2º
C overnight. A beautiful sunny day – how did the TV weather forecast get it so
wrong, were they a day out? We left at 8.00 a.m. The breeze was chilly and there
was a slight flow on the canal, the same way as we were going - towards Elblag.
More black terns were catching flies. The reedy banks were full of loud
warblers. The dykes were some 20m back from the canal and covered with stunted
goat willow. We could see tall blocks of flats and factory chimneys in the
distance. We passed a fishing party, four young men with two cars, a rowing
boat and a
speedboat, plus a tent. They looked too gob-smacked to acknowledge
our greetings. In front of them, were two wooden posts in the canal bed with
red rags fluttering from them. We slowed down and crawled past in case they
marked nets we couldn’t see. In Elblag the banks were lined with factories –
then we spotted a boat harbour and did a quick right turn to go and search for
water. An old chap was working on a yacht. He spoke no
English but we managed
to ask for water which he went off to organise while we tied up – well the
front half anyway – to a long wooden landing stage, part of which was occupied
by small yachts. A purple hosepipe supplied the necessary and we both filled
up. A large older bloke arrived and came to chat. He also spoke no English, but
he brought his digital camera with him and picked on me to photograph. A younger
guy with a long haired German shepherd dog at his heels came to speak about
mooring. We said we only wanted water as we were pushing on to
Ostroda. They
didn’t want any money for the water, which was very nice of them. As we turned
back on to the main canal we spotted another boat yard on the far side – no
signs of boating life at all for ages and now we were spoiled for choice! On
the left bank we passed a very large factory with Alstom in large letters on
its roof. Two very large propellors stood on the grass between the factory and
the canal bank as decoration. On the right bank there was a police station
with
two police boats moored in an arm (which looked like former GDR boats). Four
very large trip boats were moored by a footbridge across the canal. Later we realised that these boats did not
continue any further in the same direction we were going but probably went down
the other canal (Szkarpawa) and out into the big lagoon. Beyond the bridge
there was a nice quay for mooring by a tall church tower. Just before a railway bridge there was a
junction, we took the left turn and went under the bridge – looking closely at
the map later
the right turn was called Fiszewka. A bit further on we were
faced with another junction and turned left again – on our right was another
un-navigable canal called Kanal Tjna. There were lots of fishermen on the banks
as we left Elblag behind. The first lake we came to was just a wide area off to
our right covered with weed and occupied by swans, geese and seagulls. The
first big lake was called Druzno and was wide, edged with lily pads and reeds. As
I started
making lunch Mike called me to look at a big bird of prey. It was all
dark brown with just a
whitish top of its head and neck. The only thing like it
in my field guide book was an Imperial eagle. It was flying low over the reeds,
dived down to catch something, then it took off to land out of sight in a tree.
The canal leaving the lake was bordered on the left bank by a low dyke backed
with wide empty meadows and the right bank was lined with goat willow trees,
which were teeming with fluffy seeds. I photographed the first trip boat coming
towards us. A modest size, 25m long by about 3.3m wide, the passengers all
waved as we passed by them quite closely as the navigation was narrow. At 1.30
p.m. we arrived at the first boat lift,
number five Całuny Nowe (in German Neu
Kußfeld), a 13m lift spread over a slope of 450m. We went up first while Bill
waited in the narrows by the winding gear. It was quite an experience. All that
was visible of the right hand trolley was two sets of wooden walkways with
handrails. There was a shed bythe space where the other, descending trolley
came to rest on the left side of the cut, but there was no one around. There
was another hut on the crest of the slope, so Mike went a walk to find someone.
The guy he found said OK he would be ready in a couple of minutes. We took the
boat into the trolley and strung two ropes out from either side of the bows and
the same from the stern to keep the boat in the centre of the flat bed when the
water disappeared. We’d seen pictures of the trolley out of the water with trip
boats in it, so we knew it was flat. There was a gong (Really!) on the left
hand walkway to beat when we were ready to go. As the cables pulled the trolley
up the bank the boat settled on to the timbers which ran horizontally across
the bed of the trolley, sloping metal girders supported the wooden walkways and
their handrails on either side of the boat. It was faster that we’d
imagined
and in no time we were at the top of the 450m slope and running down the much
shorter slope into the pound between lifts five and four. I moored the boat by
the winding gear house, while Mike went off back down the slope on foot to give
Bill a hand to come up with Rosy. He’d left me with all the Polish change we’d
got and instructions to pay for the two boats. I put fenders down and tied
rather precariously to a short section of wooden fendering with the bows
pointing to the middle of the cut. Lots of books had fallen off the top of the
bookcase, so I stacked them a bit more neatly on the floor and removed those
that were left, placing those that could fall off down on the floor.
Absent-mindedly, I collected the change off the roof and dropped it into my
jeans pocket, completely forgetting they were a very old pair with a hole in
the right hand pocket (normally I never put things in my jeans pockets) – the
change went plink, plink, plink on the gunwale and bounced into the canal.
Wonderful. Too deep to reach the bottom and, I found when I checked the depth
with a short shaft,
the bottom was covered with rocks anyway so I had no chance
of recovering the 15 Złotys I’d just lost. As Rosy came up to the top of the
slope I went to pay the man with 30 Złotys in notes, securely in my other
pocket. The winchman was sitting on a bench on canal level, so I asked if I had
to pay him, he said “tak” (yes) and indicated I should follow him and went off
down a long flight of wooden stairs down the bank to the winch house. No
English again and I had a job to understand – all five lifts were to be paid
for at the same price as the locks, 5,68 each, making a total of 28,40 Złotys
(£4.50) for each boat. He had no change – his cashbox was empty. Bill arrived –
he wanted his own ticket as a keepsake – and he’d only got a 50 Złoty note. The
man gave Bill my twenty, so we ended up paying 30 Złotys each. (A cunning way
of getting a tip and they all do it, or try to!) As we set off to the next lift,
I had Bill’s
camera plus our 35mm and got off to walk the slope on the next
one, lift number four Jelenie (Hirshfeld in German) a 22.5m lift on a slope of
510m, taking photos of the two boats. There was no path on the side we were on,
so Mike and I trudged up the corn field, Mike went off through the undergrowth
to get to Rosy and I walked on until I got to the rail tracks. Mike went up on Rosy
to help Bill, then the two of them walked back down the slope and brought
Temujin up. Back on board the boat, we went on along the canal to lift number
three, Oleśnica. There were woods on our left and fields of yellow colza on our
right. We moored in the gap at the side of the big cable drums, while Bill got Rosy
settled on the trolley. Mike went to help as before. They donged the gong and
waited. No one appeared, it was 5.30 p.m. work must have stopped for the day.
Bill reversed Rosy to the winding gear and we dropped ropes on the bollards by
the cable drums and a bit of metal sticking up out of the bank. Bill moored Rosy
in the gap with his bows on the winding gear island and his stern in the
narrows. It was 5.45 p.m. by the
time we’d tied up. I cooked a stir-fry for
dinner. Mike lit the coal fire as it started getting chilly and when we went to
bed at midnight it was still alight.
Absolutely amazing, what trail blazers you were to have done this journey back in 2005, we remain in ore... Roger & Alison, Barge Lily
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