too. Looks like everybody is packing up all at once! (She’d already told us that their old mate Roger at St Jean-de-Losne was talking of retiring and going to live in Nyons. Made some sandwiches for a snack before Mike went with Bill to have a drink on Liberty in the port de plaisance ten minutes walk from the dry dock. They were moving on up the canal next day. Paul said he would see us later in the year. Bill broke the news that him he was going back to the UK. Mike was back at 9.10 p.m. just as I finished the ironing, he put the weed hatch back together and then connected up the PC to the Internet to send an email to Peter (our son) to ask him to check out prices for hiring a trailer etc, to bring our boat back to the UK, either from the Med coast or Terneuzen in the Netherlands. 

Saturday 28th June 2008 Toulouse on the dock

Hot and sunny again all day. Up nice and early again and we set to work to find the level of the waterline to paint a first coat of antifouling. It took us ages to sort out the second side – Mike chalked out the first side (port) quite rapidly, but we could not get the starboard side level right, it was too high, too low then a lump in the middle section! By the time we sorted it out the sun was swinging round the stern, so we painted the port side immediately followed by the starboard. By this time it was 12.15 p.m. I went in to make some sandwiches for lunch. After lunch Mike went to get some bread, etc, from Casino. I sat down to rest my weary legs. We helped Bill strike a line around Rosy so he could do his antifouling. Mike took the stern fenders off and handed them down to me, then he wire-brushed the coloured bands around the stern. We retreated inside out of the fiercest of the midday heat. Late in the afternoon I painted the coloured bands while Mike prepared the vegetables and chicken for a stir-fry for dinner. When I'd finished painting and clearing up I cooked the dinner. A shout from below turned out to be Paul come to visit as Liberty was moored in Toulouse. He climbed the ladder and Fanny followed him! Bill called her and she would have jumped – too far – back down to the dock! Mike carried her back down the ladder. We had a glass of wine and a chat. Paul had friends visiting on board Liberty, they were staying until Thursday; the boat was staying in Toulouse until Monday morning and then they were heading west, probably to Castelnaudary. He said Neil was coming again with another friend and they were going to go out at Port Nouvelle and back in at Agde. Paul invited us to come over for a drink on Sunday evening. We said we’d see how we were after we’d finished painting and plumbing! 

Friday 27th June 2008 Toulouse on the dock


Cooler morning after the overnight rain, but soon back to hot and sunny again. Up early and back to work. In the morning we painted the port side and in the afternoon we did the starboard side, finishing the third coat of Comastic blacking. When we finished the morning panting Mike did some welding around the stern, filling in bits and securing the strap that holds the rudder trim tab in place. At lunchtime he went to Castorama to get some special “diluant” (sythetic) thinners as the paint in the last tin we’d opened was very thick and they had no diluant in Casino (Bill had looked for some for us when he went shopping) He came back with a pack (no singles) of stick-on letters to redo the name around the stern once it had been repainted. Finished painting at 4.30 p.m. and Mike did some welding on Rosy.

Monday 1 February 2010

Thursday 26th June 2008 Toulouse on the dock

Hot and sunny, clouding over during the late evening, thunderstorms followed. Up early again and set to work painting the port side before the sun got round to that side. I gave Mike a hand to straighten the curled lower edge of the back blade of the rudder, using a small hydraulic jack and then hitting it with a hammer. He cleaned out the sink drainage, taking off the main pipes to get the gunge out, then refilled the water tank (I got a drenching when the pipe came out), and did Bill’s washing. Mike went across the road to the Casino supermarket for some bread for lunch. After lunch we sprawled out inside the boat to keep out of the midday heat. Once the sun was off the starboard side we went out and painted it finishing off the second coat. I went inside to get on with the ever mounting pile of housework then cooked pasta for dinner - the mountain of ironing will have to wait until it is cooler. Mike and Bill went to the hire place, Kiloutou, and had more words with the manager. He eventually backed down and said he would lose out on the cost of repair. Thank goodness for that. Mike told him in future we would take photos of any item we hired so we could prove we’d returned it in the same state as we took it out. That didn't go down well with the manager. They’d given us a fidelity card but I doubt we’ll be using it! Later there was a very loud thunderstorm with heavy rain. 

Wednesday 25th June 2008 Toulouse on the dock


An overcast morning, sunny spells in the afternoon. Up at 8.30 and went back to Kiloutou to find out what was missing from the karcher. After keeping us waiting ten minutes the boss came out and said (in pretty fluent English) that we’d lost a piece of plastic and a knob off the back of the machine. No way, there was none of that on it when we had it, just a short length of clear plastic tubing. He was most insistent that we’d lost it and we said how would we know that it was missing? He gave us an exploded diagram of the machine and circled the items missing. We said we’d look to see if we could find them, but we were sure we hadn’t had them in the first place. We got the impression that he was trying to claim off us for something someone else had lost. Back to the yard and we started work on the boat, both attacking it with angle grinders and wire cup brushes. Mike’s Bosch burned out so he fetched out the new Bosch from under the bed and within five minutes that had burned out too. I did below waterline all along the port side and part way down the starboard side. I got about a third of the way and had to pack up because I hadn’t got enough strength to hold the grinder firmly enough (old age and lack of practise!) Mike had already done all the way round above waterline so he finished off the rest. I made some lunch. Back to work and we painted all round, finishing at 7.00 p.m. Knackered again. After we got cleaned up, I reheated a defrosted curry for dinner. 

Sunday 31 January 2010

Tuesday 24th June 2008 Toulouse on the dock

Hot and sunny. Up early again around eight. The VNF started filling the dock around 8.30 a.m. We went in and strung out fore and aft lines to position the boats, Bill stayed on Rosy and we ran his lines back to him. The VNF man wound up the empty paddle but only by a few clicks. He said if he wound it up much more it would flood the covered dock next door. I went to look and he was right there was a puddle forming all along the left hand wall. Unfortunately there was a guy doing some welding lying underneath the big boat that was on the dock. We asked our VNF man if the welder could swim! He wound the paddle up a bit more, the puddle got bigger – the welder left! The guy who was painting the upper section of the hull kept on setting up his masking using a long roll of brown paper. Our open dock emptied slowly. I took some photos. Once the boats were settled on the bostocks he wound the paddle up some more and the water went down a little bit quicker. Mike dropped the ladder across to the bostocks and got on the boat to get his wellies. He had to change the plug on the kärcher (high pressure water cleaner) – the three phase plug wouldn’t work, it kept dropping the breaker out. As soon as the water was out Mike started work with the kärcher. It didn’t take long to do and I helped by dragging the kärcher and the hose and leads round the dock through the mud. Bill was itching to get working as time was running on. We finished just after one and Bill started on Rosy. I went in for a wash and made some lunch. It was ten to three when we left to take the machine back to Kiloutou. Paid 37,50€ and had our deposit cheque of 200€ back with the receipt. Back to the boat. Later we had a ‘phone call from the hire company to say something was missing off the kärcher. We hadn’t noticed anything but we’d look and get back to them the following day. It was very hot and sticky. We were too hot and tired to do much other than sprawl out and watch a film.  


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