Dear Boater
Our
sightings suggest your boat has been moored in the same locality for
more than 14 days. If you have not already moved, please continue your
journey, or call Customer Services
on 03030 404040 to discuss, remembering to quote your boat index number
and that you are currently moored in the South East waterway area.
Regards
Trish Fox
Boating Co-ordinator South East
Canal & River Trust
I spent an hour the next morning, going back through my daily diary which I've kept since moving aboard NB Valerie. Besides the events of each day--when we got up, the weather for the day, what we did (washed two loads of laundry, emptied the loo, and made bread, while Les worked on the new wood box...), I also keep track of all maintenance to the boat, hours on the engine, all repairs (date, repair, cost), all changes, and how much and when we spend money for diesel, Calor gas, and coal. Finally, I also track our cruising, noting where we are each day, when we arrived, and when we cruise somewhere else. Every January when I buy a new diary, I write where we were each day the previous year, at the bottom of that day's entry on the new diary pages so I know where we were a year ago.
I drafted an email to Ms. Fox, as seen below:
From: Jaqueline Biggs [mailto:biggsbiglove@hushmail.com]
Sent: 15 April 2015 10:54
To: Patricia Fox
Cc: Richard Parry
Subject:
Ms. Fox,
I am Leslie Biggs' wife, Jaqueline. We live aboard NB Valerie (513386). I am answering your email of yesterday for two reasons:
1. I am the keeper of a detailed log book of all of our
travels--when we moor up and where, how long we stay, etc. etc. going
back to 2011 when we married and I moved aboard our boat.
2. My husband was diagnosed with colorectal cancer in August of
2013. We have endured no less than three surgeries to date, with
cancellations of all of them by the NHS and during all this time we have
abided by the conditions of our license or contacted
the local CRT representative to inform them of our need to overstay in
an area due to serious health issues.
We worked with Phil Brogan when we had need to moor longer than 14 days
in October-December 2013 at Cow Roast and CRT graciously allowed us to
overstay while Les went into hospital, came home to the boat and had
visiting nurses in every day, fell ill with
Sepsis and nearly died, and eventually recovered enough for us to
cruise as we are used to doing and prefer to do. We set off January
14th, 2014 northward and visited the Aylesbury Arm and cruised all the
way To Welford on the Leicester Arm.
My husband was informed in August of 2014 that cancer had traveled to
his liver. We were up on the Leicester Arm at the time and turned around
to return to Cow Roast as we could access buses and trains down to
London from there without taking the boat to London
and becoming mired in the morass of continuous moorers living there. We
opted to go into Cow Roast Marina as another three month recovery was
required for a far more serious operation than the first one. We Left
Cow Roast marina the end of January 2015 with
the plan to cruise northward, but cancer has other plans for us.
Les was scheduled to undergo a procedure for possible metastasized cancer to his
left lung, yesterday at the Royal Free Hospital in Hampstead Heath,
London. We need to be close to a good bus/rail line to travel to London.
We didn't want to return to Cow Roast so we
decided Fenny Stratford/Milton Keynes was a good place to meet our
needs. We waited three and half weeks before hearing anything. We
received a call on April 8th to say Les' surgery was scheduled to April
14th. So we came back to Fenny Stratford and prepared
to go down to London. We were told this procedure (Radio Frequency
Ablation) would require 1 nights stay in hsopital and then Les could
come home. We planned to head North then...but his surgery was canceled
again. The inefficiency of the NHS is sending us
'round in circles as we wait to hear, get a set appointment, and then
have it canceled. This has happened to us three times now, and all three
times we've sought to find ways to meet the conditions of our CC'rs
license.
From our log book, here are our exact days and movements for the past two months:
March 2105, NB Valerie, 513386
March 1st: moored up below Slapton Lock. Stayed there through Wednesday, March 4th.
March 5th: cruised to Leighton Buzzard so Les could catch train
to RFH, London for a scan. Stayed through Saturday, March 8th, filled
with H2O and dumped rubbish.
March 9th: Cruised to Soulbury Three locks and moored up at the top on 14 day moorings. Stayed here through March 14th.
March 15th: Cruised to Fenny Stratford and moored up past the
stop lock and swing bridge and stayed until Thursday March 19th. Filled
with H2O and dumped rubbish.
March 20th: Cruised to Old Linslade Manor Park and moored up for
48 hours. Notified by the RFH that Les needed to come in for a
consultation on the 24th.
Monday, March 23rd: Winded and cruised back to Fenny Stratford
and moored up before the stop lock on 14 day moorings where we stayed
until March 28th. We took the train to London the next day and were
informed of the new lesions on Les' lungs. We were
given options and Les chose Radio Frequency Ablation (RFA) as the least
detrimental and most likely successful option. We were told he would be
scheduled for surgery--and the procedure would take place--within 4
weeks.
March 29th: Winded the boat, filled with H2O and dumped rubbish. Cruised to Stantonbury and moored up on 14 day moorings.
Stayed moored up through Friday April 10th.
April 2015:
April 1st-10th: Stantonbury 14 day moorings.
Wednesday April 8th the RFH called to say Les' appointment for RFA was
scheduled. He needed to arrive in London at the RFH on Monday , April
13thfor pre-op and check in and stay overnight. the surgery would be
done the next morning on Tuesday, April 14th and
Les would stay overnight in hospital. Barring any complications Les
could come home on Wednesday April 15th and we planned to wind the boat,
fill with H2O and cruise north again--and keep going. He planned to
catch the train back down to London in about 6
weeks time at Rugby, for the follow up appt. with the surgeon. Instead
Les' surgery was canceled for lack of beds and we are forced to wait for
a re-schedule while trying to figure out how to keep moving and meet
the condition of our license while staying
near to someplace we can easily access trains to London.
April 11th: We cruised to Cosgrove, filled up with H20, dumped
our rubbish and winded, cruising back to Fenny Stratford, where we
moored up at our current location.
It is not our intent to continuously cruise the same section of
canal--we hate it but are forced to do it presently due to my husband's
health and the complete inefficiency of the bloody NHS. We will never
overstay in one place but we may have to keep turning
and going back and forth between Fenny Stratford and Stanton Low,
mooring in places along the way where we can get a Tesco delivery, and
access bus and rail service until the NHS gets Les' RFA procedure
scheduled, gets him in, does the job and releases him
home. Once that occurs we will be on our way Northward to cruise
continuously as is our joy, delight, aim, and desire.
If you have any questions or concerns about our further movements or you
require medical proof of Les' health issues please contact me and I
will walk into town and get copies of his paperwork printed and mail
them to you. CRT personnel may also read our blog
http://boatlife.blogspot.co.uk.
I will follow up this email with a phone call to the number you
included in your original notice to my husband's email address but I
wanted to be sure CRT representatives have
a written copy of this information as well. If you review the sighting
records for NB Valerie since my husband had her put into the water in
2006 you will see that we have always met the conditions of our license
and cruised continuously until ill health has
forced our hand and required us to stay for longer than we have ever
wanted, in areas where we could access services, grocery deliveries,
visiting nurses could easily find us, and we could easily catch buses
and trains to London for medical appointments and
surgeries.
We would like a list of CRT sightings of our boat please for the
past two months, as it appears they do not match our daily log book.
Respectfully,
Jaqueline and Les Biggs,
NB Valerie
513386
I also followed up my email within minutes, phoning the CRT customer service number. Ms. Fox was on another line. She returned my call ten minutes later, we went over my email, and she apologized for troubling us, saying that when a boat is recorded by Enforcement Officers (EO's) in the same place over a period beyond 14 days, it is included in a mass email notice which is sent out to boaters.
Trish said she would let the EO, Glynn Bumford, know about our circumstances and CRT would open a file on us, explaining our circumstances and our need for limited cruising. She asked only that we keep CRT informed of our circumstances. Our phone conversation was lovely--cordial, respecftul, helpful. She also followed up right away with this email reply:
Hello,
Further to our telephone conversation a short while ago, here are the boat sightings you requested.
|
Index
|
Name
|
Location
|
|
|
|
|
24/03/2015
|
513386
|
VALERIE
|
Fenny Stratford 14 day S1 Mooring
|
10/03/2015
|
513386
|
VALERIE
|
Grand Union km 139
|
19/02/2015
|
513386
|
VALERIE
|
Grand Union km 158
|
17/02/2015
|
513386
|
VALERIE
|
Grand Union km 158
|
13/02/2015
|
513386
|
VALERIE
|
Grand Union km 160
|
06/02/2015
|
513386
|
VALERIE
|
Cowroast 14 day Visitor S1 Mooring
|
30/01/2015
|
513386
|
VALERIE
|
Grand Union km 164
|
As I
suggested during our conversation, I have sent an e-mail to the two EOs
who cover the area you are in and around at the moment and have asked
them to consider
a restricted movement pattern in order to facilitate catching trains
for your husband’s appointments. I will contact you again once I hear
back from them, or they may contact you directly themselves.
I hope everything goes well and please do not hesitate to contact me if you need any assistance.
Regards, Trish
Trish Fox
Boating Co-ordinator South East
Canal & River Trust
Tel: 01908 681277
An hour later as I was finishing up breakfast out on the bow, Glynn Bumford himself came calling. He was actually out on the towpath working, and he was there to place a patrol notice on a plastic cruiser moored in front of us that already had two patrol notices on it.
Glynn introduced himself, we shook hands and he said Trish had called him to explain our situation and asked him to stop in and say hi to us. We had a ten minute conversation, Les showed Glynn his Stoma and his scars, Glynn asked if I would please email him a copy of the letter from the RFH so he could open the file for us in the CRT system, and we all parted cordially. (NHS letters from the RFH with updates have been emailed and are on file).
About two hours later another CRT employee strode up the towpath towards us. Les and I were outside working on the wood box. This fellow--with a large sheaf of legal looking papers in his hand--stopped to say hello. He introduced himself as Peter Palmer--Glynn's supervisor.
Peter was out in the area to handle an issue which had escalated, requiring someone with more power than an EO to address. He had spoken with Trish in the office and she said he would likely pass by NB Valerie and would he please introduce himself to the nice folks on board. We had a lovely brief chat with Mr. Palmer who said a check of CRT records did indeed underscore that we are bonafide Continuous Cruisers and he apologized as well for the mass email. We parted with smiles and off he went to see a man about a boat, as they say.
Now quite obviously the boat reporting system currently in use by CRT is far from perfect. Despite our movements and the fact our bow was pointed in the opposite direction when first spotted, from their recording records it appeared we had not moved. Never mind...Les and I have seen positive changes all across the canal system since CRT took over from the U.K. government department of British Waterways (BW). Canals are being dredged, old, broken gates are repaired, overgrowth is being trimmed back, towpaths have been improved, and Continuous Moorers are finally being dealt with legally, instead of ignored as they were in the days of BW.
Our interactions with CRT have always been pleasant, informative, and supportive. But then, as our records indicate, we are bonafide Continuous Cruisers. It isn't rocket science; it's not brain surgery; it's quite simple: abide by the requirements of your boat's license as set forth by CRT at the time of licensing. Any time you cannot abide by those regulations, contact CRT and let them know. Explain why and be willing to provide proof. Be polite and respectful. It also never hurts to offer a cuppa and a slice of cake either!
On a final note, we met a young man and his father at the Fenny stop lock when we winded (turned the boat around) and stopped for water. They had gone through the lock before us, leaving the footbridge opened, and a gate opened with a paddle up as well. They stopped at the canalside pub for a brew. They had just bought the boat and Dad was helping his son cruise down to London where the young man will live on it. He cannot afford housing in London and was chuffed to bits to be the owner of a new floating home. He will join the masses already floating side by side in the City, adding to the congestion and issues rampant on the canals in the south. He is the fourth boater we've met this year who bought a boat as an answer to lack of affordable housing in London. From our conversations with each of these young men, not a single one of them had a clue about the rules and regulations regarding their licenses, how to operate locks or paddles, or indeed how to care for their boats.
We wish CRT luck with this thorny issue and thank Trish, Glynn, and Peter for their kind and friendly care of us during this stressful time. We hope to wave goodbye to this section of the G.U. soon, and with NB Valerie's bow pointed north, we plan to keep going.