Jump to content

Mirithehamster

Member
  • Posts

    56
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Widnes
  • Occupation
    unemployed
  • Boat Name
    none
  • Boat Location
    none

Recent Profile Visitors

1,099 profile views

Mirithehamster's Achievements

Engager

Engager (3/12)

1

Reputation

  1. well if it was upto me and i had the money i would dig up the Mersey Flat Winnick Queen which is buried in a infilled section of the Sankey Canal And restore and own her There are 3 other mersey flat near to the Winnick Queen in the same section of the Sankey Canal that could be dug up and restored, one is a ice breaker, usefull in winter i bet
  2. does anyone know when the mersey flats where dumped at spike island widnes
  3. the swans neck could of been stolen to order so anyone using it is reciving stolen goods
  4. The photo from 1985 taken by a friend of my late fathers shows how much land and heritage since 1985 has vanished, the council should put large boulders in the river behind the Mersey flat wrecks,and then cover everything with soil and grass Ihave also on a Mersey Gateway PDF there are abot 9 Mersey flats there or are there more
  5. A Mersey flat is a type of doubled-ended barge with rounded bilges, carvel build and fully decked. Traditionally, the hull was built of oak and the deck was pitch pine. Some had a single mast, with a fore-and-aft rig, while some had an additional mizzen mast. Despite having a flat bottom and curved sides, they were quite stable. They were common from the 1730s to 1890s. As the name suggests, these flats originated on the River Mersey, but they were also used on the rivers Irwell and Weaver.[ The length of a flat was from 62 to 70 feet (19 to 21 m) long, with a 6-foot (1.8 m) draught and a beam of 14 feet 9 inches to 17 feet (4.5 to 5.2 m). They could carry up to 80tons of cargo, and this size allowed them to work along the Bridgewater Canal, the Sankey Canal and the northern parts of the Shropshire Union Canal. The Weaver flat was a larger version of the Mersey flat, measuring 90 by 21 feet (27.4 by 6.4 m). Its draught was 10.5 feet (3.2 m) and when fully loaded, could carry 250 tons. Most Mersey flats had been converted to dumb barges by the end of the 19th century, towed by horses or by steam tugs. The larger Weaver flats were fitted with steam engines, and later with diesel engines, although there were still around 20 working by sail in 1935. Both the Liverpool Maritime Museum and the Ellesmere Port Museumhave a Mersey flat in their collections, neither of which actually worked under sail.
  6. I see Halton Borough Council and the mersey gateway team hve identified another mersey flat very near the remains of the Eustace Cary, The other Mersey Flat Identified is John And William, anyone know the history of it
  7. a firend took this video awhile ago showing how the mersey flat wrecks are being eroded,
  8. Does anyone know what happened to The Mersey Jigger Flat Santa Rosa Built in 1906, only rumour i heard that in the late 1970s she shipped of to brazil for work on the Amazon as a logging boat
  9. if mostof parts are underwater then the hulls might not be as bad as the ones at spike island widnes
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.