Categories
Getting Started Updates

Relaunching the Blog

We’ve been involved in long-term life on the canals for nearly twenty years. Over that time, we’ve seen people step away from work, test retirement, work remotely from the towpath, take sabbaticals, or pause long enough to reassess what comes next. Some stay longer than planned. Some leave earlier. Most do what they set out to do, then return with a clearer sense of direction.

This blog has been patchy in the past. Boats, like lives, have a way of demanding attention elsewhere. Going forward, we’ll be publishing regularly, focusing on the things people usually only discover once they’re already aboard.

As well as keeping you updated on the business and some reflective pieces, we really want this blog to be about the practical realities of spending three months, six months, or a year on a narrowboat instead of wherever you currently are – Not just romanticising life afloat (even though we love it).

We would love to hear some of your suggestions for topics that we could cover? In the meantime, expect us to roam freely and broadly through all sorts of topics and locations associated with the canals!

We are planning to cover some of our favourite canals and some of the practicalities around route planning: what tends to go wrong; the 14-day continuous cruising rules; what it’s like sharing sixty feet with another person; and what winter living is really like when your heat comes from solid fuel and the canal freezes over.

We’re also planning to cover solo living, busy summer cruising, waterways that see less traffic, and the engineering decisions made two centuries ago that still shape how boats move today. How people deal with it. What living aboard is like while balancing work – remote or otherwise. Why some arrangements work well, and others don’t.

This blog exists to support anyone who is considering extended time on the canals, already doing it, or quietly working out whether it’s the right choice. We have learnt a great deal about what people actually need when they’re living aboard rather than visiting briefly – and it feels like the right time to start writing some of that down.

We’re proud to have helped so many people Escape the Rat Race over the years, operating 26+ boats at different points in the process – This is one way we hope to stay in touch, wherever the journey has taken you since!

We hope you enjoy, and stick around, whether that’s because you love the waterways or are curious about one day living aboard for the long term!

Categories
Life Afloat

The Rhythm of Life Afloat

Living on a canal boat isn’t just a change of address: It’s a change of perspective. Spend weeks or months afloat and you slowly absorb a new rhythm of life, one where patience, adaptability and calm become natural responses rather than aspirations. It’s a pace that stands in contrast to normal commuter‑driven living, yet somehow complements it beautifully. It’s a chance to work in the world and come home to tranquillity at the end of the day.

Living aboard a narrowboat teaches patience the moment you step onto the towpath. Locks don’t hurry. The weather decides when it will rain. Water levels rise and fall with tides and seasons. And you soon realise that pushing for speed only leads to frustration – whether you’re negotiating a busy flight of locks or planning your next mooring. Instead, you learn to settle into a pace that suits both you and the water beneath you.

Resourcefulness becomes second nature. Things you took for granted on land – fill‑ups, storage, heating and even hot showers – suddenly need planning and care. Diesel boats will come by to top up your fuel or gas if you arrange it ahead of time, but you’re responsible for knowing where to find water points, pump‑outs and supplies along the network. A frozen hose in winter or a tangled rope at a lock used to be sources of stress. Now they’re just another part of the learning curve that turns you into someone who solves problems calmly and creatively.

Creativity on board isn’t just about the novelty of cruising the narrowboat – it’s about living in a smaller space more deliberately. Clever storage solutions, practical layouts, and personal touches all work together to make the narrowboat feel like home not a holiday hire. You discover that a cosy boat with a warm wood burner becomes more comfortable than many houses you’ve lived in. That blend of function and comfort makes returning from a workday – or a walk into town – feel like coming back to your own private retreat.

And then there’s the social side of canal life. Mooring up for a pint at a canal‑side pub or passing friendly waves at a lock starts to feel like being part of a community. Living aboard an unbranded boat helps you feel part of something that those hiring canal holiday boats only pass through. Boaters share advice, tools, and stories – often instantly when you tie up side by side. Whether it’s someone giving pointers on keeping batteries topped up or helping you through a tricky stretch, that camaraderie makes the waterways feel warm and welcoming.

Living afloat also gives you space to reflect on your “normal” life. Many people choose long‑term narrowboat living with jobs they commute to remotely, or as a break between phases – a way to slow down and learn about what’s important without fully stepping away from land‑based work and family. It’s this mix of worlds – the freedom to cruise Britain’s huge canal network at your leisure and the comfort of coming back to your own peaceful floating home – that makes the lifestyle so rewarding.

So if you’re thinking of trying life on the water for a few months, or even longer, expect to learn a lot more than you would on a canal holiday hire. Expect to learn about patience, about independence, and about what makes your heart feel at ease. Because once you’ve mastered a few skills and embraced the slower rhythm of life afloat, you’ll find that the canal doesn’t just show you new places – it shows you a new way of seeing the world.