Mark has been back to the breach site this morning.
As reported the level is up in the cofferdam again.
From C&RTs update it sounded like the eastern/downstream end of the cofferdam had given way. But from this photo it suggests it was actually the western/upstream end as a blue tarp has been added where the piling meets the bank.
Where the pipes pump the water out from the western end (I don’t know what to call them) another raft has appeared. It looks like they are planning on extending the existing pipes to this new raft, so as to suck water out further away from the piling. Maybe this is what caused the problem.
Down in the drain below you can see water is escaping again. This suggests that the hole is in the side not the base of this section. The water drained down to a level last time and then was needing pumps to completely empty the cofferdam.
The water level is now higher therefore draining into the drain again. I wonder how long it takes for it to empty itself?
These two photos were taken about ten days ago when the level was lower. The blue tarp and bags of aggregate still in position from before Christmas, helping to stem the flow of water.
Here you can see the water is being pumped out from the drain into the Dutch River.
This was the caisson gates and stop planks at Goole a couple of weeks ago, pumps working hard there.
Viking Marina at the same time. Hello Oleanna!
Goole Boathouse Marina
Thank you once again to Mark for the great photos. Even though there have been problems at the site it is good to see how things are first hand.
Later this month we will be changing our website hosting. Readers shouldn’t notice anything different and those who get an email each time I post should still get one. I will do my best to inform you of the last post before we move, JUST IN CASE!
Thank you Mike from Alchemy for bringing the notice below to our attention last night. Stoppage notices go to Mick and he hadn’t checked his emails for a while.
Notice Alert
Aire & Calder Navigation Main Line Location: Goole Docks Starts At: Goole Visitor Moorings Ends At: Goole Visitor Moorings
Friday 5 March 2021 16:15 until further notice
Type: Advice Reason: Information
Original message:
Skippers of all craft are advised that due to restricted water levels caused by the breach at New Bridge on the Aire & Calder Navigation Associated British Ports (ABP) are restricting passage at Ocean Lock Goole to commercial use only for the foreseeable future. Skippers of all craft are advise to bear this in mind when planning passage on the Derwent, Ouse, Humber, Trent and other connecting waterways.
This notice means that our escape route is now blocked. We always knew this was a possibility and sadly it is now a reality. Currently our only way out from Goole is on the back of a lorry.
Our hoped for departure date is still a way off, so there is still chance that the situation may change. But our giddiness of last week has been dampened somewhat!
Yesterday levels in the docks were low again. Apparently water had been flowing over the stop planks at the caisson last weekend, the top plank having been removed. Maybe this was because the eastern/downstream side of the cofferdam had water overflowing it.
Thank you Don for the link to this footage taken last Sunday. The cofferdam filling back up nicely. Mark Penn had also reported a week earlier that the level on the western/upstream side had been doing similar.
I’ve just noticed that C&RT have also updated their website with the following. It explains what has been happening in better detail than the snippets we’ve been getting on stoppage notices. Information is better than speculation.
Update 05/03/2021
Our initial actions when the breach occurred on the 20 December were to make the site safe and prevent further release of water from the canal which would have caused further issues for both boaters and local residents. We managed to make the site safe within a few days and added to these temporary measures over the next few weeks to stabilise the repair.
Since that point, our efforts have focussed on managing water levels for boats whilst preparing for the permanent works. We closed Goole caission and pumped water into Goole Dock and although this helped to some extent it proved challenging. This could be because there is a leak in the dock or it could be because there is a problem with the caisson or even a combination of the two.
In order to both see the damage to the bed of the canal and provide working space for a temporary repair we then installed a cofferdam and this was completed towards the end of February. This is essentially two lines of sheet piles across the canal with pumps in place to send the water across the piles.
Once these pumps were in place, to provide a continuity of water, we were able to take the water out of the cofferdam and start our inspection. Unfortunately the bank on the south side of the canal, where the piles of the cofferdam nearest the dock connected to it, suffered damage and so the cofferdam started to fill up again. We have almost completed the repair of this damage and can start to take the water out of the cofferdam again.
All these challenges have made it difficult to maintain a steady water level but we can assure you we are doing all we can to ensure this is the case.
At this stage our engineers estimate the permanent repair project will take several months to complete, though as we learn more about the cause of the problem, we will be able to refine this estimate. Until complete the navigation will unfortunately be closed at the breach site.
We apologise for the effects of the breach on the Aire & Calder and we appreciate how frustrating this must be. Please be assured we are doing all we can to resolve this problem.
A problem with the seal at the breach site has resulted in an inflow of water from the downstream end that our contractors are currently attending to.
Downstream water level fluctuations are expected to continue whilst this is addressed, and further dewatering of the breach site is planned for w/c 8th March 2021.
Maybe they’ve been waiting to see how the cofferdam would hold up before fully dewatering the breach site. Maybe the chap who reported the cofferdam being full again earlier this week was correct.
Meanwhile here in Scarborough a folding crate has been brought back out of storage and items that need to head back to Oleanna are gradually being added. We have a boat safety inspection booked in a few weeks time, before this we need to do a couple of jobs onboard. Here’s hoping we don’t have to clamber down off the pontoon again to get onboard.
The breach site has now been dewatered to provide access for inspection and investigation works to be carried out and to allow repairs to commence.
Until then we will continue to manage water levels.
Further updates will be provided when we have further informaiton.
Well one report by email a week ago, another from here and there and then the C&RT website gets an update.
Update 01/03/2021
The cofferdam has now been installed. Next week we expect to be able to dewater the site and carry out a fish rescue (while pumping water out, any fish trapped between the walls will be rescued and relocated back into the canal). Shortly after this, we will conduct our first detailed site investigation with our principal engineer, to assess the damage and decide on the repair programme to be undertaken. It will take several months for the repair programme to complete and will can share more details on timescales after the site inspection.
Not quite sure if this report is a week or so behind. Yesterday a local reported that the cofferdam was full again. Full as in up to the top? Or full to where it had naturally drained down to, as shown in the last photos? Quite unlikely to have filled all the way back up unless the cofferdam had given way, or the breach had been mended. It’s a bit like my version of 2 meters compared to someone elses!
Sadly no new photos to share that would help confirm such things. We shall wait for more information, but Ocean Lock in the docks is looking even more likely for our escape route.
One thing now ticked off the list, Mick has had his first jab. Hooray!! We’re wondering if we’ll have to return to Scarborough for our second jabs or will we be able to get them done elsewhere?
If we were still fulltime liveaboards we’d be able to go to the nearest GP surgery. Here is guidance from C&RT. Liveaboard Continuous Cruiser boater? Had your Covid-19 vaccine invite but not the actual appointment? Not had anything? Find your nearest GP and use this form http://ow.ly/sWb650DDnza to register with them. You are entitled to register, don’t accept no as an answer.
0 locks, 0 miles, 1 story here, 1 here, 1 more over here, 1st jab, 3 tests for my nephew, 9th March school return date, 1 mended camera, Act 1 and 2 drawn up, 4 options for the joust.
Blimey the end of February already! Spring is certainly springing. Here in Scarborough the sun has been out for a few days and flowers are blooming in the woods and along the cliffs to the sea.
Fewer layers required
With the announcement last Monday regarding the roadmap out of lockdown the world feels a lot more positive. On Monday and Tuesday we allowed ourselves to get a bit boating giddy, planning our escape from Goole. Mick even put our first destination into canal plan to work out how many hours cruising we’d need to do a day.
One escape route would mean we’d be needing to doing just over 2 hours a day, the other just under, although we’d most probably end up doing several days worth in one as there would be nowhere to moor up on the river sections. But this is all easy and would have us reaching our destination towards the end of June. All very exciting, we just have to hope that ABP let us out through the lock onto the Ouse or that the repair on the Aire and Calder is far easier than all the engineering suggests.
We are going to keep our first destination this year a surprise for you until we are on our way. But on Monday and Tuesday this week things started to slot into place quite nicely, we just have to hope that the Governments roadmap, (without dates!) follows the dates Mr Johnson mentioned. We will continue to abide by the rules, just hope everyone else does their part. There is also a long list of jobs to do here along with lots of work.
Sneaky peek at panto
According to various sources regarding the Aire and Calder Breach the piling forming the cofferdam was finished five days early. The area is virtually dry and decisions on a permanent repair would be made by the end of this week. Equipment has been heading to site all week and initial thoughts are that there is no problem with the culvert under the canal.
Repairs continue on the Calder Hebble at the Figure of Three Locks near Dewsbury. This was just about totally wiped out in floods at the beginning of last year. The repairs have taken into account the possibility of future flooding, the towpath has been reinforced and the spillway should now be capable of carrying flood water away. I’ve come across a couple of videos of the works.
https://fb.watch/3X9yJx9k2o/
This was a route we’d been planning on taking last year as I had a show that would start in Huddersfield and then tour to York. The gap between performances allowed enough time for us to travel between the two theatres, however the damage caused here altered our plans, then the show was cancelled.
Sun on the catwalk
Cancelled isn’t really the right word, as this week Dark Horse have been in touch and are wanting to bring the show out of hibernation. It will need designing in the next few months and some costume work before the summer even though it won’t be performed until early next year. Another reason for hoping the roadmap out of lockdown keeps going in the right direction.
Hello Oleanna!
Reports from Viking Marina in Goole suggest levels are coming back up. Mid week the caisson gates were seen open, but the metal stop planks were still in place with the pumps running full pelt around them. This weekend we’ve had reports from Lisa and Al that the metal stop planks may now have been removed. With the cofferdam now stopping any more water from escaping I suspect the caisson gates and stop planks are no longer required. Opening them up here means that as the locks in Goole docks are used there will now be another four miles worth of water to draw from. The navigation still remains closed, the red lights still showing at the caisson.
0 locks, 0 miles, 3, 1 set of gates, 1 lot of stop planks, 13 guns, 27 houses, 1 white card approved, 1 white card to be costed, 1 commission finished, 1 plan coming together, 1 roadmap, 0 dates, 1 cat going solo more, 1 new show, 3 more months photoless, 1 long list of jobs, 2 giddy boaters, 1 neighbours cat with cream paws, 1 smug boat cat.
The cofferdams at the breach site are now completed and Mark was back down there today taking photos.
Today C&RT have reportedly started to pump water out from between the dams. Hence the blue water either side and mud banks showing between them.
Water is being pumped round the dams. On some photos the pontoon is on the off side and being deluged.
The piling seems to be letting a small amount of water through. The amount of silt is quite impressive on the outside of the bend. I wonder just how deep the channel is?
Here you can see some of the bags of aggregate that were air lifted in when the breach originally happened. I wonder how much of the stuff they lifted in will have to be removed to be able to see the full extent of the breach.
This looks like the fish rescue team arriving.
Two chaps are carrying a boat along the off side. You can also see a ladder towards the top of the photo. The gravel on the right is almost certainly the start of a ramp to get access onto the site when it is fully drained.
You can see them lowering the boat down into the cofferdam here. Once the fish have been rescued the rest of the water will be pumped out.
The level in the drain below the canal looks lower than it was a few days ago. With the level in the cofferdam now low the rush of water coming through the mound of rocks looks to have stopped. Have to say I can’t see where any pumps are to drain the site, maybe they just let it drain into the drain below?
According to Mark the rest of the water will be pumped out on Tuesday, maybe then we’ll be able to see where all the water was escaping.
I also got a selection of photos of Oleanna today from Al via Lisa.
Now either that pontoon has been given a good dose of Babybio or the level has dropped even further.
The pontoon is now at roof height, the lowest she’s been. Thankfully Al was down at the marina again today and loosened off her ropes some more.
At this level I think the docks will not be operational again, although Mark has a photo showing a couple of ships in. Marine traffic shows no boats this evening. There obviously isn’t enough water being pumped in to keep the level up.
Thank you Al and Mark for the photos again. We’ve considered hiring a car to head down to visit, but there is nothing more we could do. Oleanna is still afloat, or if she is sat on the bottom, the bottom is level. So we just have to wait and watch.
Today is what She calls my ‘Gotcha day’. Five years ago I was quite happily clambering over the high edge of a pooh tray heading towards a scratch post, stopping to sniff and kill a mouse en route, when the She I’d been staying with picked me up and walked with me on her shoulder to the front door.
I was little then
Here my She stood with a big smile on her face. I had a cuddle and a purr showed off my tail to She and her family and that was it. This was the day I became a boat cat.
It’s such a hard life
Back then the back of the sofa was a good place to sit, that was when we lived on Lillian. Then on Oleanna the sofa had a secret passage behind it which only got revealed every now and again. Now we live in Scarboreugh the sofa keeps moving but always has a route behind it, which I find handy for getting to sit in the window.
Toms boating coat
Life has changed somewhat in the last five years. They no longer move the outside and there are far FAR too many other cats who visit my outside, both front and back! In the last five months I have not murdered anything! Trees are hard to come by apart from in the park and She doesn’t take me there quite as much as she used to.
Out in the park
However, the tree that Tom chopped down has been brought inside. I can now go through my door (when they bother to open it for me!) and climb it to my hearts content, not having to share it with every other cat in the neighbourhood. It’s quite cool and I can stand at the top and sneer at Bogey Face and Fatty Betty who don’t have their own tree.
MY tree
You may think that I am now a house cat. I would disagree. I still get the same rules before I go out ‘You have an hour, no friends home dead or alive or putting them on the roof for later’. I still have to find a route that is accessible to the roof. I get ‘Thank you for coming home’ Dreamies. And quite frequently get told ‘Boat cats don’t claw furniture’ or ‘Boat cats don’t bite’. Lockdown in a house is boring so I have to find new ways to amuse myself.
The highlights of my day are at getting up time and bedtime. My birthday present from last year may have lost numerous feathers now, but it is still tops. She swings it round and I pounce from one end of the bed to the other. I stalk it and wait for it to come out from the Wardle room.
I do get to look out above the trees when She and I go to work. There is lots of this happening right now. I have been given a cushion to sit on so that I won’t try to squeeze into the model box anymore, She’s been busy making things to go inside it, they are poisonous! When we worked on Oleanna everything used to get tidied up every day and put away. Well She is now very very lazy and leaves everything out. Standards are slipping.
Tut Tut Tut!
Tom says that three years ago She wondered what I’d make of life in a house. Well there is a lot more room to run around after visiting my pooh box and good windows to sit and look out of. But the lack of friends is the serious down side along with there being too many cats. She says that one day, hopefully soon, we’ll be back on Oleanna and they’ll be moving the outside again. We just have to get to the other side of this lockdown and the breach. So my killing days may not be over.
Dreaming of Boats!
0 locks, 0 miles, 5 years second mate, 4 white paws, 1 white tipped tail, 5 months house bound, 1 lockdown and breach to pounce over, 3rd sofa, 1 tree of my very own, 2 cat walks, 3 cushions, 2 many cats, 0 friends, 2 lifes, 60 miles apart.
Aire & Calder Navigation Main Line Location: Ferrybridge Lock and Goole Caisson Starts At: Lock 11, Ferrybridge Flood Lock Ends At: Goole Pipebridge
Update on 19/02/2021:
Works at the breach continue this will create fluctuations in water levels between Pollington, Sykehouse and Goole.
Skippers of all craft are advised to check their mooring lines to ensure their vessel is securely moored allowing for water fluctuation.
This notice from C&RT came through mid morning. Oleanna is moored on the other side of Goole Caisson, but that doesn’t mean the levels in the docks are any more constant. In fact this morning I received a message from Lisa saying that Al was on his way to the marina to check on boats as the level had dropped significantly overnight.
The thought was that ships had been through Ocean Lock and taken a lot of water with them, therefore dropping the level. It would take some time for the pumps working around the Caisson to bring the level back up again.
Al checked Oleanna’s ropes and sent through a couple of photos. She certainly was a lot lower than when we’d last had a photo, but not as low as when we’d first visited her after the breach. Apart from the lack of water all seems well. Thank you Al and the others in the marina for keeping an eye on things.
0 locks, 0 miles, 2 foot down, 1 very bored cat, 4 guns finished, 9 at least halfway, 1 assistant locked out, 128 photos of a white card model, 2 notebooks, 0 missing blog photos!
My phone pinged this afternoon with a notification from Mark Penn. More photos from his drone above the breach site. So I cleaned my hands off from glue and paint to take a look.
The western end of the cofferdam is now fully in place. The piles have been driven down and now resemble the piling along the towpath. There are two people in a small boat working on the dam.
On the offside bank there are six pipes that look like they are attached to a floating pontoon. This is where the water from the canal is now being piped out and around the breach site.
No piles are sitting in the field, I suspect they are awaiting more to arrive.
The level in the drain below the breach looks lower again, but the amount of water coming through from the canal is very visible now. A couple of pumps are still in situ, pumping water out from the drain into the River Don.
Here you can see the progress that has been made on the eastern dam. It looks like they are loading more sections of piling onto the pontoon.
I wonder how long it will be before they can’t get the pontoon to the loading area anymore? I doubt they will keep the pontoon inside the cofferdam as it would just get in the way.
Here you can see the amount of water being pumped round the site. Once the cofferdam is fully in this will then feed through to Goole Docks. I wonder if the caisson gates will be opened then, or will they keep pumping round them into the docks keeping the gates as a precautionary measure?
The bags of aggregate by the tarpaulin are visible again, which suggests the level has dropped. Apparently Goole docks are busy with ships again, as I write this there are four vessels shown to be in the docks and more heading up the River Ouse (MarineTraffic).
This one shows how large an area there is within the dams. There are reports of an unmapped culvert here, so this may be why they have had to block off such a large section.
Considering they have built just about a whole dam in the last week, I’d expect that the second one will be completed early next week. Then before all the water is fully drained they will do a fish rescue. It will be interesting to see what it will all look like when it is fully drained.
Then we will see if supermarket trolleys have an ability to travel distances. The nearest shop (West Cowick Spar) is just about two miles away, then the usual culprits, Tesco, Morrisons and Asda are further at about five miles.
Some people like facebook others hate it. Whilst out on Oleanna it has helped us stay connected to friends and family, near and far. Since 2014, when we moved on board Lillian I have posted a picture on facebook just about everyday. This morning my memories for today popped up on the screen of my phone. It’s always interesting to see if I can work out where we were and it also marks certain landmarks and events in life.
Titford Pumphouse
This time last year we battled our way through Storm Dennis to Titford Pumphouse to watch Heather and Kate of Alarum Theatre perform their latest show.
Sunrise over the Ings
Eight years ago I’d stayed the night at my Dad’s house and woke to the view of a private lake at the bottom, of the garden. The Ings doing their job holding flood water from the River Ouse, as they do several times a year.
Oh to be at Tixall Wide
In 2017 I was sat below on NB Lillyanne nursing a broken ankle in a boot. I sewed patchwork hexagons and watched Hitchcock films whilst Mick single handed us through Tixall Lock.
Two years ago we moored near Mexborough and started on a bit of a spring clean. This ended up with me offering my mobile phone to the gods of the deep after shaking a towel out of the hatch, which created a plop followed by the shiny exterior of my phone sinking into the depths of the Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigations!
Oleanna right at the very beginning
Five years ago we hired a car to witness the start of the build of our boat. In Newcastle-under-Lymn the base plate of Oleanna lay on the floor of Tim Tylers workshop. We had a cuppa and walked over what was to become our home. The stern was chalked out ready to start the transformation from 2D to 3D. What an exciting day.
Back seven years ago was a very busy day. Starting with some TLC for some giant puppets who had battled the elements on Scarborough sea front the day before on the first night, Act 1 of Orpheus The Mariner, a large scale community project by Animated Objects. Then some joining together of willow, ribbon, ropes and ripstock close to Valley Bridge ready for Act 2. Followed by donning my Luminaries waterproofs ready to lead one of the giants to meet an even bigger giant puppet. What a day that was.
What will be my photo today?
Well, this morning Dawn and Lee, of Animated Objects, delivered some work to our front door. A spare room had been cleared and the floor covered with dust sheets. I now have a bakers dozen of giant sci-fi guns that need covering in muslin, glue and paint. That’ll keep me busy for a while.
0 locks, 0 miles, 5 years of Oleanna, 7 years since a giant, 13 guns, 15 metres muslin, 5 litres PVA, 5 litres black emulsion, 5 cheap brushes, 1 bubble carpenter, 50 years since counting my new pennies.
Happy Birthday Oleanna, sorry we can’t be with you!