Heading up north we have found a screwdrive useful as some handcuff  locks 
tighten the metal piece onto the metal of the paddle casing and you need the 
screwdrive to prize it off. 

--- On Mon, 15/2/10, Baz Juniper <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Baz Juniper <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [canals-list] Re: Considerate Boaters guide - lift bridges
To: [email protected]
Date: Monday, 15 February, 2010, 11:33


  




On 13 Feb 2010, at 00:01, Sean Neill wrote:

> David's method wouldn't work reliably where the bridges have to be
> padlocked since you have to close a BW padlock to release your key
> and, like most folk, I am inclined to leave my keys in the padlock
> (even when the padlock is on the towpath side and I'm on the off-
> side, which I suppose would be risky in some circumstances) .
> Baz
>
> As I have my BW key on a chain, I tend to lock the padlock in mid- 
> air and come back to it if time and the boiler permit. If BW can't 
> trust boaters to act responsibly I have no hesitation in putting my 
> own safety first.

I should think that the safety of others might also be at issue if 
boiler management was unduly neglected :-)

Its a fair point, though, Sean. Not even BW seem to put much store 
by the padlocks on the western end of the K&A. Of the 8 swing 
bridges between Bath & Foxhangers, I think only one had a useable 
padlock for most of last summer.

Baz








      

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