Living on a canal boat

Author
Discussion

matt21

Original Poster:

4,292 posts

205 months

Monday 8th September 2008
quotequote all
Anyone live on a canal boat?

A few of my friends do and one of them is moving away for a year and offered to rent it out to me for a cheap fee. Thinking it would make a good cheap pad to get away from things as I currently cant afford to rent a place.

What do you lot reckon.

I have spent many days and nights on boats as lots of my friends own them so kind of know what the score is, just after some people who may have experienced and why they got out of it.

ps im nor a pikey

Wacky Racer

38,237 posts

248 months

Monday 8th September 2008
quotequote all
It never did Richard Branson any harm..........

nakedninja

540 posts

195 months

Monday 8th September 2008
quotequote all
Do it.

I'm thinking of doing it too in a few years, after the nuclear winter...

tomTVR

6,909 posts

242 months

Monday 8th September 2008
quotequote all
Hell yea that would be really cool, bet girls would like it too.

Mars

8,753 posts

215 months

Monday 8th September 2008
quotequote all
The speed with which the country floods, I think it's a very sensible suggestion.

jeevescat

880 posts

212 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
Go for it, I'd say.

BlackVanGirl

9,932 posts

212 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
You'll never, ever feel really warm and dry, miserable in winter or the prolonged bad weather of the British summer. Nice for day trips or holidays, awful to live I'd expect. Totally impossible to dry the washing etc.

Ordinary Bloke

4,559 posts

199 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
BlackVanGirl said:
You'll never, ever feel really warm and dry, miserable in winter or the prolonged bad weather of the British summer. Nice for day trips or holidays, awful to live I'd expect. Totally impossible to dry the washing etc.
So living in a black van is better than living on a boat?

Will "green bus-shelter boy' be along in a minute?

biggrin

The Curn

917 posts

213 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
Think about this carefully.

1. It is just a floating caravan.

2. It may well be more prone to damp than a caravan.

3. Tow paths are always littered with dog st which is then transferred to your boat when you get home pissed.

4. You have to empty your own sewage.

5. The shower will be weak to say the least.

6. You have to fill it up with water from a hose pipe. I could imagine that the novelty of this would wear thin after an hour or so.

7. Assuming that you have one, where would you park the P&J?

B17NNS

18,506 posts

248 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
BlackVanGirl said:
You'll never, ever feel really warm and dry
Really?

Our house overlooks the canal and we often walk the dog down along the towpath. In the winter/autumn evenings the narrowboats look so warm and cosy with their little fires chuffing away.

A life on the ocean waves, ahoy there matey etc.

Sounds cool to me and I bet the chicks would dig it.

BlackVanGirl

9,932 posts

212 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
Ordinary Bloke said:
BlackVanGirl said:
You'll never, ever feel really warm and dry, miserable in winter or the prolonged bad weather of the British summer. Nice for day trips or holidays, awful to live I'd expect. Totally impossible to dry the washing etc.
So living in a black van is better than living on a boat?

Will "green bus-shelter boy' be along in a minute?

biggrin
hehe

Think about it. White Van Man... Black Van Girl.

I live in a poxy damp house.

The Curn

917 posts

213 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
B17NNS said:
BlackVanGirl said:
You'll never, ever feel really warm and dry
Really?

Our house overlooks the canal and we often walk the dog down along the towpath. In the winter/autumn evenings the narrowboats look so warm and cosy with their little fires chuffing away.

A life on the ocean waves, ahoy there matey etc.

Sounds cool to me and I bet the chicks would dig it.
Ah, so it's you responsible for point 3 is it? wink

B17NNS

18,506 posts

248 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
The Curn said:
Ah, so it's you responsible for point 3 is it? wink
Nope, me and my dog only st in caravan parks.

Oh, and if you do decide to do it, get a pirate flag.

Edited by B17NNS on Tuesday 9th September 00:12

Ordinary Bloke

4,559 posts

199 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
'Poxy Damp House Man' is not available tonight...


laugh

TvrJohn

1,058 posts

256 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
Can imagine they take alot of heating, steel hull sitting in water etc
Still like the idea however !

B17NNS

18,506 posts

248 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
TvrJohn said:
Can imagine they take alot of heating, steel hull sitting in water etc
Still like the idea however !
I think they are insulated with spray foam or something similar.

Come on fellas, whats all this about energy efficiency.

The chicks will dig it non?

williamp

19,279 posts

274 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
living on a houseboat I have images of David essex, bright coloured waistcoats and red nech'chiefs.... and Rosie and Jim. A strange lifestyle, but a fun holiday. In Brugges I met a couple who were traveling to St petersberg purely on inland waterways.

TheEnd

15,370 posts

189 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
probably, til they realise its like a colder, damper, static caravan.

Rename it "Myot" and you'll be popular, until they see it.

Ganglandboss

8,310 posts

204 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
David Gilmour built a studio in a boat...





Edited by Ganglandboss on Tuesday 9th September 00:24

Robatr0n

12,362 posts

217 months

Tuesday 9th September 2008
quotequote all
The Curn said:
Think about this carefully.

1. It is just a floating caravan.

2. It may well be more prone to damp than a caravan.

3. Tow paths are always littered with dog st which is then transferred to your boat when you get home pissed.

4. You have to empty your own sewage.

5. The shower will be weak to say the least.

6. You have to fill it up with water from a hose pipe. I could imagine that the novelty of this would wear thin after an hour or so.

7. Assuming that you have one, where would you park the P&J?
If he's paying rent surely it will be a fixed mooring?

Have to agree with you though, I wouldn't fancy living on a boat if I was outside of a marina as I'm too used to home comforts. Plus nobody can untie my house whilst I'm asleep and push it into the middle of the canal. hehe