John sent me some pictures of boats moored on the Thames by Abingdon. He says “Seen tied up today. Nobody at home but I wonder does anyone know the stories of these boats, especially the Vrouwe Johanna of Amsterdam, dated, I think, 1899!”
He also sent pictures of Daisy D and two other similar traditional looking narrow boats – probably far more modern. They look compact on the outside for wending their way down narrow inland waterways and under low bridges but still afford plenty of living space inside.
Any interesting facts for John? Could Vrouwe Johanna cross the English Channel? What are the advantages of a Dutch Barge (if it is such) v a Narrow Boat? And why do people want to live in boats anyway?
With Thanks to John for the pictures.
Saw Lady Johanna myself on Saturday while paddling the canoe. She looks like a Dutch sailing barge all right – they’re very flat bottomed to cope with shallow waters, but that means they don’t sail up wind so well, hence the lee boards (the big things half way down) which are lowered into the water.
A bit of Googling suggests she is now in the UK – see this site with details of hiring her, and why you can’t any more:
http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bootnodig.nl%2Fboot_huren_aak_vrouwe_johanna_amsterdam_%28nh%29.html