Monday 3 August 2015

The Birth of Nyzark


A simple little ceremony on the day belied the task ahead.


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From Plywood to Steel

So, what happened next? I went back to school armed with the diary, and my holiday photos. Nobody else had kept a diary, and the teacher had forgotten she'd set the work so it never got looked at. This was a very inauspicious start to a bad year. My final year at primary school, and that worst of exams, the Eleven Plus. Whoever came up with the idea of a general exam that could have just about anything in it, and could come at any time, must have disliked children with more hatred than I have for yoghurt. I got caught up in all of the hype and ended up so nervous about almost everything that the enjoyment of being a kid in the sixties was temporarily suspended. The memory of the holiday, the promise of another, and “The Flower of Gloster” on the television were pretty much the high points of an absolutely appalling time in my life. The start of secondary school (after the promised holiday) did little to improve things but, after some battling by my parents, I switched to another school which did, in the short term at least, improve the situation.

It was in my fourth year at secondary school that some money from the sale of a house in Greece that my grandparents had owned before World War 2 came through. Suddenly we could think of getting a bigger and better boat, and plans started in earnest to find one. The sale of Lady Jena raised about £200, which gave us just enough cash to consider a 26 foot Springer hull that would be delivered before Easter so that my dad (mostly) could fit it out with help from the rest of us. Early seventies delivery dates were more of a rough target than any form of binding contract, and it was on the day of the school fête in July that the hull finally did make its way to us. Even then (due to traffic) it was late. Nyzark though, had arrived, and we had about three weeks to get her ready for the holiday.

First obstacle was the secondhand Petter 22 hp twin cylinder diesel that we'd bought that was supposed to fit the mounts. Due to a mistake in the information sent, the thing wouldn't fit, unless you cut a hole in the bottom of the boat to allow the prop shaft to line up! We'd spent every penny we had, plus some, and, thankfully were able to return the motor but still had to get something that would fit, and time wasn't on our side. About the only thing with no waiting list was the Japanese Yanmar diesel. The urgency of getting one, plus the need to economise, even on the delivery cost, meant that we were of to Acton in my dad's old Vauxhall Cresta to have one of the things placed neatly in the boot. It all but bottomed out the back suspension, and with the nose of the car pointing skywards, we headed back to Kingston on Thames.



Full Steam Ahead.


Sorry that I don't have a photo for this post.   We were a bit too busy to take pictures.

This link will be interesting though.




 Even if Nyzark had been delivered on time it was going to be a tall order to get her ready for the holiday, but, armed with plenty of advice from Sam Springer himself, we felt (or at least Dad felt) up to the task.
On the day we went up to see the “factory” where the boats were made, we were greeted by Sam, who was a pleasant enough guy with what could be called a “rough and ready” manner to him. He showed us around the place, and we were able to see a hull under construction. I remember him saying that the boats were designed to be fitted out with standard 6 inch planed floorboards.
“You'll be wanting windows,” he said, picking up an aluminium frame complete with sliding panels. “We get asked for these ones a lot, and we've fitted tons of them. The're the sort they fit on fibreglass boats and stuff. They cost quite a packet though, but I'll tell you something,” he paused to get our attention. “They're no bleeding good at all. They leak and they're a bugger to fix if they break. What you want is these,” he added, having set the posh frame down and picked up something a lot more modest. “You can't go wrong with the old Crittall frames. They're as tough as anything and if you break one you can put any old glass in them. And of course they're a bleeding sight cheaper too.”
Having just done himself out of the extra profit, and advised me to take up welding as a career, we felt he was good enough to be trusted, and went ahead with the order on the day.
I remember the truck, and the weather, also, for some reason, being driven in it for the short run from the road down to the river. It was a blisteringly hot afternoon, and in the days of no air conditioning, the cab was like an oven. Nyzark had arrived though, and the timber had been ordered from Gridley Miskin's wood yard in Kingston-on-Thames. To cut the cost Dad had ordered slight seconds, these being planks that had the odd stain, split or warp, but which were mostly fine to use.
There was a minor issue of getting Nyzark from Turk's boathouse (where she'd been delivered) to Thames Ditton Marina, where we'd set off for our first canal holiday several years earlier. Dad's friend, George Hargreaves, from Kingston Power Station stepped into the breach, offering to tow us with his boat. George was an interesting character who, some years earlier, had been left a small steam launch called Churr in a will. He was up for a challenge, and surprisingly quickly got steam up on the paraffin powered boiler of the craft. Churr was then in her seventies, and painted white, with a small saloon cabin at the back, a centrally mounted steam boiler, brass funnel, and a beautiful compound steam engine sitting between it and the saloon. With a head of steam, George set the little motor running with its sewing machine like sound and, despite comments from some people that she would not be powerful enough, we were soon under way. Once Nyzark was safely tied at Thames Ditton, we returned on Churr to pick the car up from Turk's car park. This was where the little craft came into her own. She was almost as long as the springer hulled Nyzark, but a lot narrower, and with the steam engine wound up, she could move really quickly. George Hargreaves kept her in pristine condition, and had even had a few commissions for her to appear in films, but he'd always insist on being behind the wheel for those occasions. Knowing her to be his “Pride and joy.” I was more than surprised when he got up from his seat and said “You can steer her for a bit Mike” I remember the quiet efficiency with which she cut through the water with little wake, at speeds that seemed rather faster than the 7 knot limit (and may well have been) though with George controlling that side of things I won't ever know. George kept Churr until about 1980, when he'd found some problems with the hull, the remedy set to cost more money than he had. I'd often wondered what happened to her after that, but have since found that she is still very much alive and well, having undergone extensive restoration in the mid eighties. She is now a grand old lady of 115 years, and looks splendid.





Here is the Vauxhall Cresta that lugged the Yanmar home

This is the earlest photo I can find of the completed Nyzark
This is around the same time, with headlamp (which came from a scrapyard at Kidlington)
From left to right. Me, Granny, my brother John, and Mum.
Same year, on the return home at Caversham.
Left to right My brother, Granny, Auntie Olive, Mum, Me, and Uncle John.




Good To Go
 We knew the fitting out was going to have to be basic, and what was planned was to run two more or less continuous bunks down each side, partly on the advice of Sam himself, the one to starboard being shorter to accommodate the door and a rudimentary galley. The Yanmar diesel, being a general purpose boat engine, came complete with a 1 ½ gallon tank attached, ready for instant use. To save time Dad ran a pipe from the 20 gallon tank Springers had installed, to a tap that sat just over the filler of the Yanmar, so that we could keep the thing topped up (on the run if necessary).
At the time, the working arrangement at Kingston was ten days on and four off. This supposedly being in keeping with the union agreed rule that no worker should work more than six days in any week. The arrangement was imposed as something of a “stitch up” because Sunday is officially the first day of the week, which allowed working from Monday to Saturday of one week (six days) followed by Sunday to Wednesday of the next (four). If ever there was a case of not following the spirit of an agreement, that was it, and Dad was stuck with it. Worse than that, it was the beginning of a ten day stretch at work that Nyzark had arrived, so all spare time was used in the getting ready process. That she was fitted out in any way at all, however basic, was something of a miracle, and by the start of the school holiday she had the two linear bunks, a fitting into which some plywood could be dropped to make a transverse bunk for Mum and Dad, battens in place over the newly glazed windows and the all important connection of engine to prop shaft. Any electrics beyond the starter and charge circuit were to be arranged. Also there was a rudimentary deck across the top of the engine with open steps down to the cabin door. The rust scale on the cabin had been covered with a liberal dose of aluminium primer too.
We had been invited to a cousin's wedding on the first Saturday of Dad's next four day break, but work had to continue, a small window in time being taken for the do itself. The previous evening I had been busy painting the outside cabin with green gloss paint, eventually by the light of yellow sodium street lamps. The lighting made it impossible to see what I had and had not painted without resorting to prodding at the cabin side to see where I'd been. By the time I'd decided I'd finished, I was well covered in splodges of the paint, and had no knowledge of whether I had done a good job or not.
The following morning it was time to prepare for the wedding, and I, as a sullen teen flatly refused to dress up. “They can have me in a sweater and jeans and like it.” were the words I'd used. I must have got the point across because nobody actually challenged it. They insisted that I was as smart as possible and I was to clean my shoes as well as wear clean clothes. There came the problem. I only had one pair of relatively decent shoes, these being the ones I'd been wearing to school. They were also the ones that I'd come home from school in, and gone boat painting with. They were well decorated with drips of the lime green gloss that I'd been throwing everywhere the night before, and black boot polish wasn't going to cover them. I polished as much as I could, then got a magic marker and blacked the remaining spots of green, declaring myself ready to go.
When we did get to the wedding, Monica, my second (... or so) cousin's friends had all taken her instruction not to get dressed up like a dogs dinner, so my bit of teen rebellion went unnoticed amongst the denim jackets and sweaters present.
On the Sunday morning, we headed back to Thames Ditton to carry on with the fitting out. Surprisingly I found that I'd done a fair job of the cabin sides, with only a few bits of touching up before I painted the window frames with Royal Mail red paint (part of the same batch of leftover stock which included about half a gallon of green and the aluminium primer. Nyzark looked almost ready to go.



  Here is a very similar motor to the Yanmar that first powered Nyzark.




As time went by, the interior of Nyzark got a lot more homely.
This photo was taken the year the plywood panneling went in.



Springers were solid enough, if a bit rough and ready (like the man himself)
Note the Crittall windows and unground welding.

Ready or not, here we come! 

When the day came to go on holiday, the interior of the boat was just about habitable. We had electric light from two 48 watt lamps (which I'd wired with a drum of rather thick cable and a screwdriver that could have been used as a tyre lever for a lorry), a gas ring to cook on, curtains and a chemical toilet. Luxury it wasn't but it was time to holiday, and the Yanmar diesel was started. On tickover it sounded almost authentic and we moved slowly down the length of Thames Ditton Marina, turning left to go under the bridge and into the main river. Dad increased the throttle and the motor ceased to sound in the least bit authentic. Worse than that, the boat was hardly moving. Eventually, with the thing wound up to the point that it sounded like a large and very bad tempered lawnmower, we gave up the fight and returned to the shelter of the marina. After some discussion and consultation into the various data sheets it was decided that the prop that had been fitted (to replace the steeper pitch one that was originally installed for the slower revving Petter (the engine that wouldn't fit into the boat) was actually too shallow a pitch. In the absence of a suitable substitute, the original prop was put back on. Back out on the river, the instant Dad increased the throttle, the exhaust smoke came out pitch black, but at least we were moving. Trouble was we were also destroying the Yanmar, which was not up to the challenge of the steep pitch of the prop. Back to the marina and another prop was fitted. This coming with no other guarantee other than it was different and (due to it having sat at the back of the workshop for several years) available. Another run on the river revealed that this was actually a shallower pitch than the one that was thought to be correct. I remember commenting that if we went any slower we'd actually be going backwards. The comment wasn't too well received. With the day mostly used up (and someone commenting that we should have named the boat “Yo Yo” instead of “Nyzark”) we waited whilst several phone calls were made to E.P. Barrus, Yanmar U.K. and eventually the Japanese company to ascertain the exact pitch of the propeller that should be fitted. Finally we had an answer, but no chunk of bronze to attach to the end of the shaft. That came the next day, was fitted, and we set off. The decision seemed to be that whatever the new prop did as far as performance went, we'd cope with it and deal with any consequences at the other end of the holiday. To be truthful it wasn't a lot better than the first one we set off with. Nyzark was noisy, very very nosy, ungainly (due to lack of any form of ballast) and slow, extremely slow. But we were on holiday even if we did sound like a machine gun being transported by a rather bad tempered snail.
The following morning we woke up to what seemed like a slow drizzle. The weather was O.K. but the coolness of the shady mooring allowed our collective breath to condense on every surface inside the cabin, most of which was painted with aluminium primer. Over the years several attempts were made to alleviate the problem which only went away when Dad fully lined the cabin with plywood and tongue and grooved board. First attempt was polystyrene lining “paper” which, thanks to the advertising hype, was stuck up with a proprietary brand of wallpaper adhesive. The paper was very fragile, and eventually succumbed to the fact that the adhesive was designed for plaster walls, not steel. The man in the advert, who was pasted to a board by his overalls and then suspended from the bottom of a helicopter was either very brave, or completely stupid. Hopefully he was well insured. Next, someone said that a paint called Corkon would do the trick because, as everyone knows, cork is a good insulator. It was expensive stuff though, and was therefore spread sparingly, so, it didn't work!
During the day we had a downpour of rain which revealed that the Crittall windows also leaked. This we could do something about, and Dad set off into town to buy a couple of pounds of a putty that was suitable for metal frames. This was liberally pushed round the joint between frame and boat on the inside, and actually worked really well. With a reminder to dry the condensation as soon as we woke, we felt we'd conquered the worst shortcomings of the hastily prepared craft, and our holiday continued.




"Doing" the Avon ring.
Here we are on a later holiday by one of the beautiful lock cottages on the Stratford-on-Avon canal

 Left to right
Mum Granddad Nye (then in his early 90's) my brother John, Granny (on Mum's side) and a very sullen looking teenage me.


Edstone Aqueduct, scene of the famous non-suicide leap.

Things are getting better.... (sort of)



Given the time taken to create something habitable, and the unknown reliability of just about any part of the Nyzark, we decided to follow a tried and tested route along the Thames, Oxford and Grand Union Canals. Though noisy, and ungainly we were on the move, with Dad lifting the engine hatch every now and then to top the 1 gallon diesel tank on the Yanmar from the 20 gallon tank fitted by Sam Springer via a gate valve and associated pipework. It was during one of these routines that he decided that we should moor up, pretty much straight away on account of the fact that we were in the process of slowly sinking. Nothing too serious though, just that the weed hatch bolts had worked themselves loose and water was being thrown from the prop into the engine hold. Tightening them and pumping the bilge provided a temporary fix, allowing Dad and I to head into town when we reached our destination for the day to buy some shake proof washers, a flat rubber mat and a Stanley knife with which to seal the hatch in such a way that it would not vibrate free again. This was about the only issue we had with reliability for the whole of the holiday, as, with typical Japanese efficiency ( I won't say quiet efficiency here ) the Yanmar did the job asked of it, even if that job was rather beyond its capability. There were various other shortcomings that came to light though, not the least of which being that, once under-way there were very few places to sit apart from inside the cabin, which was O.K. if your idea of a quiet time was sharing a grain silo with a pneumatic road drill. The side decks were O.K. but they had a slight inward slope, which collected rainwater. That was easy enough to spot and avoid, but when my Granny was doing her morning ablutions, she would open a window and throw the water she'd washed with out into the river (or canal). This wasn't as eco-friendly as it should be but things, I guess, were a bit different then. Granny was quite short, and at over 80 years of age, would not have made the England team as a fast bowler, so most of the water ended up on the side deck, trickled back, and soaked into whoever's jeans that was sitting there, so I guess no lasting ecological damage was done.
Nyzark was definitely more at home on the canals than the Thames and although still far from quiet, the engine note was rather less abrasive. We never did sort the issue of ballast out, which seemed something that both Mum and Dad were staunchly opposed to, so the boat always sat too high in the water, and was prone to being blown about by even moderate winds. One incident I do remember was on a later holiday when, on my brother's suggestion, we “Did” the Avon ring. We were about to cross the Edstone aqueduct on a day that couldn't really be described as breezy, but there was sufficient air movement to highlight toe shortcomings of our 26 ft Springer. Unlike the far better known iron trough of Pontcysyllte which has the towpath suspended over it, Edstone does not. The trough is the width of the navigation channel and that's it. As we entered the trough, any way we had was immediately damped, and we were soon pinned to the side of the thing by the wind. The Yanmar hadn't got enough power to use brute force, so we eased back out of the aqueduct and tried taking it at what speed we could muster. The result was the same. Much discussion followed as to how to overcome the obstacle, and I eventually had the rather obvious idea of hopping onto the towpath to push the boat back into the channel. Having thought of it I acted on the plan and, much to my poor Granny's surprise, I jumped off the side deck and disappeared from view to her. It never occurred to me that she didn't know there was a towpath, because she hadn't seen it as it was built at the level of the bottom of the trough to save on having to extend the stone piers to water level. It basically looked, to Granny, like I had simply got bored and jumped off the boat and into the river valley tens of feet below and she was understandably concerned!



Here are Mum and Granny with the new Nyzark in the background.

The Summer of 1965 was the only other waterways holiday that Granny came with us on.
Here she is in the cockpit of the "River Rose" hired from TW Allen and sons.
Granny Mum and Auntie Winnie enjoy the spartan comfort of the early Nyzark cabin.
 Two photos of Granny and Mum chatting with the lock keeper of Stoke Lock on the river Wey in the early seventies.   Next to Granny on the balance beam is "Phoenix" a balsa model I'd made at the start of that summer.
And here she is again, looking somewhat bewildered at the helm of the very stationary Lady Jena.
Gladys Amelia Gout (prnounced Goo) A truly magnificent lady.
Granny.

Granny had lived with us ever since I was two years old, which was when Mum and Dad moved into Chantry Road. The house had been owned my my grandparents when they arrived via Malta from Greece at the start of World War two, but Granny was keen to sell it, so it made sense for Mum and Dad to keep the place in the family when the house on Maltby Road became too small for us. In the days before Nyzark she'd either stay with her sister and niece in Surbiton, or her son and daughter-in-law in Caversham for the duration of most of our family holidays. To be honest, I'm never quite sure which she preferred. Thetis (her niece) was happy to have her in the flat and enjoyed feeding her with as many of the recipes she had pencilled into a small notebook. I only later found that my “Auntie Thetis” actually disliked cooking and, in her later years, avoided it wherever possible. John and Olive had quite an active social life at the time, and Granny enjoyed being a part of that as much as John and Olive's friends loved her forthright way of speaking, which was always polite and tinged with the slight continental accent that she'd obtained by living most of her life in Greece. The holidays did, however, give her the chance to spin a yarn to the relatives, story telling being something she'd always enjoyed. Even now, snippets of those tales still rattle round my head, sometimes merging into something totally different. I'm sure the incident at Edstone Aqueduct was related many times over, though I don't remember her telling it. The time that the headlamp (the one from the breakers yard in Kidlington) went out in the middle of Shrewley Tunnel was, however, embellished to the level of high drama on the ocean. Basically the lamp was wired to a two pin plug, and the insulation on the headlamp (to remove the earth return on it) shorted out, which, with the plug being the way round it was, caused it to blow a fuse in the old Wylex distribution box in the engine compartment. That light, and all the others went out, and for about twenty seconds we were blind and invisible (if not inaudible). Several torches were lit to provide more light than the original headlamp, and we continued forward to the end of the tunnel where a piece of fusewire fixed everything.
Then there was the crash near Fenny Compton “tunnel” in the summer of 1973 not long before my 17th Birthday. It can't have been long after the marina opened at Fenny Compton, as I remember us stopping there for fuel, and also remember thinking that it wasn't there the year before. The tunnel is (as most people know) actually a cutting, having been opened out many years ago. It's still narrow and you have to pass boats carefully When out of the “tunnel, it's nice to enjoy the full width of the canal again, and the person piloting the 40 foot hired boat was doing just that. What do you do when the boat coming at you seems to be aiming at wherever you go to avoid it. Ultimately it will collide with you however good you are at steering (and Dad, being ex Royal Navy) was pretty good. Granny, who was ever watchful for my brother's and my welfare had long disliked me climbing onto the cabin roof to run the length of the boat when crewing, so I had eventually agreed to take the slower and considerably more awkward route via the side decks, holding the hand rails instead (and having to avoid the edges of the open windows and fender ropes. I'd seen what was gong to happen and set off in this manner. Having just let go of the deck rail to get the boathook to fend the other boat off, it hit us, knocking Nyzark sideways and putting a small dent in weld along the top of the port bow. Having let go of the deck rail, and had Nyzark knocked about two feet sideways, instead of a side deck, I was now (like a Roadrunner cartoon) standing on thin air. So I did the only decent thing and fell into the canal, drinking a fair bit of the water and deciding that I'd really rather have lived a bit longer and done a bit more before this untimely end. Thankfully, I'm still here. As I came up for the first time, I grabbed at anything I could, and that happened to be the bow of the boat that had just hit us. I made light of it, and stepped off onto the bank. At that point Mum suggested to Dad that we pause to pick up the crew, getting the reply that they can pick up their own *****ing crew. When she told him that it was me, the previously thin air turned rather thick with Dad's best naval expletives and a graphic (and biologically impossible) description of what he would do to the person steering the other boat if our paths crossed again. When I finally arrived in the cabin of the Nyzark, Granny greeted me with
“I know it's been raining, but your father isn't that wet.”
“Yes, but he didn't just fall in the canal did he.” I replied flatly.
Whether it was a pang of guilt (Had I simply run along the top of the cabin I'd have been there in time to push the other boat off with the pole.) or simple protectiveness, Granny went into overdrive on making sure I didn't catch pneumonia, insisting that I change all my clothes, (which I was in the process of doing) and that I should have some hot coffee with rum in it (which was quite pleasant). When I got the mug, it smelt pretty alcoholic, and tasted like very little water had been used in brewing it. I was instructed to rest, sleeping for about half an hour, then it seemed that I could pretty much have the rest of the day to myself, having been absolved of all boat related duties, so I spent the early evening walking along the towpath recording the top 40 on my radio-cassette recorder.
I'm not absolutely sure if the people did remember us, but when we did do the fuel stop at Fenny Compton, we walked past the hire boat that had hit us, and it was all locked up with all curtains drawn. It's tempting to think that the crew of the boat were all cowering in fear of my dad's wrath, but it's far more likely that they were enjoying lunch at a pub somewhere close by. As for me, bear them no malice, and never have done. They'd been put in charge of a 40 foot concrete ballasted all steel narrowboat with the simple instruction that it's pretty much like a car to drive. I expect they just couldn't get to the handbrake in time.



No need to explain this one.


 

 Here are a few photos from the year we "did" The Avon ring.







The Avon Ring


The last run I remember doing with the grossly underpowered Yanmar diesel was the “Avon Ring” which we attempted in the mid seventies. By that time my brother was at university and had already had a narrowboat holiday with some other students on a hired 56 foot boat where they had gone to Llangollen. Fired up with adventure it was John that suggested we do a round trip instead of going to the same old haunts every year. In principle the scheme was good, but for the fact that we didn't really have the time to do it. Dad worked at Kingston Power Station, and was usually allowed only two weeks annual leave together out of the total of either four or five (I forget which thought I think it may well have been only three. As we'd already managed to get third week the previous two years, mainly because the power station by then was generally mothballed in summer with maintenance easy to schedule to make it ready for the winter months, dad had the application turned down by the new management. With a bit of careful number work, Mum was able to slightly circumvent this by the placement of a couple of days leave which added to the 4 day weekend meant that we could get a head start which would get us to the “Wise Alderman” at Kidlington. Dad at the time was still on what was called “Staggered working” where he worked through for ten days and then got a break of 4. The longer break sounded good but wasn't (it being more than countered by the ten day week)and there was no extra pay for the arrangement. From Kidlington, Dad went back to work for three days and then returned by car, leaving it in the pub car park by arrangement with the landlord until we arrived back two weeks later when he would go back to work for a couple of days, returning by train for the run back down the river. Even with this, there wasn't much time available for the planned trip, which in the end turned out to be something of a route march. For the first time we had to get to a certain place by a certain time, and, with John's planning, we actually achieved it (albeit with rather frayed nerves). Probably the most frightening part was the short run on the Severn, which seemed massive compared to the narrow canals. The Yanmar was simply not up to the job of propelling the Nyzark and we knew it, though thankfully she wasn't as noisy as the previous year thanks to the purchase of a Mc Murdo rubber silencer which reduced the percussive machine gun exhaust noise massively. The motor itself still sounded like a bag of bolts in a washing machine though. We wouldn't normally have bought something like the Mc Murdo, but we had ventured to the Earls Court boat show and, with all the salesmen there it was hard for even Mum to avoid spending some money. Apart from the silencer, two more things that came out of it. The first of these was a catalytic heater that was supposedly safe in all conditions. The salesman was very polite and when asked to demonstrate the key feature which was that the thing could be doused with petrol and not catch fire, he duly threw a small cap full of methylated spirit at the catalyst, which caused no harm whatsoever. We bought the base model which was about the diameter of a medium sized frying pan, and which screwed directly onto a refillable Camping Gaz cylinder. It worked, but produced a lot of water vapour, and robbed the cabin of oxygen pretty quickly too. Also, due to its compact size, the edges of the thing got extremely hot. I found that out when I caught my hand on it. Some of my skin was left stuck there, and the rest blistered into something that I really should have gone to A&E to have sorted. It was (suffice to say) painful, and took until well past Christmas to heal adequately. Even now (well over 40 years later) if I am out walking on a cold day, a red mark appears on my hand showing an imprint of the edge of that heater. The other thing that came from the boat show was the seed of an idea that we could (a the right price) replace the motor in Nyzark with something more powerful should the funds be available. The Yanmar was still a saleable item, and the unit that caught our eye most was a 12 horsepower Sabb. It was sat there in a glass case ticking over almost silently and we were impressed. It was set up to look like it was actually running, with the exhaust neatly piped to an unknown destination. I do now wonder whether the thing was simply being turned over by a small and hidden electric motor despite what the sales staff claimed. As with all ideas, nothing happened on that until we did get another small windfall emanating from the final sale of one of the houses that my mum's side of the family had to vacate rather quickly due to the second world war. Stuart Turner at the time were offering a small diesel that was made in Spain. Mum wasn't keen but we investigated it anyway, to be told that the total cost by the time all work was done would be too great. Somehow they were then convinced that it was a good idea to buy a secondhand Sabb which was actually marginally less powerful than the Yanmar, and which did not have electric start or a generator. Of the three ideas, the Mc Murdo silencer was the most successful and it meant that we could have a holiday without ear damage.

The most interesting part of the journey was the relatively newly restored Avon with its secondhand Thames lock gates and steel shuttering lock chambers which, though Heath Robinson in appearance, seemed to work pretty well. There was still a lot that was makeshift, including the signage which was almost graffiti like in nature. A lot of the bridges had just one navigable arch, and there were a lot of markers for obstructions in the channel too. The river itself though was very picturesque, if a little fast flowing in places, and of all the waterways I think it came equal favourite to the Srtaford on Avon canal, which was also beautiful but in a more ordered way. Being the sullen teen that I now was, I spent quite a lot of my time sitting on the cabin front, scribbling various things onto scraps of paper. What I scribbled was lost a long time ago, and I have no real recollection of what it was. I know that at the time I felt that I was heading in the wrong direction, having moved from school to Kingston College of Further Education where I was studying for a City and Guilds in industrial electronics. I was pretty good at what I did and, despite my not really wanting the path that it offered, I completed the course, continuing work for the company that I'd done day release (in the final year) for another year. It was on the Avon that summer though that the seeds of an idea were sown. I wasn't going to stick in a test room with no natural daylight for the rest of my life. One of my workmates had gone there from school, and was 32! It seemed horrifically old to me, though now it seems really rather youthful! I worked slowly through what I could do, and when working, spent my spare time doodling, or making small models from the plentiful supply of tinned copper wire. On one really black day, one of the guys (I think it was Martin) spotted me and saw that I was pretty fed up.
“Why don't you do some evening classes,” he said, adding, “You can draw so why not try art.”
A swiftly booked day off took me back to my old school (who I felt still owed me something) to be largely dismissed by all but the headmaster who advised that I spoke to the careers officer who just happened to be there that day. The guy was pretty positive about things and understood that I wanted to broaden my horizons, suggested a couple of classes and arranged enrolment for me. That then set the course that took me to art school, and it wasn't long before I was visiting Kingston College of Further Education to tell them of my change in direction. Peter Hayes, who taught most of the final year, was about to go into class at the time, but dragged me in to introduce me to his new students.
“This is Mr. Nye,” he said. “He was a student here and left a year or so ago. We had a lot of arguments but he did well. Now he's decided to go off and do a degree in Fine Arts.”
I waited for condemnation of my choice but got none.
“It's a new adventure and I wish him all the best in it,” he paused for a moment. “Now,” he continued. “If any of you lot have ideas like that, please come and tell me, then I can kick your backsides for you,” another pause. “Mr Nye here can do that because he can. He isn't like any other student I've taught, so if he decided he can do something he'll damn well go and do it and do well too.”
He said a good deal more before I headed back home (it being Derby day, Epsom school of Art and Design was closed). It was sunny and I was strangely happy to have the blessing of someone that had been at times an adversary as much as he was an advocate. I realise now that, had my brother not have suggested the routemarch that was the Avon Ring, I may not have had the right situation to think things through. I did go on to complete a degree in Fine Art at Sunderland Polytechnic, which I got an upper second. After that I went back to electronics as there were no jobs and everyone has to eat. My horizons were broadened forever though.
 

Here are Mum and Dad, with Nyzark still in her original bright green with name painted by me

Below are views of the newly (1975) panelled cabin.
 

 



Elvis has left the building.

My memory of the 1977 summer holidays is that they were rather disjointed. My brother had decided that he wanted to either watch cricket on television or go to the Oval to watch. John always liked the sport and had played for a team called the Oxford Erratics. The team was comprised of players who enjoyed, but were not awfully good at cricket, and they presumably played matches against similar teams from other colleges or universities. His life at Oxford is somewhat shrouded in a mystery, partly of his own making, and also because we were not the closest of siblings. Whilst he had managed, by his own intelligence and sheer hard work, to get through the eleven plus, and all other things in between with flying colours, my path through education was more than a little odd. I had completed my City and Guilds in electronics, then worked for a year whilst going to evening class and gained a further two O levels after which I was now set to start on a foundation course in art at Epsom school of art and design.

A holiday we were having though, so it was Mum, Dad, Granny and me that set off for a trip covering the River Wey, the Thames to Lechlade, and the Oxford Canal to Napton and back. There wasn't anything too strange about the holiday in terms of adventure, it all being ground that we'd covered several times before, but one day sticks out as being one of the strangest I can remember. As I remember we were tied up near Send on the river Wey, and I had idly turned my radio on whilst thinking of what to do. There wasn't any music, but a continuing commentary on how people were gathering around the gates. Many were distressed, and most were pretty incoherent in anything they said. We had absolutely no idea what was going on, but needed some groceries from the village. Someone from another boat also needed to go to the shops and, I'm not sure quite how it happened, but I think he suggested that I borrow his bicycle and do the shopping for both. He seemed an amiable enough guy, and was about as careworn as his bicycle which had a rather large lump on one tyre that caught the brakes with each revolution. Thump, thump, thump. I kept looking down to see the thing was still intact, and bought a newspaper when at the shop to see if I could throw any light on what had happened. I didn't want to make myself sound ignorant by asking but the rest of my family plus the old guy with the bike were depending on me finding out. Thankfully I was able to do just that. The news broadcasts that had been continually telling what was happening were now simply assuming that everyone knew the basic story and reporting on events as they unfolded. The newspaper rack was rather different, each paper carrying a variant of a very similar sentence. The date was August 17th and the weather was forecast to be warm with thundery showers. Elvis is Dead, or King Elvis is Dead, or even Elvis Presley dies at age 42, were the headlines. I bought the groceries, bought the paper, and rode back with the associated thumping from the tyre and passed the knowledge on.
By the Summer of 1977, Nyzark was just about as well fitted as we could make her on a low budget. The cabin was lined with plywood (finally getting rid of the condensation issue), we had a proper, though small, galley with a Calor gas cooker that had two burners and an oven (though Mum refused to pay the extra few pounds for one with a proper “Regulo” thermostat) and we even had a new engine. We'd taken the Yanmar out, and had a Sabb fitted (as mentioned earlier). As standard the second hand motor had no electric start, no generator, and was, as mentioned earlier, less powerful than the Yanmar. Sabb diesels, we were told, were reliable, easy to start, smooth running, and a whole host of other things that may well have been true about every other machine they built but not the one we got. Starting by hand, we were told, was simple. Just lift the decompression lever, swing the starting handle round a couple of times to get the motor moving, drop the lever and... Well, actually and nothing. The thing stopped dead, Dad's hand slipped off the starting handle and he skinned his knuckles on an unidentified protuberance in the engine compartment. Various profane words and an Elastoplast later, he had another go. Still nothing. We both tried and got nowhere, phoned the company we bought the thing off and told them of our problem.
“No problem, it's just a knack,” we were told. “I'll come down on Saturday and show you how to start it.”
Dad was at work that weekend so I agreed to meet the guy and be shown the special knack. Though not as hot as 1976, the summer of 77 had its moments and that Saturday was one of them, sunny, hot, a little humid but all in all a beautiful day. I cycled to Thames Ditton and met the guy that would start the motor and show me how.
“Simple,” he smiled. “Drop this lever, then one, two, three.”
When it hit compression it stopped dead and he caught his knuckles very likely on the same protuberance. No profane language, no Elastoplast. Just a smile.
“Must be a bit cold. I'll give her a few more swings,” he said.
By the time he was doing one last effort, about 45 minutes later, he was swinging the handle round so fast that, had I put the thing in gear the boat would have gone faster than it ever did when powered by the thing. It still refused to start.
“May be a little bit of dirt in the filter,” he smiled, red faced and perspiring. “We'll have it right.”
I still wonder why Sabb actually bothered to fit a starting handle and its associated mountings to the motor because it was basically impossible to start by hand. The marina eventually gave up and fitted the Sabb approved Dynostarter which looked like an over sized car dynamo and either drove or took its drive by two parallel belts around the flywheel. Even with this fitted, the process of starting was not easy. The motor would not start without a shot of motor oil down a little copped tube, it needed to be run on the dynostarter for several seconds before the decompression lever was dropped and the thing burst more into a zombie like existence than actual life. Once the black smoke from the motor oil subsided, it ticked over smoothly, but had absolutely no power whatsoever when it came to moving Nyzark. At least we'd be able to charge the battery again.
The thing was fitted, and we were going on holiday, albeit slowly. The Sabb was a bit quieter then the Yanmar but it wasn't by much. It had a habit now and again of deciding it wasn't going to start, usually at the most embarrassing times, and then occasionally would stop for no reason. Another little kink it had was that every now and then, and again for no apparent reason, the water pump, a complicated thing with nylon valves, would stop pumping water, causing the motor to overheat. Dad, with a little help from me, dismantled the thing several times over the holiday, and finding nothing wrong, reassembled it to find it worked again. Well it worked until the next time it stopped.
That winter, several letters were sent to the marina, and also to Sabb themselves to inform them of our displeasure at the thing in out engine compartment.
Sabb themselves said that the model we had was known to them as not being a good starter, but given that it was second hand, were not willing to do anything to remedy the problem. The vendor um'd and ahh'd, made sympathetic noises, but did nothing. We were stuck with the thing.
The word Sabb, we were told meant either “dependable or reliable” in Norwegian. Having checked, it apparently means nothing whatsoever in the language. Sabb have a good reputation for building good engines. This story is about one Sabb diesel that may have been the only bad one they made. It sure was a shocker though.

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