I have one, courtesy of Camberwell Covers. I used to be cold, wet and
miserable. Now I'm cold, dry and utterly paranoid about bridge heights!

On Fri, July 11, 2008 10:58 am, David Cragg wrote:
>    I think these covers are a great idea for making space when moored and
> for use on rivers. But when a boat comes round a bend on a narrow canal
> with the cover up in the rain and the steerer either peering through the
> plastic or craning round the sides of the cover, it can get a bit hairy
> with you hoping he has noticed you coming and that he will move over
> enough. At this point like us you may start working out what avoiding
> action you might have to take if he doesn't.
>
> --- On Thu, 5/8/08, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: [canals-list] Namby Pamby invasion of Stourport
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Thursday, May 8, 2008, 8:41 PM
>
>
> There's been a bit of a shuffle of boats & moorings at Stourport since the
> demise of Severn Valley Boat Centre.
>
> Several new moorers have spawned sparkly new pram-style steerer's shelters
> in the last week or so courtesy of "Waterside Boat Covers"
>
> Tut . . tut . . . what's the world coming to ? What's wrong with
> getting wet these days ?
>
> Grumble . . . . moan . . . whinge . . . I wouldn't have one of those
> on Uncle Mort it it came with a free haddock. I want to get wet and
> miserable then pop down below for a beer or a whisky and a good snooze in
> front of the stove.
>
> Beeky
>

Reply via email to