Libby Purves
Subscribe to The Times and The Sunday Times
Young and broke in the 1970s, I spent strenuous weekends with the volunteers of the Waterway Recovery Group, whose devotion restored stretches of canal ignored by haughty government - Stratford, Basingstoke, Peak Forest. We cleaned ooze and removed old bedsteads from locks, pointed brickwork, mixed concrete. The group’s devotion in that recessionary and heritage-blind decade can be measured by the fact that they bought their JCB digger with several million Green Shield Stamps from groceries.
Their passionate, beery enthusiasm was far from fashionable. Sunshine package holidays were newish, and crawling along a narrow ditch in iffy weather was understood as a pleasure by relatively few. But they were right, the canal anoraks, and now are vindicated. They helped to save, for an age of leisure seekers, the legacy of the 18th-century “navigators”, a rough, brawling, sweating horde whose shovels dug our matchless network of narrow canals for commerce, and whose laborious stamping-down of clay “puddle” keeps them watertight to this day (and satisfyingly frustrating to developers who try to fill them in).
We need them now. In an age of rush they force us below 5mph: in a world of plastic shopfronts they let us glide through the fascinating industrial backyards of dull towns, reflecting on change.
There is a soothing quality in their lovely brick arches and enduring iron bridges. Gliding through meadows far from roads or under them is the lovely antithesis of all things restless and modern.
Above all, after all the nannying and prohibition of modern life, you get to work real locks: wind the handle, shift hundreds of tonnes of water, open the balance-beam bridges. Canalling, slow and damp and beautiful and gently physical, is the cure for modern life. Good to know we’ve recognised it.
Read the training tips and advice that helped our London Triathletes
Enjoy screenings of all the classic films you love, plus take advantage of two-for-one tickets
Times Online's new TV show helps you make the right decisions for your pet
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles

The perfect summer companion


Overseas contacts and local business information
2007
£47,995
2008
£42,945
06/2006
£40,850
Great car insurance deals online
£33,000
Macmillan Cancer Support
Central/South West
£50k
NHS
Nationwide
£
£30k OTE
Meltwater News
Nationwide
circa £70k
Central Office of Information
London
Great Dubai Investment Opportunities
from £89,950
Luxury Appts, beautiful gardens w/ Thames views
Studios £33K, 1 Beds £60K, 2 beds £79K
Great Investment, River Views
New York Christmas Shopping
Christmas Cruises
From only £995pp
APTs East Coast now from only
£2425pp.
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times. Globrix Property Search - find property for sale and rent in the UK. Visit our classified services and find jobs, used cars, property or holidays. Use our dating service, read our births, marriages and deaths announcements, or place your advertisement.
Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.