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    Lyme View Marina

    3.5 (2 reviews)
    Closed 9:00 am - 5:00 pm

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    10 years ago

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    14 years ago

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    Dove Stone Reservoir

    Dove Stone Reservoir

    4.9(12 reviews)
    14.7 mi

    Just 20 minutes by train from Manchester and around 30 minutes from Leeds - sandwiched in the…read morePennines is the glorious Dovestones. Most people walk around the 1st reservoir and enjoy the stroll. You can however walk around as many as 4 reservoirs in total and increase the challenge. If your particularly fit or an experienced Walker then walk to the tops and enjoy some fantastic views. The place changes every day with the weather, and lots of different routes to take so you won't get bored. Always wear good shoes/boots and take your waterproofs just in case. There is ample parking on weekdays, but very busy at weekends.

    Our mission to go for at least one walk in the great outdoors each month of 2016 continues - at…read moreDove Stone Reservoir up in the hills of Saddleworth. Hoping lots of folks would have been put off by the cold weather and fallen snow, our group were met by total carmageddon at the official car park (which was full on a Sunday lunchtime and proved difficult to find a space). After a couple of circuits without success, we drove back to the main road, up the hill a few hundred yards and found plenty of room at the Binn Green car park. It's supposed to be pay and display but there were no machines - double winner. We took a stepped path down from this car park (it's a tad muddy in winter so choose appropriate footwear) and then eventually met the main paved/gravelled route around the reservoir. It's pretty flat all the way and there are gorgeous views to be had, so lots of photo opportunities. The shorter circular route is about 3 miles, whereas if you include the route past Yeoman Hey and Greenfield Reservoirs this increases to 5 miles. We were getting hungry by this point so decided to just do the former!

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    Dove Stone Reservoir
    Dove Stone Reservoir
    Dove Stone Reservoir

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    Leeds City Cruisers - Photo taken from official site

    Leeds City Cruisers

    4.0(2 reviews)
    39.4 mi

    Leeds City Cruisers undoubtedly provided me with one of the best methods of getting to work. When I…read morelived in a city centre flat, I caught a canal boat every morning, which transported me to the opposite side of town. The Riverbus service runs during the months of finer weather, and is scheduled to start again at Easter. It was such an entertaining journey, I always arrived at work in a buoyant mood. I concede, the head attire was too much, but you know the phrase - when in Rome, wear a pirate's hat. Leeds City Cruisers offers a variety of packages besides the early morning Riverbus. It can be privately hired out for parties, I often see it soothingly chugging along the water with raucous feather boa clad ladies giggling, signalling a hen party is in full swing. Parties of up to 50 people can catered for, with a full bar and a choice of a hot meal or buffet. The website offers a comprehensive list, detailing the various prices for trips of smaller groups. A two hour cruise with a cream scone and tea, with free admission into the neighbouring Royal Armouries Museum costs an extremely reasonable £13.50 per person. I can't recommend the experience highly enough, it almost feels as though you are on holiday in your own city, due to its originality. Having moved abode, I do resent my alternative method of transport to work. Driving is so mundane, I will have to replace it with an equally exciting journey. Zorbing, anyone?

    With most of the developments surrounding it given over entirely to posh flats, office blocks and…read morepricey restaurants, it's quite easy for ordinary (i.e. poor) people such as myself to almost completely forget that Leeds has a canal. Leeds City Cruisers are setting out to change that, offering cruises in their specially made wide beam boat along the Aire and Calder waterways. The boat is available to hire for private parties, and individuals can book places on their regular Sunday Lunch and themed dinner cruises. I joined the Sunday Lunch cruise, which although not cheap at £25 for two courses was a great way to spend an afternoon, with delicious food and a well-stocked bar for company. The sunshine definitely helped, and I'm not sure if I would have had as good a time if the rain had been pouring down, but as it was it was a lovely, relaxing experience and an interesting opportunity to see Leeds from an entirely new perspective.

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    Leeds City Cruisers
    Leeds City Cruisers - I do love an informative pin board!

    I do love an informative pin board!

    Leeds City Cruisers

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    River Trent - River Trent at Nottingham - photo courtesy of P Lamb.

    River Trent

    5.0(2 reviews)
    55.7 mi

    The River Trent is one of Britain's great rivers: at 185 miles the third longest after the Severn…read moreand the Thames, it was historically one of the great trading rivers of Britain and still carries a considerable amount of commercial traffic today, as well as pleasure craft. Boating on it offers great varieties of scenery, and for experienced crews, the chance to navigate the broad tidal stretches. History of navigation The history of navigation dates back at least to the Bronze Age, when it is thought to have been part of the route from Ireland to the Continent. The Romans built the Foss Dyke Canal to link Lincoln with the Trent in 120AD, and the Danes used it to attack the Saxons as far up as Nottingham. It remained the major transport route for the East Midlands until the 19th century. The channel was improved substantially between 1906 and 1926 with locks increasing the depth and navigability substantially, and it still carries a substantial traffic of gravel downstream of Newark. The Route Rising near Biddulph in Staffordshire, the river is joined by many tributaries that drain a huge part of central England, and which also give it its propensity to flood severely: its name is Celtic for 'flooding'. An attractive and winding river as far as Burton on Trent, thereafter it becomes wider and navigable, although for practical purposes most pleasure craft join at at the end of the Trent and Mersey canal at Shardlow. Between Shardlow and Nottingham, sections of the river have been canalised with locks, as at Sawley and Cranfleet. At Trentlock is a huge junction, where the Erewash Canal and river Soar join. The Trent at Nottingham is unnavigable, and boats must pass along the Beeston Cut and the pretty Nottingham Canal through the heart of the City. It goes without saying that there's plenty to keep you occupied here! Thereafter, the route widens again as it passes the National Water Sports Centre at Holmes Pierrepoint, and falls gradually through a series of impressive locks, built wide and deep enough for commercial traffic. These locks are mechanised, and have lock keepers to operate them, although out of hours they can be operated by British Waterways key owners. I must confess it's great fun to do this: it's like pushing the buttons in museum exhibits, but on a great scale! The usual care must be taken in locks, as these are particularly deep, and have large and impressive weirs alongside them. In times of flood, these can result in the river being closed for navigation. There are some great pubs as you go downstream - Gunthorpe village being particularly well blessed. Just before Newark, the river begins the first of its huge meanders, and the navigable section narrows through the town itself (the main river bypasses the town to the west). Newark is well worth a stop - lots of decent pubs, a castle, an impressive church and other historic buildings. Below Newark is the final lock, at Cromwell: it is huge, and also has the largest weir. (Passage should be booked in advance). From here onwards the river is impressively wide, but tidal and advisable only for experienced crews: boats must be suitable, with navigation lights, safety equipment and VHF radios. The banks are seldom suitable for mooring, and the large (and fast) gravel boats are an extra hazard, as are shallows (shoals) on some of the bends. (Pleasure craft must give way to them). On the plus side, the scenery is wonderful, the river is crossed by some impressive bridges, and the feel of boating on a major river, as opposed to a canal, provides a completely different experience. At Torksey there are moorings at the mouth of the Fossdyke (Lincoln) canal, and a couple of pubs, before the next town of Gainsborough. The latter also has some decent pubs and shops, and limited mooring. Below Gainsborough the river is now the responsibility of the Humber Navigation by-laws, administered by Associated British Ports. At this point, on certain tides, you can encounter the Aegir, or tidal bore. This can be between 1ft and 5ft (!), and is named after the Norse god of the sea. Shortly after Gainsborough is West Stockwith, its huge lock on the west bank the entrance to the Chesterfield Canal (lock-keeper operated - passage must be booked in advance). The canal has a large basin, and the village some nice pubs and an attractive church. Commercial boats downstream of here can carry well over 1,000 tons. The river now runs even broader and straighter through flat land to Keadby, where the South Yorkshire Navigation joins at Keadby Lock. Most pleasure craft stop here to join this canal: 24 hours notice is again required to the lock keeper. The next section runs to Trent Falls, where the river joins the River Ouse and becomes the Humber. This really is for very experienced crew only and for suitable boats - the tides and currents are formidable, most boats have to beach at low tide, and large commercial vessels abound. (Needless

    Great walks and wildlife along the trent , you can't beat itread more

    Photos
    River Trent - Approaching Holme Lock, River Trent - photo courtesy of P Lamb.

    Approaching Holme Lock, River Trent - photo courtesy of P Lamb.

    River Trent - Entering Stoke Lock, River Trent - photo courtesy of P Lamb.

    Entering Stoke Lock, River Trent - photo courtesy of P Lamb.

    River Trent - Trentlock - where the River Soar and Erewash Canals join the Trent. Photo courtesy of P Lamb.

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    Trentlock - where the River Soar and Erewash Canals join the Trent. Photo courtesy of P Lamb.

    Lyme View Marina - boating - Updated July 2026

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