Friday, April 27, 2018

A lovely surprise!

There are a number of very talented artists on the UK waterways, painting, drawing, sketching scenes of the rivers and canals. Sadly, I'm not one of them, but one of them is a Facebook friend of mine, Lisa Greatrix. I got a message from her yesterday, attached to which was a photo of her latest painting. It's her interpretation of one of my many photos on this blog.


She displays her work on her website The Easel Life and on a Facebook page




As with many boating artists, not all of her paintings are of water scenes.




My problem with Lisa's work, as with several other artists I've seen, is that I have nowhere I can hang paintings on board Kantara!

I encourage you to go and see all of Lisa's pictures on the web, and, while you're there, visit a FB group she's created, called Narrowboats Canals Advice Chat and Sales, which might be of interested to a good number of my readers. Press the button there to join the group.

Enjoy!


Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Stunning! Shocking!

No, "stunning" doesn't refer to the skies over the marina after a day of rain, though we've had a few of those.


And shocking isn't a reference to the dreadful weather we've had over the last few days, though most of yesterday and the early part of today were really quite pleasant.


In fact, "stunning" and "shocking" refer to work that we saw being done in the marina this morning. Four men in two small boats were buzzing slowly up and down the marina pound, round and round. Each of the men held a fishing net. The larger boat went ahead, trailing an array of electrodes through the water in front of it. These delivered pulses of electricity into the water, shocking and stunning the fish. These then floated to the surface, and each of the men reached out their nets from time to time, to catch one of the fish and dump it into a plastic box on the boat.


 

I don't know who this team was working for - CRT, the Environment Agency? - but the fish they were taking out of our water were of a "non-native, invasive species". So said one of the men to one of the moorers, though they didn't say which species it was, and I couldn't ask because I wasn't close enough.  My guess is it was zander, which I know are fished from these waters. They can be huge!

Then they went on their way, leaving our waters safer for our native species. One wonders how many of the dodgy ones they might have missed! And isn't this spawning season? They'll be back!


Saturday, April 21, 2018

Yesterday, today! We're back!

Yesterday morning in our garden. Beautiful...










This afternoon, back on Kantara. Beautiful!






We're back!