Date - 25 4 10 
Day - Sunday
Start - Stratford 0900
End  Lowsonford 1825

Last nights moorings were much quieter than I expected them to be. As we were 
in town we ate out,walking a few hundred yards from the basin/town centre where 
things were much quieter. We found a nice little Italian restaurant called iL 
Bertorelli  http://www.ilbertorelli.co.uk/ that had some vacant tables. The 
service was good and the meals very tasty. 
I needed to post some letters but all the post boxes we came across were sealed 
for the weekend. We found out later that this was because the town was 
celebrating Shakespeare's birthday. http://www.shakespearesbirthday.org.uk/.

This morning we woke not to the sound  of the dawn chorus or as I expected the 
mechanical street cleaners, but to the sound of rain on the roof at about 6 am. 
I don't know how long it lasted but it had cleared up before we were up. The 
Canaltime that had followed us down yesterday set off at 8 am so they were due 
a good road from all the locks they left yesterday. There was no point in 
hurrying away and chasing them up the locks so we left at a few minuets after 9 
am. We just left the basin into the canal as a hire boat  was setting the first 
lock to go up, so we were still right behind some one. The did offer to let us 
passed but we told them to carry on.  As we left 4th lock the pound was well 
down and I was soon on the bottom, just being able to move of tickover. This is 
quite a long pound and I caught up the the hire boat in front stuck in the 
bridge hole about 150 yards before the lock, Diana had walked up and even 
though the boat ahead had dropped a lock full of water she ran some more down 
and soon had them afloat, I was going nowhere for a bit and then I slowly 
started creeping forward to the sound of the base plate scraping the debris on 
the bottom. The 5th lock No. 65 is adjacent to a wide road bridge forming a 
tunnel into the lock mouth, I had to bowhaul through this. 
Once up the lock the next pound was just on weir with nothing flowing down the 
bywash. We were a bit short of water so stopped at the old Stratford Court 
Cruiser base to top up, but the tap was so slow we settled for half a tank. 
There is a notice in the window of the closed offices saying that Valley 
Cruisers hope to open up there with full services shortly, unfortunately the 
notice was not dated so I don't know how old it was. 
We caught up with both the hire boat who had stopped for water and the 
Canaltime boat who had broken down at bridge 63 which now gave us the good 
road. The Canaltime pulled out behind us and followed us up the next 3 locks. 
We had bit of a problem at lock 47 and invited the Canaltime boat to pass, as 
they were mob handed the back set for us all the way up the flight to lock 40 
which was as good a being in front. We didn't see them again after this as the 
long pound is quite shallow and limited our speed greatly. 
We met a few boats between here and Lowsonford  so apart from leakage the locks 
were all with us. The weather managed to behave its self until 6 pm when it 
started to rain which continued right until we moored up at quarter past in 
almost the same spot as we were in 2 nights ago.


You will find our latest position and all our past travels on our blog at 
http://nbharnser.blogspot.com/

-- 
Brian  

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