Vlog 210: Lockdown
This is a day in the life of a narrowboater who’s self isolating having come back from overseas. There’s not a lot to do so it mostly involves eating, drinking tea and watching the telly.
Watch Gone with the Wynns at www.youtube.com/GoneWithTheWynns
Music used:
Breakfast sequence: Tupelo Train by Chris Haugen
Lunch sequence: Cancun by Topher Mohr and Alex Alena
Both from the YouTube music library.
Hi David, i have been watching your vlogs for around a year now, they are very addictive, i realise that your background is as a tv reporter, luved the april 1 , haha just came accross it yesterday, you looked pretty smart in that suit haha, i live in Australia, but was born in Hull ,came over here when 15 yrs old, mever seen those canals before till recently, when this covid crap is over iam gonna try and get over there and give you a wave when i buy myself a narrowboat, im 67 yrs but watch out cos im coming over when possible,wil give you a big wave, keep up the god work, yes i know your taking a break lol, cheers Tony K
Hello Tony. Ah, when will we all be able to travel again, eh? I hope you get your chance to come over and get a boat. Cheers
My wife and I are enjoying season four of Cruising the Cut. We especially enjoyed the episode about the Crick Boat Show where the focus was more on boats rather than the canals.
Since we spent 12 years cruising the Intracoastal Waterway and the rivers in the US and Canada aboard our Present 42 Trawler, Mañana, our interest in cruising, the cruising culture, and the boats runs deep. In the mid 1990s we chartered a narrow boat for two weeks in the UK and traveled from Llangollan to Chester and back, a great adventure that is brought to the forefront of our minds with each episode of Cruising the Cut.
Thank you for producing such an interesting and entertaining video series.
Thank you! I’m very glad you enjoy it and appreciate the message. Regards, David
We love watching your series. We are from Oceanside California just north of San Diego . I have surfed for over 40 years so I love the water. Your show is awesome . We hope to get there to rent a boat soon. Hoping to see new Episode’s soon. Take care as we continue to watch you over and over again.
Thank you. I hope you get the chance to have your trip over here. Unlikely to be soon, alas, I suspect though.
Hey David,
My husband has just found your series and as it’s lockdow we are completely addicted, to be fair it’s not the life for me but it has been a pleasant and interesting program
I’m sure he would love to do it if he could!
That is lovely to hear, glad you are enjoying the films :-)
David . . . have you ever tried Paris tea? I buy it on Amazon and it is amazing with a little honey added in.
I confess I’ve never heard of it!
David, here is a link on Amazon. I think you would really enjoy this tea. It is loose, however, so you would need one of those spring loaded tea balls. Add in a little honey, and it is oh so soothing. https://www.amazon.com/Harney-Sons-Flavored-Black-Paris/dp/B000WJNX3A/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=Harney+%26+Sons+Flavored+Black+Tea%2C+Paris%2C+4+Ounce&qid=1602733341&sr=8-1
Thanks Michael. I’ll see if I can find it over here. I think I’m going to stop buying teabags as it happens, as I recently discovered they’re made with plastic which is of course dreadful for the environment. Loose leaf tea henceforth!
Awesome David. Harney & Sons makes some quality tea. I know they offer several flavors including Earl Grey and Victorian London Fog, but I am particularly fond of the Paris Tea. Enjoy !
Hi David, loved this vlog. I especially like this one because I would love to live on a narrow boat and would if not for my geological location, ( Omaha Nebraska ) money and my age. ( 72 )
If I were a rich man I would sell everything move to jolly old England buy a narrow boat and live out my days.
Thanks for all the vlogs you create, very interesting…!
Thanks Jim, I’m glad you enjoy them. That would be quite a move for you! Cheers
Jim, I share in your enthusiasm and dream. Living like a lizard in the Phoenix, Arizona heat, I long for the charm of living full time on a canal in England. Would love to sell up and move onto a 60 foot boat, with room enough in the Saloon for a Digital Piano to practice on. I could also do my Ham Radio hobby to round out my days. If only England would allow retirees to live year round . . .
Hubby and I have been binge watching your canal boat series here in TN while on lockdown. We’ve rented a narrow boat 3 times and have learned a lot of tips from your series. If we ever get to travel to the UK again, we’ll definitely rent a boat again.
Thanks for tuning in!
I love your vlogs and glad you got back safely. This is a bit contraversial but if you put the milk in your tea before the water you won’t get those indelible tea stains…
Haha ooh no, can’t put milk in first then the water goes off boiling point and that’s crucial to a nice cup of tea!
If ever I were to visit you on your boat, would you be able to make me a cup of coffee? Tea makes me jittery.
I’ve followed your vlog for a while, really enjoying it. First time I’ve commented. I have to say that , as a trained soprano myself, you have a pleasant baritone voice- don’t be too hard on your singing – with a very decent vibrato!
Keep vlogging and stay safe!
Haha thank you so much!
Hi David:
We enjoy your VLOGS, having originally found you on your Netflix series. I’m probably posting this in the wrong place but expect you can sort it out.
We are in the US Washington state on the Columbia river and have a 33′ powerboat. I noticed that a lot of the narrowboats sit lower aft than forward so I’m wondering if you walk ‘uphill’ going forward or that is taken into account when the boats are fitted out? Our boat sits much lower aft as well but is designed so the interior floor is basically level with the water. Any thoughts on this?
There is a very slight tilt to the boat (and it does also depend hugely on how full the water tank is as these tend to be placed in the well deck, so the boat is more level when full). Also, most of the boats do also have a design style that suggests the boat rises more than it actually does; the baseplate and thus the interior floor will in all likelihood be virtually flat even when the lines of the steel suggest otherwise. Cheers!
Thanks, David, for continuing to post your vlogs during this time. It is a pleasant relief from the isolation my wife and I are experiencing in rural North Carolina. Thank goodness we are retired and we used to being homebodies.
Looking forward to your next vlog, regardless of the topic or content, it will be welcome.
Here’s to your health, and prayers for your PM. May he make a full recovery very soon.
Glad you enjoy them, cheers
I’m having narrowboat withdrawal symptoms just now,
My marina is closed, & I’m stuck at home…
So enjoying some canal therapy with your vlogs.
Doing exactly what you’re doing, only in a house.
Keep them coming David!
Cheers!
This was great! I don’t feel so alone in the incessant ennui of the dog days of virus.
You’re not alone! Cheers
I am surprised at your toast technique. My New Zealand experience (I assume they learned from GB) with breakfast toast has the toast cut into points, then put into a metal rack and left out until cold and hard. Then served.
BTW, I really enjoy your blog. Your day is not too different from mine in Virginia.
Cold toast?! Yuck hahaha
I am with you. If my toast does not set off the smoke detector I am not happy!
David, a delightful vlog per usual with one exception: no ice in your G&T. Dear me, my American roots must be showing…
I had to take the ice cubes out of the freezer to make space for food
Thank you for crediting the background music. I’m adding those to my listening list. You made your daily routine enjoyable to follow. I’m having some difficulty developing a daily rhythum since until the lockdown my days were filled with volunteering at social service organizations of which I am not considered an essential worker. Plus being in the late 70s I am advised that I am part of a high risk group and should avoid contact with anyone other than my wife. Glad you are healthy and able to provide me with a distraction. I’m looking back at older vlogs and reliving past cruises.
Yes, do take care!
Loved the video!
:-)
Thanks for your vlogs, from the USA. Like you, I’m solo and isolated; unlike you, I live on a 110 acre farm in ‘nowhere’ Iowa. My closest neighbor is about 1 mile away. There are only about 7500 people living in my entire county. So, my point is we’re living the same, but different, lives. I do enjoy ‘traveling’ with you in the evenings. You’re doing a great job presenting something to me that I didn’t even know existed – the UK canal system. Absolutely beautiful and the history is fascinating. Thanks.
FYI, and I’m not trying to push, but after my wife passed on I began writing a blog that I call ‘The Farm Report’ in an effort to let my kids and others know I’m OK, and to share what I’m doing with them. You might take a look and ‘farm’ along with me if you’d like. Here’s a link to it: https://oakdalefarm.blogspot.com/ Be safe.
Glad you like the videos, cheers
I love your vlogs, keeps in touch with the gentle life in England as i’m busy working in the biggest city in the Southern hemisphere! Maybe narrow boating will be my retirement plan.
Thanks Alison
Hi David, I am spending the morning binge-watching your show, Cruising the Cut, and I’ve never felt so “not guilty” for watching hours of Amazon prime!
My dad was from Dudley, near Wolverhampton, in the West Midlands. On one of my first trips to England, he explained the canal system, and we watched many Narrowboats cruising peacefully and also maneuvering the locks. I thought it was the coolest thing, qnd promised myself I’d do it one day. Well, here I am, after countless trips to England, and I have never been able to convince anyone to do it with me. Most people want 5 star hotels and room service, not what I call “Camping on Water”. Thank you for sharing your adventures and giving me a chance to see it semi – firsthand! I still intend to do it, but now I know I better get to the gym if I have to do it alone!
Hahaha hello and what a lovely message. I’m so glad you’re enjoying the videos. I hope you manage to find some boat-friendly friends to go with you one day :-) Cheers, David