July 8, 2010

Captain’s log Day 5 Henley-on-Thames to Windsor

Filed under: misc — Duchess @ 10:27 am

We set off in mist and heavy rain, and the emotional boaty weather was not a lot better.  Mr Crew was at the helm (narrowboats are driven from the back) and I was up front with the binoculars – not concentrating on what was ahead, as I probably ought to have been, but on ducks instead. 

Within moments Mr Crew was shouting at me to summon his wife, and I called back to say she was in the loo. As that only produced louder shouts from the helm, I put down the binoculars and went back to see what the problem was.

I was met only with an angry, screaming insistence that Mr Crew wanted to talk to his wife, so I retreated to my lookout spot on the bow.

Moments later, Mrs Crew emerged agitated from the loo to find out what all the shouting was about, spoke to her husband, and raced forward to ask me for the binoculars (which was apparently what Mr Crew wanted all along).  Alas, by then I was so flustered by all the angry screaming that I could not remember where I had put them.

The binoculars were eventually found, consulted, and Mr Crew altered our course so that the boat didn’t run into a riverly dead end, which I quite agreed would have been very inconvenient. 

The Duchess at the bow, leaving Henley

The morning’s event had three effects:

1. I silently surrendered the binoculars to the helm, though they had always been meant for birdwatching, and never for navigation.  I hate conflict a lot more than I love ducks.

2. Mr and Mrs Crew began to treat me more gently, as if I were some semi-crazed imbecile, who mustn’t be upset, or who knows what she might do: losing the binoculars was probably only the beginning.

3. After briefly contemplating abandoning ship (but where would I go?  the boat is my home) I began to feel liberated.  I considered Mr Crew’s behaviour so rude, so unreasonable, and so improper in a guest that I felt absolved from many ordinary host rules, and especially from paying attention to anything he said.

Mrs Crew particularly encouraged me in the last.  She quietly assured me that the secret of a happy marriage was “Yes, Dear” and I might like to practice it, in case I ever got married again.

Without saying anything to me, she also banned Mr Crew from the helm when I was driving (bless her) and stood with me while I practised ignoring his instructions shouted from the front.  I got a lot of extra practise ignoring him whenever I was driving into a lock (Hurry up! hurry up! left! right! neutral! reverse! forward! right! left! neutral! reverse! hurry up! hurry up! hurry up!)

Yes, Dear, Mrs Crew whispered in my ear.

At Windsor the river was suddenly once again extraordinarily busy, with row boats and cruise boats everywhere, and whole flotillas of eager schoolboys slicing the water with their sculls.  Mr Crew was driving, and he skilfully dodged the river traffic, swung the boat around, and pulled us up alongside the playing fields of Eton, where we moored, paying the Bursar a mere trifle for the privilege.

We tied onto the bank with the boat facing upstream

We tied onto the bank with the boat facing upstream

For the first time I saw Mr Crew really happy.  I had promised they would want to stop at Windsor, and sad, crazed person that I am, I wasn’t wrong, just this once.  We had a mooring with a view of the castle overlooking the town, and Mr Crew was enchanted by the dozens of swans who flocked our boat, demanding bread. When I explained that the queen officially owns all the swans in the whole country he roared with laughter and took pictures of swan butts in the air.  What, he asked, would Her Majesty think of that?

One of Mr sCrew'<br /> s photos

One of Mr Crew's photos

The crew and I drank gin and tonics on the Eton playing field.  I don’t think our boaty war was either won or lost, but for the time being peace reigned.

Day 5 statistics: Henley Bridge to Windsor Bridge.  21 large river miles and 8 wide river locks.

11 Comments »

  1. Mr. Crew needs to A) learns some flippin’ manners (if I remember correctly, your guests are Americans, and apparently the kind of Americans that give us a bad name abroad) or 2) torque down the the testosterone a notch or two.
    Okay, both.

    Comment by Jan — July 8, 2010 @ 11:12 am

  2. I agree with Jan. Maybe instead of “yes, dear” you should say “yes, asshat”.

    Comment by Midlife Slices — July 8, 2010 @ 2:14 pm

  3. Well, it’s worth it, isn’t it. The playing fields of Eton. England’s green and pleasant land. I’m jealous.

    Comment by Hattie — July 9, 2010 @ 12:51 am

  4. That’s a nice beneficent British sky over Windsor in yr photo. Glad the weather is on your side — rain wouldn’t do anyone’s tempers any good. What’s the mini-Jefferson Memorial in mid-river leaving Henley? I’m vicariously with you every mile for everything except the cantankerousness, so thanks.

    Comment by T P — July 10, 2010 @ 6:40 am

  5. Mr. Crew sounds like an ass. Mrs. Crew sounds like a woman who has had to deal with an ass for a long time.

    Comment by Twenty Four At Heart — July 11, 2010 @ 8:13 pm

  6. I’ve seen this kind of behaviour in the male half of married boaters for years. Though relatively mild-mannered on land, some husbands seem to turn into Captain Bligh as soon as they set foot on a boat deck. Our otherwise dear friends do it all the time – he roars, she gets even more flustered and everything goes pear-shaped. Fortunately, my ship mate is different, otherwise either we or we and the boat would have parted ways a long time ago.
    Looks like a marvellous cruise otherwise …

    Comment by Tessa — July 14, 2010 @ 7:27 am

  7. The one good thing about people like Mr. Crew is that they’re fun to write about. Interesting he fell in love with scenes of swans with their butts skyward; perhaps he identified with them.

    Comment by Ruth Pennebaker — July 14, 2010 @ 1:03 pm

  8. TP – the monument is a folly on Temple Island. The folly is part of Fawley Court, a manor house (according to my guidebook) designed by Christopher Wren and later (18th C) “classicised” by James Wyatt, who also designed the folly. So you are quite right in thinking it Jeffersonian. The gardens of the manor are Capability Brown. It sounds worth a visit, but it is only occasionally open — though one could get married in the folly!

    Comment by Duchess — July 16, 2010 @ 9:23 am

  9. The swan picture is great!

    Comment by lawyersis — July 18, 2010 @ 3:32 pm

  10. I knew the Lawyer Sis would appreciate that photo…

    Comment by Duchess — July 18, 2010 @ 3:43 pm

  11. Oh, my….the photos are so lovely i’ll have to go back and look this over again without taking in Mr. Crew’s behavior (behaviour?). Mrs. Crew sounds like a peach. Ask her again the next time but tell her to leave him in drydock.

    Comment by M.E. — July 19, 2010 @ 6:47 pm

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