Which is the most notorious stand-alone lock (not affected by other  waterway 
factors) on the system?
 My vote is for Colwich.   
On Wednesday afternoon this week I approached Colwich Lock from Great  
Haywood to find a long queue of boats waiting for the lock. At one point I was  
eighth in line of thirteen waiting boats. This came as no surprise as this lock 
 
is notoriously slow to fill, has heavy, ill balanced bottom gates one of which  
can (and usually does) swing open in the time it takes the 'lockwinder' to  
walk from the bottom gate to the top gate and an inadequate length of lock  
landing (considering the queues that often form) at the southern end. For those 
 
of us who have queued for two to four hours at this lock, a few of the 
bollards  that are being sprinkled around the system would be usefully located 
along 
the  banks to remove the necessity to stand holding a centre line for hours on 
 end. Rumour had it that the inoperative ground paddle at the top of the lock 
had  been recently repaired (within the last 24 hours), but had failed again. 
 Quote from one frustrated ancient mariner standing waiting was: Why have  
they (BW) put in a plastic paddle which is not reliable, when wooden ones  has 
been satisfactory for 200 years? Even when the lock is working 'to spec.'  
queues form quite regularly, especially at weekends (one holiday weekend some  
years ago I was about 15th or 16th in the queue trying to head north, and  had 
a 
3.5 hour plus wait). 
On the plus side, apart from the railway junction overhead, it is in  a 
pretty location.
 
Arthur Naylor
 



   


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