Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Would you like to visit London on your boat? Have your say on moorings.

Many boaters reading this will I'm sure be aware of the situation I'm about to describe.  It's not recent news but an ongoing problem which sees visiting boaters from up country actively discouraged from visiting one of the gems of the canal network.  Right now there's an opportunity to let CRT know how we feel about this.  First let me paint the picture.

In our first few years of having Herbie, we made frequent visits to London, mostly tying up in Paddington for a city break and sometimes continuing on down to Limehouse, or turning off for a trip up the Lee and Stort. It was a joy, and for the first time in our lives we were able to take regular advantage of what the city has to offer without expensive and tedious train journeys and even more expensive hotels.  Later, I joined the Towpath Ranger volunteer gang in London and spent many an hour talking to London boaters and towpath users and seeing from the inside some of the operations of CRT.

When we first started making these visits, we sometimes paused at Kensal Green  for a night or two before moving on in to Paddington.  On the stretch between the two, we saw no moored boats until we got to Little Venice, then on arrival in Paddington it was often fairly full, but we never failed to find a spot to tie up.  The Paddington security guards would pay us a polite visit reminding us that we would be expected to leave after seven (I think) days.

Skip forward ten years and I'll describe our more recent  experiences.   (It's been  a year or more probably since I last patrolled the area, but I'm pretty sure my recollections hold to this day). From the time you arrive anywhere past Acton, the bank will be lined with boats two or sometimes three abreast all the way into Paddington. That's four miles of nose to tail boats virtually all residential.  Your chances of finding a vacant spot are virtually nil.  There are of course moorings designated as Visitor Moorings throughout London, but those occupying them will not be visitors but mostly  boaters resident in London.  It is common to see boaters exchanging mooring spots late at night, so that they can fulfil their time limit obligations without losing a spot.

CRT knows the problem but thus far they have been unable or unwilling to protect the needs of visiting boaters to any proper extent.  There are a couple of spots on Rembrandt gardens which are bookable by visitors.  That's two or three moorings which you might be lucky enough to book in a huge city of thousands of boats.  I'm sure that places in Paddington basin can be found on some days, but they wouldn't be vacant for more than a few hours. Other spots at Camden and Victoria  Park have long since been virtually impossible to obtain.  I think I also read that Limehouse  was now a no no, but you may correct me on that.  How anyone who wishes to make the trip from the Grand Union to the Lee navigation can guarantee to do so defeats me, you cant't reasonably do it in one day, so you need somewhere to stop for the night.

The upshot of all this has been that the uncertainty of finding anywhere to moor has meant that anyone cruising into or through  London from further afield runs a high  risk of finding nowhere to stop.  So most of us, sadly, just don't go there even though we'd love to.  In practice we feel excluded.  Locked out.

CRT has problems enough with managing all the residential boaters in London and that is where much of their energies are spent, but having worked alongside them for some time (admittedly not very recently) they do seem totally absorbed by the issues of London based boaters at the expense of those visiting or passing through the city.

This is not a rant against London residential boaters, it is a plea for the rights of the rest of us.

At the moment they are running another consultation on boating in London, and yesterday I filled in the survey.  If you feel like me, I urge you to do the same.  What I suggested is this.  CRT has a duty to enable navigation through the system and that must include maintaining places where visitors can stop.  Visitor moorings should be for visitors to the city, not for boaters already resident in the area to move back and forth.  It would not be difficult for CRT to issue a distinctive licence for boaters based in London, so that genuine visitors to the city could be identified as such.  In that way a reasonable number of spaces for visitors could be maintained for their sole use and barred to boaters with a London licence.

I get the feeling that CRT feels that very few 'genuine' visitor spaces are needed, and of course that's because so many of us have given up bothering to take the risk to visit or pass through the city.  Were the places available, the people would come - as we have every right to do. 

Rant over.  If you feel as strongly as I do about his issue then spare a few minutes to complete the CRT survey on Managing Boats on London's Busy Waterways.  If you feel so moved, then please encourage others to do so. You can be sure that the boaters from within the city will be eagerly protesting their own needs (as they have every right to do), but those of us who wish to exercise our right as visitors need to speak up.  I don't know about you, but I feel as though London is virtually a no go area for visitors which makes me very sad.

9 comments:

Pip and Mick said...

Hi Neil
We went to London in 2019 and CRT had just introduced a scheme for six bookable moorings in Paddington basin, on the first pontoon on the left as you come in opposite St Mary's Hospital. I think it was £12 per night, which for central London is a good price. I think we stayed a week. The moorings were full of boaters like us. It made us laugh when a London boater came by and remarked about "Shiney Boat Central". He was quite ok about it but wasn't going to spend £12 pounds a night.
I don't know if that scheme still operates but there was talk at the time of extending it to include some moorings at Kings Cross and by the Olympic park on the Lee too.

I will now go and fill out the survey.

Mick
NB Oleanna

Jennie said...

Done - thank you for the heads up. We loved our one and only visit to London and would love to do so again, but the stress of not being able to find a mooring is very off putting. Jennie nb Tentatrice

Unknown said...

Great post - very measured and reasonable, but then we agree with you - it's a long time since we last visited London by boat - the last time was unpleasant and we were made to feel like strangers in old home town.

I don't know how we overcome the "them and us" - I don't want to take anything away from the residents, I just want to be able to enjoy the waterways myself with the freedom just to pop in and out without booking - this is what I miss.

Thank you for the link to the suvery - it's important!

Sue, Indigo Dream

Sue said...

Very well written. Totally agree and have done the survey. It is a terrible shame and we would not visit London again. Last time we did was in September 2017. Full of boats then nowhere to moor but I knew that would be the case so booked at West London Motor Cruising Club for the night on the way to a booked mooring at Rembrandt Gardens and a night at the Cruising Club on the way out. I don't think there is much chance of CRT doing anything about this but your idea of a London Licence is something they might look at but how they work it... Hummmm I have no idea.

Sue

Nb Duxllandyn said...

Great post on a very controversial topic for boaters who actually boat. London is becoming/has become a no-go area and both CART and BW must take responsibility for letting the permanent moorers move in with a sense of entitlement and possession. I agree with others that it's probably too late to reverse this situation and many boaters will not venture that far South in the future.

Mike
nb Duxllandyn

nb Carmel said...

I visited London from my usual haunts "oop norf" in 2016. It was a wonderful experience but will never attempt it again. I remember managing to get a spot breasted up at Kensal Green for the night, then the following day had to go 7 hours continuously as far as the northern end of Hackney Marshes before finding anywhere to moor. As a solo boater I had to resort to stopping illegally on a lock landing just to make myself a cuppa and a sarnie. The way back was equally as bad. I have no idea what can be done to encourage boaters from outside the London area to visit, but I don't think I shall bother again. Pity. I shall now go and find the consultation, and respond best I can.
Cheers, Dave

nb Carmel said...

Further to above, response done, and in it I've made a suggestion that the CC license should be restricted within the M25 area to say, one month only with no return in two months. This would drastically reduce the numbers of those who deliberately misuse the license, and where the usual 25mile p/a requirement is a joke. This would not impinge on genuine CCers or those with home moorings from outside the M25 area who would have ample time to visit and return to home areas or continue their genuine CC wanderings.
Dave

Dave (Scouts) said...

We last went into London in 2012 having hired a boat from near Kings Langley. We moored one night on the offside next to willowtree marina (it felt safer) and then managed to book a mooring at the narrowboat museum around back of Kings Cross.

It was bad even then and having just looked on google maps you can see boats lined up as you say for miles.

Its not just London though, Oxford has a similar problem. If you carry on down the canal rather than take dukes cut you will be crawling along almost to the end and then find nowhere to moor.

Herbie Neil said...

We found that the secret of getting a mooring in Oxford was to stop at Thrupp the night before, then arrive in Oxford at about noon or shortly before. There is a daily turnover of boats down in Jericho but it soon fills up early afternoon. Also if you have the nerve to back down the arm past Isis lock there is often room at the end. It is a crawl in to Oxford though.

On the subject of the bookable £12 Paddington moorings, I object in principle. We have already paid our licence which should allow us access to visitor moorings not occupied by locals.

Thanks everyone for supporting my grumble.