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Reply to: House Boats

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Previously on "House Boats"

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  • bogeyman
    replied
    Had a brief look on Sunday but not entirely sure about it.

    Boat looks in good nick to my untrained eye but I would definately get a boat surveyor in before I decided anything.

    The biggest worry is the mooring rights, which the current owner is being slightly cagey about - which makes me feel bad about the deal.

    Leave a comment:


  • bogeyman
    replied
    Originally posted by Churchill View Post
    A few questions...

    When was the boat last surveyed and by whom?

    Year and method of construction?

    Anodes, when were they last replaced?

    Certificates, Boat Safety etc.

    Are you paying cash or getting a marine mortgage?
    Good questions, but was not in a position to ask them all, but will.

    I would be paying cash for this, if I went for it, and that's a big IF as well as a big load of cash.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sysman
    replied
    Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Post
    They do tend to be oldies. My son in law got busted for speeding as he raced for the RV at a canal side pub. he was doing 50% over the speed limit at 3 knots

    Once, just once Thank God, we got cornered by a John Bull type who flew the Union Jack and kept going on about Queen and Empire. We politely declined his offer of sharing a long flight of locks with him. There are 23 locks on the canal as it drops down to Wigan.

    It took me a couple of days to cope with the fact that I could walk faster, but once that was out of the way it really was a great way to wind down.

    Leave a comment:


  • EternalOptimist
    replied
    Originally posted by dang65 View Post
    Yeah, it's incredible how quickly you get seduced into wanting to buy one and live on it, just after a week's pleasant holiday. I ended up reading the entire narrowboat-related internet and even buying a few boat magazines. Now I'm kind of glad I never went further, but the idea still pops up in daydreams from time to time. I think if I could buy one and use it for a year or so to do a proper tour of the canal network then I'd still be really tempted, but I'll wait till the kids are long gone... which is the standard sort of age for narrowboat owners anyway as far as I can tell.
    They do tend to be oldies. My son in law got busted for speeding as he raced for the RV at a canal side pub. he was doing 50% over the speed limit at 3 knots

    Leave a comment:


  • dang65
    replied
    Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Post
    I have done a few narrowboat holidays, normally pay about £1200 for the week.
    It strikes me as perfect while its a novelty, but could easily become a real bummer.
    Yeah, it's incredible how quickly you get seduced into wanting to buy one and live on it, just after a week's pleasant holiday. I ended up reading the entire narrowboat-related internet and even buying a few boat magazines. Now I'm kind of glad I never went further, but the idea still pops up in daydreams from time to time. I think if I could buy one and use it for a year or so to do a proper tour of the canal network then I'd still be really tempted, but I'll wait till the kids are long gone... which is the standard sort of age for narrowboat owners anyway as far as I can tell.

    Leave a comment:


  • Moscow Mule
    replied
    Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
    £120K for a boat seems a bit steep. No idea how that compares, but it sounds like not much less than a cheap flat with a lot of disadvatages.

    I'm not sure I'd want to be walking along a tow path at night, and I'm not an 18 year old girl. There was a murder on the Oxford canal in Banbury not so long ago.
    There was a murder in a high street in london this weekend*. This fact didn't stop me from doing the shopping.

    Boat living is a lot of fun, and generally has much more of a sense of community than a flat. I would have been overjoyed if my parents had bought me a boat whilst I was at uni.





    * in all likelyhood. They tend not to report them unless they are kids with knives these days.

    Leave a comment:


  • wurzel
    replied
    Always been a pipe dream of mine. I am, in fact a bit of a closet gongoozler.

    Leave a comment:


  • Churchill
    replied
    A few questions...

    When was the boat last surveyed and by whom?

    Year and method of construction?

    Anodes, when were they last replaced?

    Certificates, Boat Safety etc.

    Are you paying cash or getting a marine mortgage?

    Leave a comment:


  • TiroFijo
    replied
    Originally posted by Board Game Geek View Post
    The name of the vessel is the most important thing.

    If, for example, she's called "The Canal Queen", make sure the paint hasn't peeled away on the letter "C".

    Otherwise you may be getting some unexpected visitors.
    unless he's the one doing the peeling

    Leave a comment:


  • TiroFijo
    replied
    Originally posted by Churchill View Post
    The two happiest days in boat ownership are...

    The day you buy it!

    The day you sell it!
    A boat is a hole in the water where you throw money!

    Leave a comment:


  • Menelaus
    replied
    Amsterdam

    I lived on the NADINE II at Waterlooplein in Amsterdam when working at ABN Amro in 2006. Houseboat living in the middle of a town isn't great if it's a massive tourist haven like Amsterdam but I'd expect if outside of Oxford then it'd be good.

    In other things to be considered:

    - sanitation: how does waste water get off the boat?
    - water: does it have a clean water source / water purification?
    - electrics: how does it generate power (e.g., solar panels, mains connection)

    Maintenance and mooring charges may be an issue to be considered also.

    Leave a comment:


  • EternalOptimist
    replied
    I have done a few narrowboat holidays, normally pay about £1200 for the week.
    It strikes me as perfect while its a novelty, but could easily become a real bummer. e.g. if you are a big bloke, or the missus is a big bloke, those tiny showers can be a real problem. Plus the cooking facilities are ok for slumming around for a week, for for a permenant stay might be limiting.

    Moving around I never paid any mooring, but static, I could not say.


    Leave a comment:


  • VectraMan
    replied
    £120K for a boat seems a bit steep. No idea how that compares, but it sounds like not much less than a cheap flat with a lot of disadvatages.

    I'm not sure I'd want to be walking along a tow path at night, and I'm not an 18 year old girl. There was a murder on the Oxford canal in Banbury not so long ago.

    Leave a comment:


  • MrMark
    replied
    Originally posted by Churchill View Post
    The two happiest days in boat ownership are...

    The day you buy it!

    The day you sell it!
    heh! I suspect you could apply that aphorism to many things in life. For example, the two happiest days on a contract are

    The day you start it!

    The day you finish it!

    No, that's not right. First pay day is the best

    Leave a comment:


  • Churchill
    replied
    The two happiest days in boat ownership are...

    The day you buy it!

    The day you sell it!

    Leave a comment:

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