The Beeb claim the next door field took million gallons of water. I'm not sure how much that really is but apparently its equivalent to 100 road tankers.
it's unusual to read that a similar thing happened at Bridgewater Canal/Dunham Massey almost exactly a year ago, although that time I think it was just a breach caused by a massive amount of rainfall rather than a sinkhole.
Blimey, more to this than meets the eye - was recent incident even a "sinkhole" - maybe more of a landslip? https://www.canaljunction.com/news/middlewich-breach-caused-by-paddles-left-open/2954 it's at times like these that you inadvertently get to test the integrity of your mooring rope.. - can be catastrophic and/or life-threatening if a failure should occur while boats are beached.
At least with narrow boats they will sit well on their flat bottoms, a cruiser would be on its side. Hire boaters are responsible for the vast majority of damage to the locks on our river, two locks were out of action for several months this year for repairs due to hire boats, trapping boats caught between the locks ( I was one of them). The problem is that the navigation authorities just increase the licence fees to cover the cost of repairs, our river license has gone up nearly £100 for next year. £570 for 42 miles of water….its a rip off.
small point, but I've seen with my own eyes what can happen to any boat when it stresses a rope, they don't necessarily just sit down on the keel regardless of whether it's flat or not, and narrow boats are a hell of a lot heavier than equivalent fibreglass cruisers. agree with you on the hire boat bit though, sadly
Yes sorry I didn’t mean when they are left tied up, more when they are allowed to go down in a controlled manner. I’ve cut loose dozens of hung up boats over the years and it’s dicey to say the least.