
Mooring here is ok (a perfectly adequate mooring).
Facilities: water point.
You can wind here.
Henry Knibb Bridge No 3A | 6¼ furlongs | |
Shardlow Lock No 2 | 1¾ furlongs | |
The Clock Warehouse PH | 1¼ furlongs | |
Winding Hole below Shardlow Lock | 1¼ furlongs | |
Idle Bridge No 3 | ¾ furlongs | |
Shardlow | ||
The Malt Shovel (Shardlow) | 1 furlong | |
New Inn (Shardlow) | 1¼ furlongs | |
Wilne Bridge No 2 | 1½ furlongs | |
Shardlow Pipe Bridge | 1½ furlongs | |
Shardlow Floodgates | 2½ furlongs |
- Trent & Mersey Canal Society – founded in 1974 — associated with Trent and Mersey Canal
Mouseover for more information or show routes to facility
Nearest water point
In the direction of Derwent Mouth
In the direction of Horninglow Basin
Nearest rubbish disposal
In the direction of Derwent Mouth
In the direction of Horninglow Basin
Nearest chemical toilet disposal
In the direction of Derwent Mouth
In the direction of Horninglow Basin
Nearest place to turn
In the direction of Derwent Mouth
In the direction of Horninglow Basin
Nearest self-operated pump-out
In the direction of Horninglow Basin
Nearest boatyard pump-out
In the direction of Derwent Mouth
In the direction of Horninglow Basin
Out of Nottingham from Scribblings from the Mintball posted Monday the 4th of August, 2014
The Cranfleet Cut sounds like some sort of Public School entrance exam from Scribblings from the Mintball posted Tuesday the 29th of July, 2014
Wikipedia has a page about Shardlow
Shardlow is a village in Derbyshire, England about 6 miles (9.7 km) southeast of Derby and 11 miles (18 km) southwest of Nottingham. Part of the civil parish of Shardlow and Great Wilne, and the district of South Derbyshire, it is also very close to the border with Leicestershire, defined by route of the River Trent which passes close to the south. Just across the Trent is the Castle Donington parish of North West Leicestershire.
An important late 18th-century river port for the trans-shipment of goods to and from the River Trent to the Trent and Mersey Canal, during its heyday from the 1770s to the 1840s it became referred to as "Rural Rotterdam" and "Little Liverpool". Today Shardlow is considered Britain's most complete surviving example of a canal village, with over 50 Grade II listed buildings and many surviving public houses within the designated Shardlow Wharf Conservation Area.