What the Papers Say



Hertfordshire Lifestyle

Canal Public Relations Specialist Lindy Foster Weinreb provides us with a Christmas Quiz, as she strolls the newly renovated towpath
with the award-winning educational plinths she inspired,
when serving Berkhamsted as councillor and mayor.
Courtesy of The Gazette, Berkhamsted, Tring and Hemel Hempstead.
 

Drifters
PO Box 232, Worcester WR1 2SD
Tel: 08457 626252
www.drifters.co.uk.

Operators of hire and hotel boats with more than 300 boats from
20 bases nationwide, all of which are tourist board approved.

Prices for short breaks range from £70 per person
 


Find great ideas for enjoying the waterways on www.waterscape.com 
 
Visit the waterways museums on
www.thewaterwaystrust.org.uk

http://www.castlewharf.com/waterways/canalquiz.htm
 

FED up of Christmas TV and leftovers? Feel as stuffed as the turkey you had the day before? Kids driving you crazy after growing tired of the new games console you bought them?
     Take a stroll canal-side in Berkhamsted and you might just rediscover your zest for the seasonal festivities.
    A crisp, bright December afternoon is all you need to entice you out of the armchair and onto the towpath of this historic Hertfordshire spot.
    Opened in 1798, the stretch of the Grand Union Canal through Berkhamsted put the town on the map and made it part of the national transport network helping to bring about the Industrial Revolution in Britain.
    It was, and still is, a gateway to 2,000 miles of waterways stretching across the country from London, through the Midlands and beyond.
    More than two centuries of history have seen the area between Ravens Lane and Castle Street—known as Castle Wharf—change, but the area has retained its magic.
    It once provided the basis for the town's business wealth, allowing the expansion of industries concentrating on coal, grain, timber and chemical handling.
    Bizarrely a small factory in 1852 set up by William Cooper of Shropshire gave the bustling port area the dubious honour of being dubbed the birth place of sheep dip—with the sulphur and arsenic mix fast becoming the region's most famous export.
    Sadly narrow boat trade as it was intended ceased along this historic stretch of water in the 1970s, but thanks largely to the efforts of Lindy Foster-Weinreb and the Canal and Riverside Partnership, it is enjoying a renaissance after a regeneration project revitalised the area as a leisure spot.
  With information plaques and colourful, traditionally hand- painted signs it is a tribu te to the glory days of Britain's industrial heyday.
   It is a beautiful place to introduce the family to the region's past and to get a feel for what the town was like when it was the transport hub of Hertfordshire.

Liquid
Refreshment

Take a stroll along the Grand Union Canal this Christmas and you could win a short break on a Drifters canal boat. Stuart Amos looks at the waterway's history (and finds the best places for a pint after all that walking).

After taking your Christmas Stroll along the canal in Berkhamsted, we are giving you the chance to win a fantastic canal boat holiday for you and your family.

Simply print out and complete a question competition sheet available at www.castlewharf.com to find out how to enter. You will need to answer a quiz about the canal and include a photograph, drawing, or poetry about your Christmas canal walk by you or a member of your family.. Be sure to clearly mark your entries with your contact details and age group as instructed on the castlewharf.com web site.

Send your entry, along with your name, address and telephone number to Berkhamsted Canal Competition, Hertfordshire Lifestyle Magazine, 39 Marlowes, Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire HP1 1LH. Every entry will receive either a £250 voucher towards a two-week boating holiday, £150 towards a one-week canal cruise, or £50 towards a short break.

Closing date: Friday January 14, 2005. Usual CNN rules apply.
 

  A reminder of that legacy are the three watering holes which once quenched the  thirst of workmen who used the waterway on which they have stood for more than 100 years.
   Each has its own character and place in the canal's history, but all have one thing in common—they're open for business over Christmas to provide some respite from cooking and Only Fools and Horses repeats.

    The Rising Sun, a Victorian canal-side pub built in the 1880s,  is largely unspoilt in its original charming setting and the only one left of its type in the area.
  The Riser, as locals affectionately know it, used to be a horse stables and housed the local George Street smithy.
    Described by the bar manager as a 'chimney pot' for local drinkers it is a rustic pub popular with regular clientele,  A friendly welcome is assured but punters should beware it is usually packed over the Christmas period. It is open from noon to 2pm on December 25 and noon to 4pm on Boxing Day.
  
A short walk away is the new Boat pub b y Berkhamsted Lock, which replaced a building popular with boaters and their horses. Now marketed with a gastro-pub menu it generally attracts a younger crowd than its close neighbours and again is sure to be a favourite. Families are catered for at the pub and with an extensive choice of main courses on Boxing Day (noon–10.30pm), it could be an ideal way to get away from the kitchen sink over the holiday.
   Soak up the tranquil scenery as you stretch your legs for the short walk to the Crystal Palace, which was designed by Sir Joseph Paxton, who also designed the ill-fated Crystal Palace Great Exhibition building in London.
  In the '70s it was owned by 'Charlie and Madge' and it still boasted sawdust-covered floors, regular clog dancing and an accordion player and catered to the industrial narrow boat trade at that time.
   The new management has retained much of its charm andmusical tradition putting on regular live bands, but have also added facilities such as dis-abled access, a pool table and juke box.
  Christmas (noon–2pm) and Boxing Day (noon-Hpm) trade should be brisk thanks to a warm welcome from landlady Cheryl Killingsback, so get in early if you want a seat at the bar.
   Fresh-air, excercise and history, and after the festive blowout everythingyou need for a very merry canal-side Christmas.

  
           

 The
 Waterways
 Trust

Drifters

For the very best 'award winning' canal holidays.

waterscape.com
Find great ideas for enjoying Britain’s waterways.


  

         Lindy Foster Weinreb 
      Public Relations Consultant
       Castle Wharf Promotions

    

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