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ymu

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ymu last won the day on March 31 2011

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  1. No. I think you would have the guts to apologise publicly, had you realised you needed to. I'm not outing anyone. That's their call, not mine. Don't go Kellying it by elimination.
  2. I meant the 'apreciative audience'. And a few people who were battling me on a thread a few minutes earlier deciding to back down in private. Such is the aggression level here. Never seen that before. Anywhere.
  3. They mostly PM on here. For obvious reasons. Some of the aggressors do it instead of backing down in public too. Big men, eh?
  4. Then why do you assume I plan to break the law? Davies clearly broke it. We do not. I'll leave it for a judge to decide if BW decide to make it a test case. Would be delighted to, in fact. I shall endeavour to use all the busiest visitor moorings I can find to attract time-wasters complaints.
  5. Pretty sure I didn't say we'd be using the Davies defence, dave. That would be a remarkably silly thing to do, not to mention a remarkably odd conclusion for you to leap to.
  6. There would be no point at all engaging you in private. You don't think I'm bothering because I find you interesting to talk to, do you? There's a massive invisible audience judging us. I'm quite, quite delighted with your performance so far. Apologies for bringing the rape topic on this thread though. I thought it was the other thread at the time.
  7. Don't feed it Patrick. Turns out it only makes it stupider. See month mooring thread. Oy vey!
  8. Nibble, there is no definition of 'place'or 'bona fide navigation' in BW 1995. If I had a precedent where a judge relied on the CC guidance, I'd not risk ignoring it. Now I know that the CC guidance is unlikely to be considered definitive by a lower-level court, I will obey the law and treat the CC guidance with the contempt it deserves and take my chances in court. There's always Windermere if we lose.
  9. What are you talking about? Who am I pigeon-holing? Apart from boaters who habitually speed past moored craft?
  10. It's an impossibly difficult board search, but some have claimed exactly that. Now that we know, we will not be moving further than the next stretch of moorings unless we want to. I'm happy that we can satisfy a court that we comply with BW 1995.
  11. Where do you get that from Phyllis? I think I've explained why lines won't and can't always be tight. If they're loose, we move a lot. This is not a problem until a series of unnecessarily large bow waves go past. It's never one boat that sets us adrift, it's a succession of them, which happens remarkably often given that all boaters should have absorbed the handbook by the time they get on the tiller.
  12. If the lines are loose on the Ozford an over-enthusiastuc duck shifts the boat. And the constant back and forth movement can pull huge chunks of bank out. We don't care about being thrown around, we care about being set adrift three times before breakfast (we do get up late, tbf). If the pins don't pull out the bank gives way, We could plonk ourselves on those nice visitor moorings instead. Too many selfish boaters might force us to be less considerate ourselves next time we hit the Oxford. "I'm not slowing down for every moored boat!" … "Well, screw you too, we'll find ourselves a visitor spot. Hope you don't find them all full of CCers when you come back." Liveaboads on the Oxford sometimes thank us for slowing down. Half the fisherman we've passed do too. Very sad indictment of boaters in general. There seem to be an awful lot who are selfish, ignorant or both. Not good for the rest of us. At least we have no fear of maggots getting chucked at us, now we know why it happens.
  13. Where did I say it threw the guidance out? It just removes the ambiguity over whether satisfying the board is part of the law. The answer is no. You may be able to satisfy the law without satisfying the board. Both 14 day rules are now effectively the same, with the exception that those with home moorings can still ignore them with impunity whilst CCers who choose to obey the law but not the guidance may have to justify themselves in court.
  14. We have always used springs because that is what we were taught the very first time we went out on a boat. I'm clearly too stupid to know how they help when the level changes a lot, sometimes too rapidly for tight lines to be safe. Please do explain.
  15. You could also identify helpful types in each area. We picked up our first. boat from an area with no phone reception and stayed there a couple of days whilst we moved on board. The moment we got into reception his phone went nuts. My mother-in-law had had a stroke and wasn't expected to survive the weekend and he had to get there fast. We checked the maps for the closest station, bumped into Dusty who advised us where to head and phoned someone to ask them to help us out if they saw us. We left the boat on a lock-landing with apology notes in the canalside windows (not wanting to advertise our absence on the towpath side).. The yard sent someone to move it through the lock whilst I was still in London. I was on my own for the first few weeks CCing because he had to be in London, but lovely people helped me move. It helped that we were hiring out of season so the yard were there for us (David Dare and all at Heyford, you're diamonds, all of you). Full recovery, btw. She's started going out on her own most nights cos hubby slows her down. Nibble, you obviously prefer your expensive mooring to all your alternatives. That is all. Why are you going around in circles agreeing with me whilst pretending you don't? 'Market forces are for life, not just when it's convenient for you. Suck it up or oppose 'free' market capitalism like you so obviously should, given the views you express here.
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