Seriously, your level of wit, charm, brilliance and intelligence in this episode is amazing. This is what all the videos should be modeled after. so informative, educational, production value through the roof, just loaded chock full of production value. And I understand your humor, which surprises me, because i usually dont get British humor. This is a great show. TV quality.
these vlogs are the best time of my day. im very busy all the time and alot goes on in my head, it's nice to take a leisurely cruise to settle my brain. thanks for the relaxing break.
7:46: There's an interesting bit of history to the Etruria Forge as well. One if its employees, operating a steam hammer back in the 1860s, was a young teen-aged lad named Edward Smith, who would go on to obtain a mariner's certification, and was eventually employed by the White Star Line, where he was the first and only Captain of the ill-fated RMS TITANIC.
I love most of your puns (one or two have been over my head), but you excelled yourself with Steelite Span (at least for those of us of a certain age, who remember Steeleye Span when they were young and exciting). I laughed out loud and I think frightened my cat!
I'm sure residents of the UK would laugh at me for saying this, but so much of England looks like a park or open air museum, I love it. I hope to visit one day.
6.00 Yep, I agree, and I'm not alone in this: love a good cemetery me, and find them not only really peaceful, but excellent local history books. Full of stories...👍🏴
Hi there just thought I would say how much I enjoy your vlogs I live in stoke and used to have a boat on the leek arm my dad, bless him built our first boat a wooden one I might add at stone and we had such wonderful times on the canal in the 1960s/70s You sound like an educated man and come across as being a real nice person best wishes steve
David Thank you for answering my many questions over recent weeks. I am still catching up with some of your previous vlogs. I just watched the 'Brothers in Arms' vlog about the North Oxford restoration. What an excellent vlog that was, the interview with the organising volunteer just captured the spirit of the canal volunteers and what they have achieved over the past 65 years - I do think that these vlogs will be a very important archive material in the future. I also recall the interview with the man canoeing the network for charity, also very interesting I thought. When you interview people in this way they seem to relax and just tell their story, you seem to disappear and they have the space to 'tell', reminds me a little of the listening project on the BBC at times. I recall being on the Errewash recently. We were delayed at the Gallows lock while the volunteers fitted a plaque to the lock gate. We chatted to them while we waited. They were mostly retired engineers, they used a restored historic work boat as their work base that they were extremely proud of, I can only describe them as a totally charming and marvelously eccentric bunch with many fascinating stories to tell. The voices on the canals, whether they be boaters on the network, canal trust staff, volunteers, canoe fund raisers etc, are often very interesting raconteurs, arguably more individual and unique than in any other walk of life. When you do capture these voices I find myself transfixed. Any chance we could hear some more of them within the vlogs? Mike
Hi. Thanks. It's really a question of when I come across them, them being willing to go on camera, and there being a visual story to tell. It's not enough for them to talk, there needs to be relevant pictures to go over the top, to make a decent video. I do, when I can :-)
I remember coming through this section of the canal in the early 1980s with my Dad. Back then it was very different and we cruised through the middle of Shelton Steelworks. I remember seeing yellow hot bars of steel shooting down from one side of the plant to the other. It was spectacular. Does anyone else remember seeing this?
Your Vlog is very addictive David, and I look forward to the regular invitations to watch the latest high quality production. It's a fascinating world you're travelling through, and I can see one has to be fit, fearless and "sticky of foot" to manage such slippery tall lock-ladders. Thanks for such great stuff.
This series is very well done. You're doing a great job of taking us along. The meeting the boat at the narrow point is another fine example of "Critical Convergence".
Hello David, I've just finished my "binge watch" to catch up on your wonderful video's ... enjoyed 'em all, thanks, oh and completely agree with you about Cadbury's and graffiti. Long may you continue to C.T.C.
I too like cemeteries, they are dead cool. I tend the find that the history you referred to is hidden just below the surface. Buried in fact! Great vlog. Thanks.
Well, I've watched for about 19 hours straight and I'm packing it in for today! I heartily enjoyed all of your videos and had some great laugh out loud moments while watching them. Thank you, thank you!
I really love your video's and your comment. It looks very professional and is very informative. Very nice for a Dutch guy to watch. Thanks very much!!!
Sorry, slightly boring comment, but many fish love the churning of locks as it stirs up food for them. Excellent spot for perch fishing. If you didn't fall asleep. Thanks.
the answer to your chimney question = incinerator. A grand boating experience through an area the canals were built for. Coal coming in and pottery going out. Fascinating trip, excellent film. Thank you David.
As a Stokie I have to say that you made the area sound more appealing than it actually is lol. I've walked this entire stretch of the canal and live about 10 minutes walk from the Caldon canal which is much more picturesque.
Ha! You're the only Stokie to say so. I had to trim a few seconds out of the start of this video after many furious locals expressed vitriolic fury that I said I'd read forum comments about Stoke not being somewhere to stop overnight. I didn't even say whether I agreed or if it was true or not, just said I'd read it but lots of folk got extremely annoyed.
Awesome Video....Dolphin Discount was flying its 1800's Southern USA Flag LOL not gonna mention its name.......that was the Hanford waste recycling Center smoke stacks you pointed out.....also those train wheel tables, there is the Axiom Rail Complex They have thousands of Rail car wheels everywhere, That was a eerie narrowboat at 5:00 thought that was Charon (ferryman of Hades who carries souls of the newly deceased across the rivers Styx)....You should of toured the at Trentham Lake and Gardens....so are you gonna take a dip at Water World.
I really enjoy your videos, went ouch on the steel ice span bit lol 😂 thank you you made me smile(your not sad looking at gravestones I find them interesting to, guess we're just nosy lol
Absolutely love all your vlogs but particularly loving these ones as we bought our boat from Great Haywood and did this exact journey your doing. We went up to Anderton. Its really great to see it all again and be able to giggle along. Thank you.
These vlogs are wonderful! My friend has given up the house and the job at 58 and migrated to the canals as well. More and more people seem to be doing this. I have not got the courage to do it, but good luck to you!
I, too like stalking around old cemeteries. I grew up in Kentucky and, the old family cemeteries are beyond fascinating. In your more rural footage it takes me back to sailing on the Kentucky River which makes a diagonal cut across the state. It is fairly narrow (compared to the Ohio or Mississippi) and has bucolic country settings and few urban areas...Thank You Again.
Buried history in the cemetery I think! They are rather intriguing places just the names and the dates of those who have moved on is interesting in an odd way. Great blog again.
the smokestack is for the Hanford household waste recycling center! I went to Stoke on Trent in google maps and found a road overpass and went into street view and located the stack and moved to it.
Another lovely VLOG as always. I also love to walk through old cemeteries and read the inscriptions. I was surprised to see the sign for Portmeirion - I have been to the enchanting village of Portmeirion but it is in Wales, I guess the pottery is in England. You have to be extremely agile to get up those ladders in the locks! Keep up the good work.
I recently went up the narrowest, most ridiculous lock ladder ever, just wide enough for one foot and only an inch or so for that foot to go through the rungs; quite dangerous!
What a lovely place to moor. This journey is great. I can't wait to see your trip through the tunnel, you've probably done it by now. I hope it went OK!
Good job again David, Etruria was the original site of Joshia Wedgewood"s original pottery. He of course was one of the original proposers of the Trent and Mersey.
I'm watching all your videos in succession. I really enjoy them! I had never heard of narrowboats before discovering your channel, and now I wish I had one. In Arkansas we have the Arkansas River and the Mississippi River, but I don't know if a narrowboat would be able to operate on those.
Another good one Dave, we have relos in Stoke and we were there for a brief visit just before last Christmas, its a very historic place and well worth a more extended visit, keep on cruising mate, good to watch, cheers, Ken
The missing bridge (2:33) was part of a railway line, the Trentham Park Branch. The chimney in Sideway is part of an incinerator, I guess for household waste. At least it's marked as such in the Nicholsen guide #4. Which is exactly the spot where a low hanging branch grabbed my copy and threw it into the T&M. That miscivious plant is clearly visible on your clip. Glad you made it arround :)) For the Etruria Industrial Museum, the second building is the main museum, housing the mill. The first building is a warehouse, originally part of the gauging station, now used as exhibition room for the museum. Your caveat about mooring overnight in Stoke is maybe a bit outdated. We stayed this May for three (seperate) nights in Stoke, twice about ~200m north of Etruria Junction. No problems at all, in fact, it felt way more safe than on some rural stretches, where nights where torn apart by motorbikes roaring along the towpath. If at all, the area arround Hanley park is a less desirable mooring spot due to many idle students during afternoon and evening. Its nice to recall our own trip by watching your vlog. Thanks. narrowboat.meckerhut.de/2017/05/11/die-englaender-ihre-hunde-und-der-hundsdreck/
A train station but no trains stop there anymore :( Etruria Junction in Stoke is absolutely fine to moor at overnight. Hanley park on The Caldon arm, however, is not.
If I am not mistaken the reason why the locks in Stoke are fairly deep is due to the subsidance issues stoke has. Stoke was subject to large amounts of mining whether it be the coal mines or potteries digging holes in their yards to mine clay for the saggar boxes used in kilns. In fact you can see on the last lock you entre (next to etruia industrial museum) the top of the lock has had to shored over the years to revent the canal from leaking over the sides. The canal next to the origional wedge wood factory for example is now roughly 14 feet above where the last remaining part of the factory used to be.
I love cemeteries. There are so many stories written in stone. I spent two hours yesterday exploring Brookside Cemetery in Winnipeg. It seem that every time i find a half hidden stone in the underbrush, a long forgotten person lives again .... just for a moment. I also saw two deer, and a coyote.
6:03 I like cemeterys for the same reason when I'm out riding my Yammie on the highway. Quiet, peaceful and a wander round the older stones always provides a history lesson about the local town. Most often you'll see the faded family names on the stones repeated as street names that have been there forever. Early settlers and movers and shakers of the times 100+ years ago. Plenty of pictures on the smartphone, of course. We don't have the depth of history here in Canada that you do in England. I enjoyed the family visits to England from Paris for the history, the architecture and my god, the castles...brilliant.
Thanks David love your vlogs from the very beginning are you near Market Drayton you need to stop at the ANCHOR at High Offley you will be transported back in time not changed since the time of the working boats. also stop at the Whalfe at Goldstone where lLTC Rolt stopped after going through the deep cutting it is truly beautiful, I am moored at Betton Wood still refurbishing my old 23ft Springer.
Thanks for showing Stoke-on -Trent, we left there in ‘65 for Melbourne and all those names are ones I grew up with, places mum and dad talked about when they were trying to instill a bit of heritage in me. Great series, although the landscape looks unbelievably alien rather like a country wide botanical garden than an actual country.
Your vlog is becoming somewhat educational , being from the U.S. , I didn't understand the steelite span reference , so , I had to search all around ( my hat) to find out what it meant.
I'm with you, I like cemeteries too. There's so much history in the old ones. My favorites are those on the East coast of the U.S., but I bet you have even better ones where you are.
I think Dolphin refers to a make of glass-fibre boats from the 70s and 80s. Mind you, I could be wrong. Well done with the lock work. Steelite Span is GOOD!
neat about the china area--and seeing the spode sign and now knowing the area where all of my christmas dishes came from was neat---and the comment about the cemetery. i have family buried in the same cemetery as an old time midwestern gangster, you are right about how much history there is in a cemetery.
I also like cemeteries, though the history in ours in the southern US doesn't go back as far. Head stone names and dates are fascinating to peruse. Keep up the good work.
If you are cruising this way again you must stop over at The Black Lion pub at Consall Forge. Lovely food and great views over the canal and Churnet Valley steam railway ☺ Loving the vlogs and watch them in bed before settling down to dream about selling up, divorcing my husband and buying my own little narrowboat 😉
Seriously, your level of wit, charm, brilliance and intelligence in this episode is amazing. This is what all the videos should be modeled after. so informative, educational, production value through the roof, just loaded chock full of production value. And I understand your humor, which surprises me, because i usually dont get British humor. This is a great show. TV quality.
Thanks ma.
these vlogs are the best time of my day. im very busy all the time and alot goes on in my head, it's nice to take a leisurely cruise to settle my brain. thanks for the relaxing break.
Great! Glad to hear it, thank you.
For 10 points, the 'chimney place' is the council incinerator :).
Its amazing the how old the buildings and waterways are and still in use..... great tour
Cheers Russ!
7:46: There's an interesting bit of history to the Etruria Forge as well. One if its employees, operating a steam hammer back in the 1860s, was a young teen-aged lad named Edward Smith, who would go on to obtain a mariner's certification, and was eventually employed by the White Star Line, where he was the first and only Captain of the ill-fated RMS TITANIC.
That's a great nugget of info! Love that.
I love most of your puns (one or two have been over my head), but you excelled yourself with Steelite Span (at least for those of us of a certain age, who remember Steeleye Span when they were young and exciting). I laughed out loud and I think frightened my cat!
I'm sure residents of the UK would laugh at me for saying this, but so much of England looks like a park or open air museum, I love it. I hope to visit one day.
6.00 Yep, I agree, and I'm not alone in this: love a good cemetery me, and find them not only really peaceful, but excellent local history books. Full of stories...👍🏴
Up to the usual standard....... Excellent. Thanks very much David.
Thank you
Hi there just thought I would say how much I enjoy your vlogs I live in stoke and used to have a boat on the leek arm my dad, bless him built our first boat a wooden one I might add at stone and we had such wonderful times on the canal in the 1960s/70s You sound like an educated man and come across as being a real nice person best wishes steve
I enjoy your channel and recently started using google maps to follow along. I highly recommend it.
David
Thank you for answering my many questions over recent weeks. I am still catching up with some of your previous vlogs. I just watched the 'Brothers in Arms' vlog about the North Oxford restoration. What an excellent vlog that was, the interview with the organising volunteer just captured the spirit of the canal volunteers and what they have achieved over the past 65 years - I do think that these vlogs will be a very important archive material in the future. I also recall the interview with the man canoeing the network for charity, also very interesting I thought.
When you interview people in this way they seem to relax and just tell their story, you seem to disappear and they have the space to 'tell', reminds me a little of the listening project on the BBC at times. I recall being on the Errewash recently. We were delayed at the Gallows lock while the volunteers fitted a plaque to the lock gate. We chatted to them while we waited. They were mostly retired engineers, they used a restored historic work boat as their work base that they were extremely proud of, I can only describe them as a totally charming and marvelously eccentric bunch with many fascinating stories to tell.
The voices on the canals, whether they be boaters on the network, canal trust staff, volunteers, canoe fund raisers etc, are often very interesting raconteurs, arguably more individual and unique than in any other walk of life. When you do capture these voices I find myself transfixed. Any chance we could hear some more of them within the vlogs?
Mike
Hi. Thanks. It's really a question of when I come across them, them being willing to go on camera, and there being a visual story to tell. It's not enough for them to talk, there needs to be relevant pictures to go over the top, to make a decent video. I do, when I can :-)
Oh to be cruising! Thanks for another great vlog!
:-)
Aaah CTC, nice, nice, nice and nice again! Thank you very much.
Thanks Bruce :-)
I remember coming through this section of the canal in the early 1980s with my Dad. Back then it was very different and we cruised through the middle of Shelton Steelworks.
I remember seeing yellow hot bars of steel shooting down from one side of the plant to the other. It was spectacular.
Does anyone else remember seeing this?
Your Vlog is very addictive David, and I look forward to the regular invitations to watch the latest high quality production. It's a fascinating world you're travelling through, and I can see one has to be fit, fearless and "sticky of foot" to manage such slippery tall lock-ladders. Thanks for such great stuff.
I grip the rungs like Luke Skywalker hanging under the mining colony on Bespin...
you hook a leg in and hang upside down while calling out to your sister? LOL
Haha, something like that!
This series is very well done. You're doing a great job of taking us along. The meeting the boat at the narrow point is another fine example of "Critical Convergence".
Thank you, much appreciated :-)
Beautiful footage, great audio and splendid editing.
As always, +1
Thank you!
You spoil us dear friend ! And such wonderful weather to support you ! Another halfhour's real pleasure. Thank you.
Very kind, cheers.
Hello David, I've just finished my "binge watch" to catch up on your wonderful video's ... enjoyed 'em all, thanks, oh and completely agree with you about Cadbury's and graffiti. Long may you continue to C.T.C.
Well done on your epic watch! Glad you're enjoying them. Cheers.
Trentham that would be where the well known garden attractions would be I think. Thanks David your spoiling us with these fabulous cruising vlogs.
Cheers John
i've lived in Stoke on Trent for 3 years now and it was nice to see this video
Loved this vlog fish rollercoaster and Steeleye Span too funny !!
:-)
I love cemeteries! I make a point of visiting some whenever I travel.
This ended too soon for me; I could have watched it for ages more. So soothing!
Sorry - it ends when that section of travel ends! But the next one will be up soon :--)
Thank you David, for the wonderful narrative as much as the pitures, very enjoyable.
Thank you
I too like cemeteries, they are dead cool. I tend the find that the history you referred to is hidden just below the surface. Buried in fact! Great vlog. Thanks.
:-)
Well, I've watched for about 19 hours straight and I'm packing it in for today! I heartily enjoyed all of your videos and had some great laugh out loud moments while watching them. Thank you, thank you!
Glad you're enjoying them! Pace yourself!! Cheers
I really love your video's and your comment. It looks very professional and is very informative. Very nice for a Dutch guy to watch. Thanks very much!!!
Thank you Ron, I am glad you like them. Cheers.
I appreciated the Steelite Span Joke ! Well done sir :-)
Thank you!
Scooby2142 there was me thinking I'm the only guy left who remembers Steeleye Span lol and then I watch Cruising the cut lol
The way you capture the details is amazing, you can tell this is pro.
Another magic few minutes. I appreciate your videos so much. Thankyou
Cheers Bob
Sorry, slightly boring comment, but many fish love the churning of locks as it stirs up food for them. Excellent spot for perch fishing. If you didn't fall asleep. Thanks.
Was going to say the same thing, they live a good roll about in the turbulence. Aerates the water too 👍
the answer to your chimney question = incinerator. A grand boating experience through an area the canals were built for. Coal coming in and pottery going out. Fascinating trip, excellent film. Thank you David.
As a Stokie I have to say that you made the area sound more appealing than it actually is lol. I've walked this entire stretch of the canal and live about 10 minutes walk from the Caldon canal which is much more picturesque.
Ha! You're the only Stokie to say so. I had to trim a few seconds out of the start of this video after many furious locals expressed vitriolic fury that I said I'd read forum comments about Stoke not being somewhere to stop overnight. I didn't even say whether I agreed or if it was true or not, just said I'd read it but lots of folk got extremely annoyed.
@@CruisingTheCut yeah Stoke does have a lot of angry people who don't like being filmed. My guess is that most of them have criminal records lol.
The puns are getting better David. I tip my all around my hat to you young sir.
Very kind :-)
Awesome Video....Dolphin Discount was flying its 1800's Southern USA Flag LOL not gonna mention its name.......that was the Hanford waste recycling Center smoke stacks you pointed out.....also those train wheel tables, there is the Axiom Rail Complex They have thousands of Rail car wheels everywhere, That was a eerie narrowboat at 5:00 thought that was Charon (ferryman of Hades who carries souls of the newly deceased across the rivers Styx)....You should of toured the at Trentham Lake and Gardens....so are you gonna take a dip at Water World.
You are a mine of information!
2:57 hahaha dang man, love the UK sense of humor
Another wonderful video. Best wishes!
Thank you!
Great vlog. Back in Blighty now. Your vlogs have almost given me the confidence to put an end to my far east existence and buy my own boat. Almost.
Steady on old bean, that's dramatic talk!!
One of the most charming video posts this far. A real enjoyment to watch it. Thanks!
I really enjoy your videos, went ouch on the steel ice span bit lol 😂 thank you you made me smile(your not sad looking at gravestones I find them interesting to, guess we're just nosy lol
Glad you liked it; it's interesting to look at the people's names and think about who they were and all that history.
CruisingTheCut I agree
Advert duly watched to the end. Good vlog as always David.
Good man, cheers JP
Very good, even the corny joke! That water park is excellent well our dog thought so. Looking forward to the tunnel.
Corny? How very dare you...
I know i ma coupel of years late but the building with the large tower is the recycling center and incinirator
Absolutely love all your vlogs but particularly loving these ones as we bought our boat from Great Haywood and did this exact journey your doing. We went up to Anderton. Its really great to see it all again and be able to giggle along. Thank you.
Lovely! My Anderton video is only half-edited but coming soon :-)
I really look forward to each new vlog and following your journey on google earth.
Thanks David
Thanks for watching :-)
Love this episode! Keep up the great work (:
I love cemeteries too! lots of history!
Yes, exactly
Cheers Ashleigh
Dying of envy. Perhaps I should book a plot at that cemetery? At least I will be near the canal for an extended time!
Some impressive helmsmanship there , you are becoming the admiral Nelson of the canal system.
Haha, yes I like that. Out of my way, everyone!
Enjoyable as always .....
Ta
These vlogs are wonderful! My friend has given up the house and the job at 58 and migrated to the canals as well. More and more people seem to be doing this. I have not got the courage to do it, but good luck to you!
Great history bits.... Love it! Nice Cheers and as always God bless
Thanks William :-)
So, that's where Hyacinth's Royal Dalton China was made ;)
I find watching your videos very relaxing and fun. thank you!
I, too like stalking around old cemeteries. I grew up in Kentucky and, the old family cemeteries are beyond fascinating. In your more rural footage it takes me back to sailing on the Kentucky River which makes a diagonal cut across the state. It is fairly narrow (compared to the Ohio or Mississippi) and has bucolic country settings and few urban areas...Thank You Again.
Sounds lovely! Cheers
Someday if you are in the USA I suggest the Kentucky River as a cruising spot...
I think an overseas series of Cruising The Cut would be very interesting :-)
A treat as always. Keep it up please.
Cheers
Buried history in the cemetery I think! They are rather intriguing places just the names and the dates of those who have moved on is interesting in an odd way. Great blog again.
Thanks Chris
Liked the new LOGO at the start; and always enjoy your narrated jaunt along the canal
New logo? It's been like that for ages...
Obviously you are correct...Can't believe I never noticed it before... Must be old eyes failing me.
I was panicking in case I'd slipped up or something there...
I live the little forge area . SO much difference in a few miles. awesome.
:-)
the smokestack is for the Hanford household waste recycling center!
I went to Stoke on Trent in google maps and found a road overpass and went into street view and located the stack and moved to it.
Perhaps you have missed your calling as a private investigator!
If you ever get than chance in future years I highly recommend the Caldon. Its a great detour and even has a steam line following it part of the way.
One day... !
Another lovely VLOG as always. I also love to walk through old cemeteries and read the inscriptions. I was surprised to see the sign for Portmeirion - I have been to the enchanting village of Portmeirion but it is in Wales, I guess the pottery is in England.
You have to be extremely agile to get up those ladders in the locks!
Keep up the good work.
I recently went up the narrowest, most ridiculous lock ladder ever, just wide enough for one foot and only an inch or so for that foot to go through the rungs; quite dangerous!
What a lovely place to moor. This journey is great. I can't wait to see your trip through the tunnel, you've probably done it by now. I hope it went OK!
Oh yes, it was some weeks ago and all fine, thanks.
Awesome journey David. :-) thank you for sharing.
Ta
Good job again David, Etruria was the original site of Joshia Wedgewood"s original pottery. He of course was one of the original proposers of the Trent and Mersey.
I did not know that (about the site), cheers
I always enjoy watching your vlogs, keep up the good work
Thank you :-)
I'm watching all your videos in succession. I really enjoy them! I had never heard of narrowboats before discovering your channel, and now I wish I had one. In Arkansas we have the Arkansas River and the Mississippi River, but I don't know if a narrowboat would be able to operate on those.
I think those rivers would be too wide and turbulent for a narrowboat.
Another great vlog, always full of information, your nearing 100 hope it's something special.
Errr, no, it's just another vlog!
Wow! That's an interesting area! Thanks for another great vlog!
Cheers Jim
Another good one Dave, we have relos in Stoke and we were there for a brief visit just before last Christmas, its a very historic place and well worth a more extended visit, keep on cruising mate, good to watch, cheers, Ken
Thanks Ken. I don't tend to visit the places much as I go through, I'm not much of a tourist. Maybe when I get my campervan...
Absolutely love it when you come through my home city. One day I'll spot you.
Cheers but I’m not tending to cruise these days
@@CruisingTheCut hope everything is alright..
Some excellent shots; and I do like the "new" camera angles from the bow this go 'round...
Good! (You have no idea how much extra work I've made for myself using two cams...)
The missing bridge (2:33) was part of a railway line, the Trentham Park Branch.
The chimney in Sideway is part of an incinerator, I guess for household waste. At least it's marked as such in the Nicholsen guide #4. Which is exactly the spot where a low hanging branch grabbed my copy and threw it into the T&M. That miscivious plant is clearly visible on your clip. Glad you made it arround :))
For the Etruria Industrial Museum, the second building is the main museum, housing the mill. The first building is a warehouse, originally part of the gauging station, now used as exhibition room for the museum.
Your caveat about mooring overnight in Stoke is maybe a bit outdated. We stayed this May for three (seperate) nights in Stoke, twice about ~200m north of Etruria Junction. No problems at all, in fact, it felt way more safe than on some rural stretches, where nights where torn apart by motorbikes roaring along the towpath. If at all, the area arround Hanley park is a less desirable mooring spot due to many idle students during afternoon and evening.
Its nice to recall our own trip by watching your vlog. Thanks.
narrowboat.meckerhut.de/2017/05/11/die-englaender-ihre-hunde-und-der-hundsdreck/
Good info!
A train station but no trains stop there anymore :( Etruria Junction in Stoke is absolutely fine to moor at overnight. Hanley park on The Caldon arm, however, is not.
If I am not mistaken the reason why the locks in Stoke are fairly deep is due to the subsidance issues stoke has. Stoke was subject to large amounts of mining whether it be the coal mines or potteries digging holes in their yards to mine clay for the saggar boxes used in kilns. In fact you can see on the last lock you entre (next to etruia industrial museum) the top of the lock has had to shored over the years to revent the canal from leaking over the sides. The canal next to the origional wedge wood factory for example is now roughly 14 feet above where the last remaining part of the factory used to be.
I love cemeteries. There are so many stories written in stone. I spent two hours yesterday exploring Brookside Cemetery in Winnipeg. It seem that every time i find a half hidden stone in the underbrush, a long forgotten person lives again .... just for a moment. I also saw two deer, and a coyote.
Maintaining and running a cemetery is always a great undertaking!
I have a Facebook friend in Stoke-on-Trent. I do hope to meet up with her one day. I'm in the states but a long stay in the U.K. is on my bucket list.
I have been binge watching your vlogs today, my backside is getting numb, lol. But well worth it.
6:22 nice bit of helmsmanship!
Stoke is my original home...was born in Alsager ...a lovely little village ...enjoy xx
Cheers Monnie :-)
That chimney building 3:41 is the city incinerator.
Yay! can't wait for the "Scarecastle" tomorrow! =D
It was "tomorrow" for me, it'll be next week for you :-)
your vlog is such a treat
Thanks!
Steellite Span. Perfect!
I’m glad some folk like my appalling jokes!
@@CruisingTheCut Grooaan!!!!
I love the puns too. I look at these vlogs at night to help me 😴. not being sarcastic, so relaxing.
6:03 I like cemeterys for the same reason when I'm out riding my Yammie on the highway. Quiet, peaceful and a wander round the older stones always provides a history lesson about the local town. Most often you'll see the faded family names on the stones repeated as street names that have been there forever. Early settlers and movers and shakers of the times 100+ years ago. Plenty of pictures on the smartphone, of course.
We don't have the depth of history here in Canada that you do in England. I enjoyed the family visits to England from Paris for the history, the architecture and my god, the castles...brilliant.
Thanks David love your vlogs from the very beginning are you near Market Drayton you need to stop at the ANCHOR at High Offley you will be transported back in time not changed since the time of the working boats. also stop at the Whalfe at Goldstone where lLTC Rolt stopped after going through the deep cutting it is truly beautiful, I am moored at Betton Wood still refurbishing my old 23ft Springer.
Hi Daniel. Thank you. I'm a long way past, these vlogs are a few weeks delayed from actuality due to the editing time involved.
Thanks for showing Stoke-on -Trent, we left there in ‘65 for Melbourne and all those names are ones I grew up with, places mum and dad talked about when they were trying to instill a bit of heritage in me. Great series, although the landscape looks unbelievably alien rather like a country wide botanical garden than an actual country.
Why on earth did you leave Stoke on Trent for Melbourne? Oddball!
The last time I walked along the canals around Etruria was around 1978. Things have been cleaned up considerably!
Your vlog is becoming somewhat educational , being from the U.S. , I didn't understand the steelite span reference , so , I had to search all around ( my hat) to find out what it meant.
Haha!! Glad you (clearly) found it ;-)
nice little cruise, somewhat scarey looking ladder. I'd not want to slip and fall , yikes! looking forward to more pastoral scenery. . .
Yup, they're all like that though not necessarily as tall.
Great vlog. Really looking to the next one. Hope it doesn't put me off the tunnel too much!
Errrrrrrrrrrrr, it might :-)
My condolences for you having to come through Stoke.
Also the old mill is in neither of those buildings. Its on its own behind them.
I'm with you, I like cemeteries too. There's so much history in the old ones. My favorites are those on the East coast of the U.S., but I bet you have even better ones where you are.
We certainly have older ones with amazing dates on the headstones.
I think Dolphin refers to a make of glass-fibre boats from the 70s and 80s. Mind you, I could be wrong.
Well done with the lock work.
Steelite Span is GOOD!
Ahh, that's a splendid piece of obscure knowledge about the Dolphins, thank you!
neat about the china area--and seeing the spode sign and now knowing the area where all of my christmas dishes came from was neat---and the comment about the cemetery. i have family buried in the same cemetery as an old time midwestern gangster, you are right about how much history there is in a cemetery.
I also like cemeteries, though the history in ours in the southern US doesn't go back as far. Head stone names and dates are fascinating to peruse. Keep up the good work.
Cheers Dave
At 9:37, many moons ago, you'd have actually been passing through Shelton Bar, a now long gone Steel Foundry 😎
we have many canada geese in our back yard ,we have a small river next door, the geese dont fly south for the winter anymore ,they adapted.
I hope they don't leave poo all over your yard :-(
If you are cruising this way again you must stop over at The Black Lion pub at Consall Forge. Lovely food and great views over the canal and Churnet Valley steam railway ☺
Loving the vlogs and watch them in bed before settling down to dream about selling up, divorcing my husband and buying my own little narrowboat 😉
Haha, does your husband know this yet??!!