As planned, we took my daughter's Mouse to
Norfolk, England, for a week's holiday on the Broads, and I'm pleased to
say it turned out a great success.
Ella (six years old) was initially a bit nervous about paddling but became
enthusiastic about the idea after seeing her elder brother paddling around
- so much so that on our last day she must have paddled just a little
under two miles behind our hired Old Town canoe. Following close behind,
she seemed to have no difficulty keeping up. I think that part of the key
to this was the boat's confidence-building stability.
Ella's brother Ewan (eight years old) also took to the
little boat like a duck to water. In truth, I should say that he would
have preferred us to have brought his sailing Flying Mouse, but still he
was delighted to find that he could race and beat his Dad rowing an 11ft
tender supplied with the houseboat in which we were lodging. (That tender
was a pig of a boat, but still it says something that no matter how hard I
tried I couldn't beat him without playing dirty...)
For myself, I can see why people like these little boats; they're quite a
lot better than I would have guessed they could be when David Colpitts and
I first worked on the original idea.
>'Lion' is a standard vee-bottom 8ft Mouse. It's urprisingly stable when
heeled even slightly (a LOT of chine goes into the water very quickly as
she heels), it comfortably supports my weight (195lbs or so) and it
paddles acceptably straight with the skeg I made for it (see the picture
files). AND and I can put it on a roof rack and take it down easily
without help.
It travels at a reasonable speed without being too
tiring. I took it out for a paddle after the kids were in bed (see
sidebar) a few times while we were away, and from experience I'd say the
boat settles down to a kind of natural rolling-along speed of about 3mph
with a desk-jockey non-athlete paddling after a good dinner - going any
faster takes so much effort that it's unrewarding and going any slower
seems too easy. A true athlete might get something better, however!
Overall, I'm very pleased. In fact, I'm absolutely delighted with the
boat, and the experience has confirmed my theory that young children love
to be in charge of their own craft so long as they feel confident and it's
done safely, of course. Really, I should have found a way of taking a
Mouse boat each for them.For more on the Mouse family of boats, sign up at
https://groups.yahoo.com/group/mouseboats/
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Wayford
Bridge to
Dilham by Mouse
It’s 9.30pm on one of the first pleasant
evenings we’ve had this summer.
We – my partner Sally and my two children, Ewan and Ella – are staying in
a houseboat close by Wayford Bridge in the quiet Northern part of of
Norfolk Broads. After an action-packed day at the seaside and a slap-up
dinner at the Wayford Bridge Hotel, the kids are in bed and it’s time for
me to go for a twilight paddle down the river. After three beers and a
good feed, I probably shouldn’t be doing this but I can’t resist the
opportunity to take my daughter’s Mouse on its first real voyage.
So I get ready to go, strap on my bouyancy aid, launch the little boat,
and paddle round to my children’s bedroom window to wish them a last
goodnight before I set off into the gathering dark. At this time of the
evening the Broads are still, with the holidaymakers eating, busy in the
kitchen or watching the football world cup matches on television – it’s so
still that I wonder if there’s a rule forbidding movement at night.
The water is glassily still as I round the first bend on the little river
up to Dilham. It’s a stretch that the big family motor cruisers can use,
but most don’t as the little hamlet isn’t on the way to anywhere very
much, either by water or by road. This, therefore, is a wild and unspoilt
stretch of the Broads. All around me the river is hemmed by reeds, and by
a willow scrub that’s slowly turning what was once open water into land.
In the warm of the evening there are clouds of flies in the air, but
inexplicably they’re taking no notice of me. An occasional fish jumps to
catch one. A heron explodes from the reeds about a boat’s length from me,
looking for all the world more like a dinosaur than a bird. I pass a
single cruiser, from which a happy, slightly inebriated face gives me a
wave.
Dilham has a row of neat little houses with gardens running down to the
water. I could live here. After half an hour’s paddling, I turn round at
the village staithe, and head back for the houseboat – I’ve said that I’ll
be gone for an hour only. Passing a meadow, a stoat runs across the grass,
which I can now only just see is green in the dim light. Ducks and coots
fuss over their young. The happy holidaymaker waves to me again. I feel as
if I could paddle like this for hours, if only there was light enough, but
I have no regrets as this quiet paddle in the evening is a different thing
from what it would have been in broad daylight. Besides, I can come back
another time (and do so a few days later).
Soon I’m back at the houseboat, feeling that I’ve had some sort of
spiritual experience in the quiet dusk – but I’m also cock-a-hoop about
the little boat that has carried me perfectly safely and with very little
fuss for about three miles in the space of an hour. I’ll do this again and
again…
Gavin Atkin |