No, not a layout, though with this weather, I hope to get some jobs done that are best performed outdoors.
Back in 1986, which was a pretty dreadful year for me thanks to a workplace bully*, one of the few highlights was a canal trip on the Leeds & Liverpool with friends from university.
It was very different from the other canals we were all used to, and had some memorable moments, including that moment from films when strangers walk into a bar, and everybody goes quiet.
Other than that, it was great fun, but we ran out of time to reach our planned destination, the Bingley Five Rise.
So, forty years later, we decided to put that right with a weekend cruise.
Most of us had interesting train trips to our starting point in Silsden, thanks to various delays, but it is amazing how a pub lunch can restore spirits. Which was just as well, because the boatyard advised us that it was impossible to do the Five Rise and return in a weekend.
So we did a lot of re-planning, which wasn't helped by differing definitions of "up" and "down".
The result was that we spent Friday night re-visiting Skipton, which has changed a lot since we were last there. The bonus was that after a meal in the aptly named Narrowboat, we ended up at the excellent Skipton Beer Festival.
We couldn't stay long, because a plan was coming together.
On the dot of 8am we winded the boats and headed back to Silsden to pick up our last crew member.
And, eating lunch on the move, we headed to Bingley to try our luck.
For once, the Gods of the Inland Waterways smiled on us, though at a cost.
The incredibly hardworking volunteer lockkeepers took a pragmatic approach to following the published schedule, but we still had to wait over two hours until the locks were set for our descent. A wait enlivened by a Dakota flypast. The dangers inherent in working such a large flight of staircase locks mean you can only transit them with the lockkeepers in charge. And it isn't quick. They did welcome our help, though. And most importantly, they were flexible enough to agree to us returning within the 25 hour time limit that would otherwise have left us stranded with no way to return the boats on time.
As well as the Five Rise the lockkeepers also control the Bingley Three Rise, so it was late in the day when we began the final cruise to Saltaire, and the next blog.
*Four years later, I had the great pleasure of insisting she call me Sir, which is probably the only time in my career when I pulled rank.











































