Stroudwater Navigation
Pike Lock to Ocean
This is the length of canal
which sees the majority of the boating activity at present. It consists
of about 2 km of canal
with two fully working locks. Good slipway access is provided just upstream
of Pike Lock. The canal is generally about 42 ft wide and there are a number
of places where boats up to about 30 ft in length should be able turn.
Pike Lock is the middle lock of the Eastington Flight. It is waiting for
a replacement bridge and regating. The Pike Lock House is only half the age
of the canal itself, having been commissioned by the Company around 1880
on land which was formerly occupied by a toll house for the turnpike road
(from which the lock derives its name).
The slipway was built by the Cotswold Canals Trust just prior to a visit
by HRH Prince Charles in April 1992. Although principally built of concrete,
it is finished off with blue bricks which once formed part of a loading bay
for offloading stone from boats into carts. When using
the slipway, it is important that the stop plank at its head is replaced
after use - this is a short pound and the plank is a precaution against
flooding in the event that excessive water comes down the flight.
Blunder Lock is different to all the other locks on the flight in that
it it built of stone. Its name derives from an incident during the canal's
construction when the company engineer caused the original lock to be built
at the wrong level having been previously been given notice to quit by the
company. Please leave all gates and paddles closed
when you have finished with the locks.
The canal heads off towards Newtown Lock with a wood on the offside and
the road on the towpath side. In the 1970s, it was planned to build this
road over the canal and this would have resulted in a long length of canal
and historical structures being obliterated - fortunately the canal enthusiasts
started work on the restoration here and were therefore able to turn public
opinion in their favour and stop this from happening.
Newtown Lock was the first to be fully restored to full working order on
the whole Thames - Severn link. There can sometimes be an accumulation of
floating weed at the head of the lock. Like Pike and Blunder Locks, Newtown
has a good overspill weir which takes excessive water from above the lock
and discharges below the tail of the lock.
The hamlet of Newtown was built by the canal company at the time of the
construction of the canal and several of the buildings were, at one time or
another, public houses. Similarities of architectural style can be observed
with several of the buildings and others up and down the canal.
Beyond Newtown, the canal passes under Newtown Roving Bridge where the
towpath moves from the north bank to the south. Views of the Cotswold hills
open up here.
At the end of this stretch is Bonds Mill Bridge. This used to be a swing
bridge and is the only access to Bonds Mill which is now an industrial estate.
The swing bridge had been fixed and additional girders put across the canal
and its swinging area had become obstructed. The original intention had been
to install a balescule style lift bridge but a novel approach was subsequently
adopted in the use of a light weight plastic structure capable of being
lifted without a counterbalance. This resulted in a structure more in keeping
with the original but capable of carrying modern day traffic weights.
There are currently some problems with the bridge and it not possible to
lift at the present time. Headroom under the bridge is very limited and portaging
may be necessary.
The canal beyond Bonds Mill Bridge is on an embankment on the side of the
hill. The first bit was narrowed following a series of collapses due to
poor reinstatement work after a pipeline was built under the canal bed.
As the railway is approached, a narrow point in the canal marks the site
of a former dam which was installed to safeguard a water supply to a nearby
factory. A section of the dam has been removed and most 7 ft beam craft
should be able to pass through with care, siltation permitting.
Only a short length remains before the site of Ocean Railway Bridge is
reached. It is only possible for light craft to pass through the railway
culvert here.
Section 2c Ocean - Ryeford Double Lock (LIGHT CRAFT)
Section 3 - Ebley to Wallbridge, Stroud
(CANOES)
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Guide to Navigation
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