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Boats stranded in Aylesbury after Grand Union Canal dries up during drought
 
Boats stranded in Aylesbury after Grand Union Canal dries up during drought
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 10:31, 3rd September 2025
 
From the BBC:



Boats have been left stranded due to low water levels in a canal following the summer drought.

The Aylesbury Arm of the Grand Union Canal has been closed since 16 June by the Canal and River Trust.

According to the The Aylesbury Canal Society boats have not been able to leave the drydock while others have remained stuck in the canal.

Dale Canfield, from the Canal and River Trust, said the waterway is more than 200 years old and needs more investment to keep up with maintenance.

Four reservoirs supply the Grand Union Canal but a lack of rain has left them without water, meaning the canals cannot be topped up.

Nick Coolican-Smith, the chairman of the Aylesbury Canal Society, said the business could lose at least £10,000 as a result of the closure.

He said :"We've lost probably tens of thousands: boat cancellations, about a dozen dock bookings cancelled or postponed, and then the ripple effect to guys who come and work here on the boats or paint the boats. A lot of people's holidays have gone out the window. A lot of people trying to get their boats back from holiday and are stuck in various places. In some places are rows of boats just sat on the bottom of the canal, leaning sideways... They are stuck there indefinitely. Nothing they can do."

He added that while there are usually water problems in September, it was unusual to experience issues from June. "The last time it was like this, I am told, is 1976," he said.

Mr Canfield said: "It needs a huge investment to deal with the leaks, with all the problems we have got and then to maintain keeping navigation open which we'd all love to do. But there isn't the funding and the resource currently to do that."

A Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs spokesperson said: "Our canals provide a wide range of benefits, such as connecting people to nature. That is why we are investing more than £480m of grant funding to the Canal and River Trust between now and 2037 to support the essential infrastructure maintenance of our much-valued waterways."


Re: Boats stranded in Aylesbury after Grand Union Canal dries up during drought
Posted by TonyN at 18:32, 3rd September 2025
 
From the BBC:



Boats have been left stranded due to low water levels in a canal following the summer drought.

The Aylesbury Arm of the Grand Union Canal has been closed since 16 June by the Canal and River Trust.

According to the The Aylesbury Canal Society boats have not been able to leave the drydock while others have remained stuck in the canal.

Dale Canfield, from the Canal and River Trust, said the waterway is more than 200 years old and needs more investment to keep up with maintenance.

Four reservoirs supply the Grand Union Canal but a lack of rain has left them without water, meaning the canals cannot be topped up.

Nick Coolican-Smith, the chairman of the Aylesbury Canal Society, said the business could lose at least £10,000 as a result of the closure.

He said :"We've lost probably tens of thousands: boat cancellations, about a dozen dock bookings cancelled or postponed, and then the ripple effect to guys who come and work here on the boats or paint the boats. A lot of people's holidays have gone out the window. A lot of people trying to get their boats back from holiday and are stuck in various places. In some places are rows of boats just sat on the bottom of the canal, leaning sideways... They are stuck there indefinitely. Nothing they can do."

He added that while there are usually water problems in September, it was unusual to experience issues from June. "The last time it was like this, I am told, is 1976," he said.

Mr Canfield said: "It needs a huge investment to deal with the leaks, with all the problems we have got and then to maintain keeping navigation open which we'd all love to do. But there isn't the funding and the resource currently to do that."

A Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs spokesperson said: "Our canals provide a wide range of benefits, such as connecting people to nature. That is why we are investing more than £480m of grant funding to the Canal and River Trust between now and 2037 to support the essential infrastructure maintenance of our much-valued waterways."


Any Ideas where the picture shows its not Aylesbury

Sorry just worked out its further out of Aylesbury not the basin at the end of the Aylesbury arm.

Mods please delete if you like

Re: Boats stranded in Aylesbury after Grand Union Canal dries up during drought
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 18:49, 3rd September 2025
 
No - I won't delete your post! 

I merely quoted their 'News item' from the BBC.  We all know they don't get things wrong, do they?

I'll do some more 'digging' (or possibly dredging) to find out more.

CfN. 

Re: Boats stranded in Aylesbury after Grand Union Canal dries up during drought
Posted by grahame at 19:25, 3rd September 2025
 
I have memories of the Aylesbury Arm - dropping from the Grand Union at Marsworth down to Aylesbury.  In those days, I don't think that big basin was there; a pretty tight space at the end.  Memories not entirely happy - we ended up in A&E at Stoke Mandeville; we were very fortunate that ... no long term problem issue, but a lesson learned.   As I recall the lock flight is narrow, but not back-pumped.  I think it starts with a staircase, which doubles water consumption.

Re: Boats stranded in Aylesbury after Grand Union Canal dries up during drought
Posted by bobm at 20:01, 3rd September 2025
 
On tonight’s BBC Points West there was a report on the Wilts & Berks canal.  The volunteers have been forced to stop barge trips on two stretches as the water has dropped too low.  Sadly another section is unlikely ever to see craft again as it has been filled in and grassed over.   (And that’s the bit that goes past my office window!)

Re: Boats stranded in Aylesbury after Grand Union Canal dries up during drought
Posted by Mark A at 21:35, 3rd September 2025
 
I have memories of the Aylesbury Arm - dropping from the Grand Union at Marsworth down to Aylesbury.  In those days, I don't think that big basin was there; a pretty tight space at the end.  Memories not entirely happy - we ended up in A&E at Stoke Mandeville; we were very fortunate that ... no long term problem issue, but a lesson learned.   As I recall the lock flight is narrow, but not back-pumped.  I think it starts with a staircase, which doubles water consumption.

The Aylesbury arm... with ambitions to reach Abingdon and thereby bypass the horribly obstructive and influential Thames Commissioners, who duly slaughtered said ambitions...

Mark

Re: Boats stranded in Aylesbury after Grand Union Canal dries up during drought
Posted by Mark A at 21:43, 3rd September 2025
 
I think it's the case that depending on how it's operated, a staircase lock doesn't consume more water than two locks with the same fall arranged sequentially. Also, the staircase had sideponds which mitigates the water consumption.

i'm now wondering if there are locks anywhere on the system with both working sideponds and the expectation that they be used.

Mark


Re: Boats stranded in Aylesbury after Grand Union Canal dries up during drought
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 22:05, 3rd September 2025
 
Mods please delete if you like

No - I won't delete your post! 

I merely quoted their 'News item' from the BBC. We all know they don't get things wrong, do they?

I'll do some more 'digging' (or possibly dredging) to find out more.

CfN.

I've done some more 'dredging', and I've found that the BBC have previously used that same image to 'illustrate' their news stories about, for example, the Trent and Mersey Canal and the Oxford Canal.

It seems to be yet another use of a 'stock picture' to illustrate any 'canal story'. 

 
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