Brilliant David 👏👏👏 And well done Riikka. Having started out as a continuous cruiser in London this brought back memories! Yes at times it can feel unsafe/hard to find a mooring/you have to queue/double moor. But as a community London’s waterways are entirely unique, everyone seems to look out for one another. And for those of us that aren’t retired it’s the only place in the country where you can be with others of a similar age/lifestyle.
Land lovers don't want to pay the taxes that keep the waterways open. The only real solution is steep taxation on all boaters to 1. keep the infrastructure maintained and 2. separate the homeless from the real boat enthusiasts
@@abpob6052Quite a bad attitude there, Way back in the late 60s early 70s we had a council run bus service, All this cost effective nonsense didn't exist, Paid for by the people to use but very cheap fares similar to the NHS, You ask if people "want to pay" THEY PAY, And everyone can use the facility with some policing obviously, People on the river pay the same council tax as a one bedroom flat and bring the mooring down and limit the number of boats on the canal, So those "land lover's" you despise pay a small percentage in the upkeep or clear of to Shoeburyness where everything is cheaper and access to the Thames at Shoebury Common unfortunately you have to pay i believe just for the day,Jetski paradise
OMG Pink flamingos, a singing husky and CRT wars 🐾 Just how much more exciting can a winter's evening be 😂 Brillant end picture!! Great stuff as always Thanks
a lot of those boats look abandoned...maybe the crt needs to start doing checks to see which ones can be pulled out and scrapped to clear up some space..
Another deep investigative report by a seasoned investigative reporter! I quite enjoy the new direction of David’s videos. This one because he tells about a different view of narrowboat life and pink flamingos. Keep up the great work! I enjoy the van videos too. Many thanks David!! 🇨🇦
The situation there also means it's practically impossible for visitors to go to London because all the moorings are taken up with live-aboards. It would be great to take a boat to London again but it's just too much hassle.
Rikka`s is an inspiration and very brave to be doing boating on her own. Some of those boats need pulling out of the water and scrapped. Its like skidrow of the boating world!!
Love the video- I have always wondered what it would really be like to live on a narrowboat in London and this vlog gives ample insight. Quite a lot more difficult than I would have thought. What a lovely person with her beautiful dog and thanks to her for sharing a little of her experience with us. What a pity there are so many negative comments here, and some rather hurtful imo comments about her dog. Totally unnecessary and rude. I enjoy all your videos and the lovely people and their animals you introduce us to. Many thanks King David!
How strange that my lifelong ambition in life was to be an artist and spend my evenings sipping champagne on an inflatable pink flamingo. Sadly they're still but dreams... Another great vlog!
There is a famous, rather fat Heron on the Tottenham stretch of this canal, where part of this was filmed, that will eat tinned fish straight out of your hand. I didn't believe it possible, as Herons are so wary, until I saw a lady feeding it sardines straight into its beak.
Couldn't cope with the constant stress of finding a mooring spot. That's totally contrary to the laid back and free ethos of boating!! Well put together and interesting video, I was unaware so many lived aboard in the capital!
Yeah, I think I'd have to find a private mooring at least once or twice a year. Maybe go in with a few other boaters and try to get a lower annual rate. Having a break of "find a new spot" would be tiring.
Thanks for another great video and an interesting life aboard. Chuckling at the idea of waking up to a giant pink flamingo looking in at the window the next day!
Very enjoyable video and great to see the real boating life & challenges of that area. Riikka comes across as real lovely & has a zest for life...that dog though, i'd be chucking it in the cut the amount of whining it does😀 🐕
An interesting video David, as always. You hear a lot of stories about boat life in London, a lot of which is very negative. You give an honest and unbiased account, well done.
Ok, the snark level here is wonderful. Love it! You had me at "... and tried to hump my leg," and I stayed for the delightful rest. Really interesting.
Nice one David. Yet another very interesting vlog. Yes Londons waterways have always been hectic, even years ago. I am sure with the cost of living going up, there will be another influx of new continuous boaters looking for a cheaper option to live on a boat. Think I will stick to less urban areas. Just don't like crowds.
It is so odd how much I cherish your channel, since I am from such a different place. Your film direction is so pure and smooth. Very satisfying! :)))🌍
As a Land Dweller Living In Hackney , I Talk To A Lot of The Boat Owners As I Walk My Dog Along The Tow Paths.. And Yes We All Know About Bowie. Or Fog Horn Bowie as Some C all Him. The CART Are Not Treating The Home Owners on The Canal Fairly. By Effectively Culling The Amount of People Now Living On The Waterways, When I grew Up In The Area That Canal was Basically An Unkempt Toxic Swamp Because Of The Industry in The Wick area . It Is Now a Vibrant Place To Both Visit And Stay.. And The One Aspect That Few Pick Up On Is How Safe They have Made The Area. Especially For Female Cyclist And Joggers. And I Hope Rikka Does Not Mind I Have Taken a Few Photos Over The Years Of Her Flamingo.. We Need People Like Her On The Canals...CART Support Them More.
This is fascinating and it is great to see a really well-made video that takes a balanced view. It is certainly a challenging lifestyle and some determination is needed. The high rents in London are at the root of many of the problems, overcrowding in particular. It’s temporary though. There will come a point where all the boats will have to have electric propulsion and it will be interesting to see what happens then.
Thank you David for such an interesting and enlightening video. It is a great insight into the less glamorous world of live aboards, especially in London. I hope you will continue to make more videos showing this side of canal life. 👏👏👍😀
Great video. Love this channel. This was close to home as I spent my first 4 years (at the end of the 1950's) living in a caravan by Pickett's Lock on the Lea Navigation. Father was a civil engineer building Deephams water treatment plant on Pickett's Lock Lane. Very fond early memories and nice to see the canal being used. Keep these videos coming they're very professional - not surprising given your background!!!
What a wonderful people you meet! Here in the Netherlands people confuse Boats with cheap living as well, and indeed they suffer! No maintenance for two years means a huge loss in value and 4 years to catch up. I have seen several new neighbors go very miserable with a debt for the boat and not being able to cope in winter with no place to go.
Another great video David - cheers ! 😎 Like many other commenters, this constant searching for fresh moorings would slowly drive me mad ! 😱 But each to their own I guess.
Lived in London on the canals 20 years ago. It was a lot quieter, but at the time there were very few resources and very many sketchy places, specifically in the East, around King's Cross and Paddington. And yes, huskies are all full of drama. 😁 Great dogs though.
Helsingistä Englantiin viisi vuotta sitten muuttaneena suomalaisena olen tosi iloinen siitä, että satuin törmäämään tähän "Riikan" videoon. Kiitti paljon, Riikka, ja kaikki videon tekijät. :-)
Dang, you sure looks comfy on the flamingo David, lol Thanks for the boat tour, London canals seems very crowded, better with green landscape and peaceful settings. Cheers from Texas
And this is on the River Lea...try that again a couple of miles south through the Hertford Union Canal (Ducketts Cut) and onto the Regents Canal through London. Moored up three abreast. Moored on water points. Moored on Lock approaches. It's an absolute nightmare. I took my boat through there in the early 2000's and it was amazing. Plenty of places to short stop and enjoy London. Went through there this summer (2022) and it was horrendous. Damaged Lock gates, flooded locks, drunk and abusive people, sunken boats, filth and rubbish everywhere. CRT? nowhere to be found.
You looked mighty fine on that Pink Flamingo. U need one. (Haha) Thank you for the video - hard life boating around London it seems. No boating here anymore - 1 to 3 inches of snow today. Ice on the ponds a bit even. No more boating on the old mighty Mississippi River till next spring for us. Plus the river is at very low levels. Take care
CRT need to enforce their own rules in London and indeed everwhere. If they craned out all the unlicensed and overstayers the canal network would not be spiralling down to the watery squat that it is currently......
Interesting lifestyles. The congestion is quite a contrast to continuous cruising the canals. I expected more people, but grossly underestimated the numbers in my head. Your quite the adventurer riding that flamingo. Glad you weren't bucked off😂
Really enjoyed the video. When I was young I could live close to people, but now that I am approaching retirement age I want a few hundred yards between me & any other humans except my wife. London canals are way too crowded for me.
I live fairly close to Stonebridge lock, and would highly recommend the Waterside cafe located adjacent to it, which I frequent on a regular basis for a burger, whilst strolling through Tottenham marshes.
Im from America, and most of our canals got filled in. I think its great the UK still has their canal system. Our canal systems were never too connected... sometimes to the rivers. I think it would be cool to live on a long boat.
I would imagine that urban London boaters are very different to the vast majority of canal users, peace and quiet in the countryside or the gritty life of the big city I know which I would choose. Love your videos keep them coming.
Interesting to have a look at another style of life on the canals, or, in this case, river. There are more challenges than life on the canals in more rural settings, but still has advantages over living in a flat. I don't envy their fight with the CRT for mooring rights/space, but wish them well! Excellent work as always, entertaining, and well shot. Also, thanks to Riikka and Bowie for letting us have a glimpse into their lives.
I do enjoy these videos of yours on the canal. In lockdown 2020 I binged them all from start to finish (whilst meant to be working!) Your videos always make my feel relaxed. Thank you!
Another great video David. That sunken boat by Stonebridge Lock... I reported that to CRT back in June, when it was floating. I told them it was in imminent danger of sinking because of the huge rust holes in its hull. I'm hoping (giving them the benefit of the doubt) CRT were doing all they legally could to get it moved, but just ran out of time.
@@CruisingTheCut If the CRT already have the legal power to lift a boat from the water after a move-on notice noncompliance,and also manage mooring free zones, it seems odd, that they would not have the power to insist that a potentially sinking boat be moved to a dry-dock. I imagine you would also have people living on a boat still needing to commute to work, and from their successive different locations. It all seems a bit trailer-parkish.
Fascinating , David, thank you once again for a different view of boating life. I can see it would not appeal to everybody and I think the uncertainty of finding moorings must be anxiety creating. What is the rule on double mooring - can you only do it if the boat closest to the bank agrees?
There are no official rules just etiquette; if someone objects then it's likely to be an unpleasant stop if you try anyway so just move on and try another.
That was interesting, somewhere we haven’t been yet, but are a little daunted by the lack of moorings. When are you posting the outtakes of you getting on and off that flamingo? 🦩😂
A big fat thumbs up!! Learned so much through this episode AND I just love your dry humour, David 🦩😂 THANK YOU for the effort you go to provide this production & entertainment value! ❤ xx Tania
These videos you've been making since giving up your own boat have been brilliant; it's really interesting to see all the special interest stories about the canals and the different locations. I still say the CRT should give you a proper job and let you be a contributor to their media outreach. I don't think the pink flamingo is you, though ... maybe an inflatable mini-version of the Ark Royal perhaps? =)
I love how she states that she can go wherever, whenever! ..........right after spending ages looking for a spot where she is actually allowed to moor.
Well, you ARE getting around, aren't you David. Very informative. More to this than I imagined. Certainly broadened my concept of what Narrowboat living entailed. I can see the River and Canal Authorities having problems coping with waste disposal and management of moorings. Can't you just see it : the CRT becoming the HOA of Britain.....Goodbye Pink Flamingo.
Stonebridge Lock, that brings pack memories. I was walking my dog near there (Doberman) in the mid 1970s. The water in the lock was completely covered in algae and the dog thought it was grass and went to run on it. I pulled him out and he was a bit shaking but he didn't do it again 😀
Thanks again David for another fascinating video, alas it shows again how our bureaucracy's cannot comprehend the changes that need to be made for regular folks to survive. Keep up the good work and I now understand why your host's K-9 companion was so vocal..................
Having visited London a few times, I'm not at all surprised the mooring spots are as crowded as the rest of the city. Living there is an amazing challenge unless you are royalty or extremely wealthy. Knightsbridge is lovely. And, by the way, David, you look smashing while atop a huge pink flamingo!
Fascinating. I've watched you off and on for quite a while and I still can't wrap my head around certain things that are completely normal there. 🙃 It reminds me of truckstops in America.
I must say David, you really did suit that pink flamingo at the end there. How about getting one for the campervan, but preferably on wheels because we wouldn't want to see it being dragged along the road.
What a great glimpse into boat life. The constant changing of where you live alongside actually living on water was so well captured. Now, that is one Happy Dog, anyone who knows this breed of dog (and understands dogs in general) knows Bowie is talking , involved in the journey and his life with Rikka on their floating home. As CRT have made more moorings into private , not repaired banks that could be used and taken an attitude that Continous Cruisers are a problem. I moved onto canals in 2000. Continuous Cruising was the legitimate way of life (and still is). TowpathLife ...nothing finer and more vibrant ⭐💫⭐💫⭐
Ooooh I happened to be on when you posted this! I LOVE IT! Such an interesting difference to the quieter and more "slow paced" canal life of the world outside of London,.
Huskies are so vocal. We rescued a Husky cross last autumn, and have discovered this. He’s such a sweet natured dogs though. When I say rescued…we did, from a river bank when on a boat holiday. We think he was probably thrown off a boat, as there was thick woodland behind, so inaccessible except by river.
A very useful story, David. I was wondering whether the insane real estate costs was having an impact on narrowboat life, and it seems it has. By the way, your decision to sell off your own boat seems to have given this channel the freedom to pursue more unusual narrowboat stories. I appreciate your new direction. Cheers!
Very crowded. Good point made about not choosing boat life for rent saving reasons. Question: what happens when someone moors alongside and they aren't around when you want to leave?
Hello David, Very interesting sir. I did notice not only many of the boats in need of care and Decluttering, but the river also. Its a shame that there is this constant conflict over mooring. I do still look forward to and appreciate your vlogs.
Brilliant David 👏👏👏 And well done Riikka. Having started out as a continuous cruiser in London this brought back memories! Yes at times it can feel unsafe/hard to find a mooring/you have to queue/double moor. But as a community London’s waterways are entirely unique, everyone seems to look out for one another. And for those of us that aren’t retired it’s the only place in the country where you can be with others of a similar age/lifestyle.
Thank you, Robbie 👍
I miss Londons Boating community, it is amazingly supportive, I made so many friends. It’s a bit different where we’re ccing now in Yorkshire!
Land lovers don't want to pay the taxes that keep the waterways open. The only real solution is steep taxation on all boaters to 1. keep the infrastructure maintained and 2. separate the homeless from the real boat enthusiasts
@@abpob6052Quite a bad attitude there, Way back in the late 60s early 70s we had a council run bus service, All this cost effective nonsense didn't exist, Paid for by the people to use but very cheap fares similar to the NHS, You ask if people "want to pay" THEY PAY, And everyone can use the facility with some policing obviously, People on the river pay the same council tax as a one bedroom flat and bring the mooring down and limit the number of boats on the canal, So those "land lover's" you despise pay a small percentage in the upkeep or clear of to Shoeburyness where everything is cheaper and access to the Thames at Shoebury Common unfortunately you have to pay i believe just for the day,Jetski paradise
@@abpob6052 So, what are you using that need to be taxed to pay for its costs? It is usuall a car....
OMG Pink flamingos, a singing husky and CRT wars 🐾 Just how much more exciting can a winter's evening be 😂 Brillant end picture!! Great stuff as always Thanks
Thank you!
a lot of those boats look abandoned...maybe the crt needs to start doing checks to see which ones can be pulled out and scrapped to clear up some space..
Another deep investigative report by a seasoned investigative reporter! I quite enjoy the new direction of David’s videos. This one because he tells about a different view of narrowboat life and pink flamingos. Keep up the great work! I enjoy the van videos too. Many thanks David!! 🇨🇦
I didn't see a gin and tonic in either of your hands in that parting glimpse, David, for shame! Thanks for yet another gem of a post! Cheers.
Meh.. Alcohol is the Devil's taint sweat anyway.
I liked this video as it spotlighted the lives of two narrow boaters with the good and bad side of this lifestyle. Well done David.
The situation there also means it's practically impossible for visitors to go to London because all the moorings are taken up with live-aboards. It would be great to take a boat to London again but it's just too much hassle.
I do love this new direction that your channel has taken. I also loved just slowly chugging along the UK scenery.
Just love your style of journalism. A mixture of well presented facts and humour.
Thank you
This certainly shows another (not pleasant) side of the boating life. I can't imagine having to do this every two weeks. Bless them all.
Rikka`s is an inspiration and very brave to be doing boating on her own. Some of those boats need pulling out of the water and scrapped. Its like skidrow of the boating world!!
Love the video- I have always wondered what it would really be like to live on a narrowboat in London and this vlog gives ample insight. Quite a lot more difficult than I would have thought.
What a lovely person with her beautiful dog and thanks to her for sharing a little of her experience with us.
What a pity there are so many negative comments here, and some rather hurtful imo comments about her dog. Totally unnecessary and rude.
I enjoy all your videos and the lovely people and their animals you introduce us to. Many thanks King David!
Thank you 😊
The most reasonable and positive comment here.
that is hands down the most calm voiced version of " and tried to hump my leg" I have ever heard :) so funny David. great video.
Did you not see those calves in that Flamingo shot? Can you blame the poor fella? :D
@@x--.It would have been worthwhile adding the clip of ol' mate fully clothed uncomfortably getting on and off that giant nipple.
How strange that my lifelong ambition in life was to be an artist and spend my evenings sipping champagne on an inflatable pink flamingo.
Sadly they're still but dreams...
Another great vlog!
Loved the postcard shot of you at the end.... I bet video of you getting on & off is hilarious....
A heron that didn't fly away and David on a pink flamingo, you are spoiling us sir!
There is a famous, rather fat Heron on the Tottenham stretch of this canal, where part of this was filmed, that will eat tinned fish straight out of your hand. I didn't believe it possible, as Herons are so wary, until I saw a lady feeding it sardines straight into its beak.
That picture on the flamingo is great! So funny! Thank you for sharing!
Damned fine work sir. Damned fine journalism. An excellent slice of British canal life. Bravo.
This was really very interesting and most professionally produced. Well done.
Couldn't cope with the constant stress of finding a mooring spot. That's totally contrary to the laid back and free ethos of boating!! Well put together and interesting video, I was unaware so many lived aboard in the capital!
Yeah, I think I'd have to find a private mooring at least once or twice a year. Maybe go in with a few other boaters and try to get a lower annual rate. Having a break of "find a new spot" would be tiring.
Where's the video of you climbing on and off that flamingo?
🤣🤣
Well that was an eye opener, I cannot wait for our boat but I would definitely pass if I had to live on it in London, that would send me batty 👍👍
Fantastic documentary work David. Great job representing the viewpoints of both the boaters and the CRT in this rather controversial topic.
Thanks for another great video and an interesting life aboard.
Chuckling at the idea of waking up to a giant pink flamingo looking in at the window
the next day!
Very enjoyable video and great to see the real boating life & challenges of that area. Riikka comes across as real lovely & has a zest for life...that dog though, i'd be chucking it in the cut the amount of whining it does😀 🐕
He stopped as soon as we moored
An interesting video David, as always. You hear a lot of stories about boat life in London, a lot of which is very negative. You give an honest and unbiased account, well done.
interesting view of city boat life. Best wishes to the continuous cruisers of London
Ok, the snark level here is wonderful. Love it! You had me at "... and tried to hump my leg," and I stayed for the delightful rest. Really interesting.
Love that picture at the end 😃
Nice one David. Yet another very interesting vlog. Yes Londons waterways have always been hectic, even years ago. I am sure with the cost of living going up, there will be another influx of new continuous boaters looking for a cheaper option to live on a boat. Think I will stick to less urban areas. Just don't like crowds.
Nice one Dave that wud stress me out all them boats I luv dogs but bloody hell that dog never stops Cheers Dave 🙂🦆🎤✌️
He stopped as soon as we moored
It is so odd how much I cherish your channel, since I am from such a different place. Your film direction is so pure and smooth. Very satisfying! :)))🌍
Thank you
What a lovely lady. And a very insightful look at some of the struggles of boaters in that area. Well done.
As a Land Dweller Living In Hackney , I Talk To A Lot of The Boat Owners As I Walk My Dog Along The Tow Paths.. And Yes We All Know About Bowie. Or Fog Horn Bowie as Some C all Him. The CART Are Not Treating The Home Owners on The Canal Fairly. By Effectively Culling The Amount of People Now Living On The Waterways, When I grew Up In The Area That Canal was Basically An Unkempt Toxic Swamp Because Of The Industry in The Wick area . It Is Now a Vibrant Place To Both Visit And Stay.. And The One Aspect That Few Pick Up On Is How Safe They have Made The Area. Especially For Female Cyclist And Joggers. And I Hope Rikka Does Not Mind I Have Taken a Few Photos Over The Years Of Her Flamingo.. We Need People Like Her On The Canals...CART Support Them More.
This is fascinating and it is great to see a really well-made video that takes a balanced view. It is certainly a challenging lifestyle and some determination is needed. The high rents in London are at the root of many of the problems, overcrowding in particular. It’s temporary though. There will come a point where all the boats will have to have electric propulsion and it will be interesting to see what happens then.
Thank you David for such an interesting and enlightening video. It is a great insight into the less glamorous world of live aboards, especially in London. I hope you will continue to make more videos showing this side of canal life. 👏👏👍😀
Leaving for my first trip to the UK (London) in 3 days. I can’t wait to see the canals and all of the boats.
Hope you enjoy it!
Good stuff David,as always. And that dog isn't fat,he's just a little husky.
Great video. Love this channel. This was close to home as I spent my first 4 years (at the end of the 1950's) living in a caravan by Pickett's Lock on the Lea Navigation. Father was a civil engineer building Deephams water treatment plant on Pickett's Lock Lane. Very fond early memories and nice to see the canal being used. Keep these videos coming they're very professional - not surprising given your background!!!
What a wonderful people you meet! Here in the Netherlands people confuse Boats with cheap living as well, and indeed they suffer! No maintenance for two years means a huge loss in value and 4 years to catch up. I have seen several new neighbors go very miserable with a debt for the boat and not being able to cope in winter with no place to go.
Another great video David - cheers ! 😎
Like many other commenters, this constant searching for fresh moorings would slowly drive me mad ! 😱 But each to their own I guess.
Thanks 👍
I notice there is no footage of you getting on or off the flamingo David 🤣🤣
Lived in London on the canals 20 years ago. It was a lot quieter, but at the time there were very few resources and very many sketchy places, specifically in the East, around King's Cross and Paddington. And yes, huskies are all full of drama. 😁 Great dogs though.
Helsingistä Englantiin viisi vuotta sitten muuttaneena suomalaisena olen tosi iloinen siitä, että satuin törmäämään tähän "Riikan" videoon. Kiitti paljon, Riikka, ja kaikki videon tekijät. :-)
Dang, you sure looks comfy on the flamingo David, lol
Thanks for the boat tour, London canals seems very crowded, better with green landscape and peaceful settings.
Cheers from Texas
And this is on the River Lea...try that again a couple of miles south through the Hertford Union Canal (Ducketts Cut) and onto the Regents Canal through London. Moored up three abreast. Moored on water points. Moored on Lock approaches. It's an absolute nightmare. I took my boat through there in the early 2000's and it was amazing. Plenty of places to short stop and enjoy London. Went through there this summer (2022) and it was horrendous. Damaged Lock gates, flooded locks, drunk and abusive people, sunken boats, filth and rubbish everywhere. CRT? nowhere to be found.
You looked mighty fine on that Pink Flamingo. U need one. (Haha) Thank you for the video - hard life boating around London it seems. No boating here anymore - 1 to 3 inches of snow today. Ice on the ponds a bit even. No more boating on the old mighty Mississippi River till next spring for us. Plus the river is at very low levels. Take care
CRT need to enforce their own rules in London and indeed everwhere. If they craned out all the unlicensed and overstayers the canal network would not be spiralling down to the watery squat that it is currently......
That was quite neat.. such a different perspective of narrowboat life.. would love to see more of such, with interesting folk such in this edition.
I am pleasantly surprised, to say the least, by the beautiful canal/nature surrounding central London. Beautiful! Thanks for sharing this! 😊👍
Very interesting, and full of relaxing visuals. Great video!
Interesting lifestyles. The congestion is quite a contrast to continuous cruising the canals. I expected more people, but grossly underestimated the numbers in my head.
Your quite the adventurer riding that flamingo. Glad you weren't bucked off😂
Really enjoyed the video. When I was young I could live close to people, but now that I am approaching retirement age I want a few hundred yards between me & any other humans except my wife. London canals are way too crowded for me.
I live fairly close to Stonebridge lock, and would highly recommend the Waterside cafe located adjacent to it, which I frequent on a regular basis for a burger, whilst strolling through Tottenham marshes.
Im from America, and most of our canals got filled in. I think its great the UK still has their canal system. Our canal systems were never too connected... sometimes to the rivers. I think it would be cool to live on a long boat.
Can't forget the Erie canal in NY.
Nice to see my neighbourhood on this channel I've been watching for a long time. I recognise these boats and the flamingo well.
I often ride my bike along the Lea and love passing the narrow boat community and occasionally stopping for a friendly chat x
I would imagine that urban London boaters are very different to the vast majority of canal users, peace and quiet in the countryside or the gritty life of the big city I know which I would choose. Love your videos keep them coming.
Looks like a floating skid row.
It reminded me of the boat/ campsite scene in Smiley’s People.
Interesting to have a look at another style of life on the canals, or, in this case, river. There are more challenges than life on the canals in more rural settings, but still has advantages over living in a flat. I don't envy their fight with the CRT for mooring rights/space, but wish them well! Excellent work as always, entertaining, and well shot. Also, thanks to Riikka and Bowie for letting us have a glimpse into their lives.
This is a far cry from the romance of canal and river lift as projected on Griff Jones 'rivers' series. Great production David, thank you.
Cheers
I do enjoy these videos of yours on the canal. In lockdown 2020 I binged them all from start to finish (whilst meant to be working!) Your videos always make my feel relaxed. Thank you!
Awesome, thank you!
Thank you again David for a great video.
It's always about "safety" when your freedoms are taken. I love the cut!
Another great video David. That sunken boat by Stonebridge Lock... I reported that to CRT back in June, when it was floating. I told them it was in imminent danger of sinking because of the huge rust holes in its hull. I'm hoping (giving them the benefit of the doubt) CRT were doing all they legally could to get it moved, but just ran out of time.
Hmmm, yes the legal process always seems very drawn out but it's absurd when it's a navigation hazard!
@@CruisingTheCut If the CRT already have the legal power to lift a boat from the water after a move-on notice noncompliance,and also manage mooring free zones, it seems odd, that they would not have the power to insist that a potentially sinking boat be moved to a dry-dock. I imagine you would also have people living on a boat still needing to commute to work, and from their successive different locations. It all seems a bit trailer-parkish.
i agree the countryside and rural canal settings are the best . they are less crowded and the scenery is much better
Nice to see you still managed to get in the obligatory shot of a Heron !
Of course!
Fascinating , David, thank you once again for a different view of boating life. I can see it would not appeal to everybody and I think the uncertainty of finding moorings must be anxiety creating. What is the rule on double mooring - can you only do it if the boat closest to the bank agrees?
There are no official rules just etiquette; if someone objects then it's likely to be an unpleasant stop if you try anyway so just move on and try another.
That was interesting, somewhere we haven’t been yet, but are a little daunted by the lack of moorings. When are you posting the outtakes of you getting on and off that flamingo? 🦩😂
A big fat thumbs up!! Learned so much through this episode AND I just love your dry humour, David 🦩😂 THANK YOU for the effort you go to provide this production & entertainment value! ❤ xx Tania
These videos you've been making since giving up your own boat have been brilliant; it's really interesting to see all the special interest stories about the canals and the different locations. I still say the CRT should give you a proper job and let you be a contributor to their media outreach.
I don't think the pink flamingo is you, though ... maybe an inflatable mini-version of the Ark Royal perhaps? =)
Glad you like them!
Thanks for another interesting and informative video, David, on a side of canal life which I previously knew nothing about.
I love how she states that she can go wherever, whenever! ..........right after spending ages looking for a spot where she is actually allowed to moor.
Well, you ARE getting around, aren't you David. Very informative. More to this than I imagined. Certainly broadened my concept of what Narrowboat living entailed. I can see the River and Canal Authorities having problems coping with waste disposal and management of moorings. Can't you just see it : the CRT becoming the HOA of Britain.....Goodbye Pink Flamingo.
Stonebridge Lock, that brings pack memories. I was walking my dog near there (Doberman) in the mid 1970s. The water in the lock was completely covered in algae and the dog thought it was grass and went to run on it. I pulled him out and he was a bit shaking but he didn't do it again 😀
Lovely video, David. Great photo of you relaxing on the pink flamingo.
David on a pink flamingo. Now that is not something we see every day
I bet Lorna is jealous ;0)
Thanks again David for another fascinating video, alas it shows again how our bureaucracy's cannot comprehend the changes that need to be made for regular folks to survive. Keep up the good work and I now understand why your host's K-9 companion was so vocal..................
Having visited London a few times, I'm not at all surprised the mooring spots are as crowded as the rest of the city. Living there is an amazing challenge unless you are royalty or extremely wealthy. Knightsbridge is lovely. And, by the way, David, you look smashing while atop a huge pink flamingo!
Fascinating. I've watched you off and on for quite a while and I still can't wrap my head around certain things that are completely normal there. 🙃
It reminds me of truckstops in America.
I must say David, you really did suit that pink flamingo at the end there. How about getting one for the campervan, but preferably on wheels because we wouldn't want to see it being dragged along the road.
That life looks hella comfy, waking up rainy morning pulled up next to a cafe have a cup of coffee listening to the sounds of the urban river. 😌
What a great glimpse into boat life. The constant changing of where you live alongside actually living on water was so well captured.
Now, that is one Happy Dog, anyone who knows this breed of dog (and understands dogs in general) knows Bowie is talking , involved in the journey and his life with Rikka on their floating home. As CRT have made more moorings into private , not repaired banks that could be used and taken an attitude that Continous Cruisers are a problem. I moved onto canals in 2000. Continuous Cruising was the legitimate way of life (and still is). TowpathLife ...nothing finer and more vibrant ⭐💫⭐💫⭐
Really enjoyed the snap of you on the flamingo. Capital discomfort is more like it! Great video.
Great interviews. Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you both for all the serious good information...glad you hit the pub !! : )
4:20 ...James Acaster has a narrow boat..!?
Also great video David, Thank you ever so much!
I saw your notice pop up and couldn't wait to get home and watch. Another great relaxing video. Thanks David. I hope you are well
Gotta love a Husky! Great vlog. It’s too bad some of those boats are not being taken care of. What a shame.
Way to style, David.......rocking the Pink Flamingo!
I know that stretch of the canal. A nice place to go walking along the Walthamstow and Tottenham marshes.
Ooooh I happened to be on when you posted this! I LOVE IT!
Such an interesting difference to the quieter and more "slow paced" canal life of the world outside of London,.
Jeez, Bjōrk on a boat ! Dressed very appropriately for boating too ! Thsoe boat shoes are amazing. Hah !
Lovely vlog…so interesting meeting the different folk,,,,keep them up
Huskies are so vocal. We rescued a Husky cross last autumn, and have discovered this. He’s such a sweet natured dogs though. When I say rescued…we did, from a river bank when on a boat holiday. We think he was probably thrown off a boat, as there was thick woodland behind, so inaccessible except by river.
A very useful story, David. I was wondering whether the insane real estate costs was having an impact on narrowboat life, and it seems it has. By the way, your decision to sell off your own boat seems to have given this channel the freedom to pursue more unusual narrowboat stories. I appreciate your new direction. Cheers!
Very crowded. Good point made about not choosing boat life for rent saving reasons. Question: what happens when someone moors alongside and they aren't around when you want to leave?
You move out and re-tie them back to the bank in your place.
@@CruisingTheCut That sounds very civilized.
Excellent! Your media background really shone through. Very watchable and well balanced.👍
Thank you
Lovely Video!!!!
Thank you!
Hello David, Very interesting sir. I did notice not only many of the boats in need of care and Decluttering, but the river also. Its a shame that there is this constant conflict over mooring. I do still look forward to and appreciate your vlogs.