Our boat in final paint scheme |
Lisa phoned to confirm the survey was fine. The buyer was
going ahead with the purchase and was leaving the boat out of the water until
it could be blacked up. The Captain agreed to meet her in the office at 1.00 to
sign all the paperwork.
It was 10.00 when we left Mum’s heading northwest. There were
problems on the M6. We diverted around it but still reached King’s Bromley
Marina just after 12.00. We picked up the spare keys and said goodbye to the
staff who were there.
Then we set off for Great Hayward Marina, arriving just
after 1.00. We completed the paperwork, handed over the keys and checked they
had the boat’s logbook and other documents.
As the boat was out of the water we had a good look at her hull. The steel work was as good as when we had her surveyed prior to buying 10
years ago. Amazing that the survey said she had not lost any thickness to the
steel.
Then we strolled over to the neighbouring farm cafe for a
celebratory lunch.
our boat at its survey before we bought it |
Our drive back home started later than the Captain intended.
He had a fairly untroubled drive down to Cherwell services on the M40 even though
the traffic was heavy at times.
rear of boat |
However there were problems being reported ahead both on the
M40 and on the M25 which was reported as having heavy congestion from the
junction with the M40 all the way round to Reigate.
We decided to leave the motorways and reached home via Oxford,
Reading, Bracknell, Guildford and Dorking.
After Guildford we stopped at a park on the top of the Surrey
hills to take a break from driving, give Lottie a walk and give her dinner.
Normally the drive home takes 3 ½ hours. Today it took over
6 only partly because Great Hayward Marina was an extra ½ hour away. The
Captain was philosophical; “we won’t have to do that journey again”, he said.