Ajonc – The Little Canal Boat In France

France and Belgium April/May 2026

We are taking things a little slower and changing things up a bit. A little less housesitting, and a bit more directed towards a wish list. We have talked about a canal boat trip somewhere in Europe for a few years now. About a year ago we booked this bucket-list trip and now finally the day has arrived.

We arrived at Pont-a-bar in the Ardennes region of France where we were introduced to our home-upon-the-water.  She is a beauty, 9.3 metres Penichette, 30hp Volvo engine; we will be very comfortable here. The weather is stunning, blue sky and balmy temperatures. We anticipate 21 awesome days ahead of us.

On arrival at Pont-a-Bar the owner was very excited that we had the boat for 3 weeks, not the usual around here. She was also very excited as there was a couple from New Zealand here getting their boat ready for the season. We were introduced. After talking for a bit we realised that they were from Australia. It always amazes me how sometimes people from up this end of the world have absolutely no idea of the geography past the equator. We really enjoyed their company and managed to polish off a couple of drinks onboard our wee home. It was great to get their “local knowledge” of the river Meuse and the area we were planning to travel to as they have been sailing this area for a few years now.

We had a lesson on how to get up and down the locks the next morning, then headed up the Canal des Ardennes – see you in 3 weeks! There is a 3 light system for the locks, green and red sequences which mean different things. Our very first lock solo was 2 red lights. Oh, what was that again? We had to look up our guide to discover it means that the lock is out of service. What a start! So, we turned around and steamed right back past the starting point and the Aussies, and off to the river Meuse instead.

Green and red light signals

It was a fantastic 3 weeks. We travelled 272 kilometres, navigated locks 62 times and 2 tunnels in both directions. The boat preformed beautifully. We plodded along at around 6 knots. Originally we wanted to do a circuit, ie not go over the same ground twice. We are so glad we took the advice not to, as we would have had to be travelling about 5 hours every day to get around. We travelled down river toward Belgium and turned around at Profondeville. We were able to really take our time and some days we didn’t leave the dock. It was surprising how different things looked from the other direction.

Profondeville, Belgium

The locks in the French section were small. Enough room for 2 boats of our size at once. The lock was activated by remote control from our boat, this set off the operation sequence which saw us several meters lower on the other side. The lights showed a green and red. This meant that the lock was being prepared. The gates were shut, the chamber needed to fill up with water. Once full, the gates opened and the red light went out leaving only green, we were good to go. Once inside the chamber we loop our bow line onto one of the huge bollards. Careful not to tie off otherwise we would be “hung up” hanging down the wall with no water – not the best seamanship! There is a ladder inside the chamber which is the full depth of the lock. Inside the ladder cavity are 2 poles. Once we were ready, we could push the blue pole up (never touch the red one, we were told, this is for emergencies). The alarm sounds and the gates close behind us. We must let the line out as we descend and the boat, along with the water level drop. Once the water is at the same level as the canal on the other side, the bottom gates open, we release the lines and putt-putt out and carry on our way. Some of the chambers are really deep. The walls are slimy and green. We start to wonder how we are going to navigate back up, where do we tie the ropes? We will have to figure that out when we get there.

Commercial barges take up a lot of space

Once we entered Belgium there was commercial traffic on the river. This meant that the locks had to be a lot bigger. These locks were operated by a lock keeper. I have decided that this is the job for me, I would love to be a lock keeper in Belgium. It would be like being a lighthouse keeper, but not so remote. As you approach these locks you are supposed to use you VHF radio to let them know you have arrived. We don’t have a VFH radio on board. Being such a little boat, often the keepers did not see us coming. We would wait and wait. Often, we had to tie up alongside before the lock and take a walk to the keepers house. They were mostly very friendly and would activate the lock and away we would go.

Going up turned out to be not as hard as we thought. There were tie off points along the walls inside the chamber and you could also tie off on the ladder wrungs. We had to use bow and stern lines in the big locks. Once the gates were closed and the water was released, there was quite a pressure wave coming right at us.  As the water filled the chamber, we had to hold the rope tight to keep the boat alongside but let it out at the same time so that the boat could go up with the water. On the very deep locks, we had to do a quick change in the middle of the flood to re-loop the rope up higher as it was now way below the boat.

The neighbours boat, Haybes, France

We had enough diesel onboard to take us the distance we wanted to go. There was 250 litres of water onboard. We had a book which showed where all the jetties were and where we could get water or tie up and use power – just like a camper van on the water. This was mid-April into May, the summer season had only just begun. This meant that the Capitaine was often not there, so, free to stay – but, no power or water. We managed well with no power, we had plenty of battery power and gas for cooking, but water was a bit of a problem. There were a couple of days where we ran out and had to use bottled water.

The boat was well thought out and well provisioned. There was everything you could need in the galley. 2 burner gas cooker and a gas oven. Fridge, coffee filters, cork screw – yes they still have corks in their wine bottles in this part of the world! All crockery and cutlery, pots and oven dishes. We cooked most nights and created amazing meals. Confit of duck one night! Safe as to say, we did not miss out on anything! We visited the patisseries most mornings when there was one and ate the best bread and pastries in the world, paired with the most delicious cheese.

 There were some very beautiful villages along the way. We stopped for a few days at some places that we particularly liked. The countryside changed quite a bit from start to finish. Beautiful green fields and wide-open spaces to sheer cliffs and sharp jagged points. So many bridges, everything from motorway traffic and trains to small foot bridges. It is a very pretty part of the world.

Monthermé, France
Dinant, Belgium
Anchamps, France
Haybes, France

We had a fabulous 3 weeks. This was a bucket list item and it did not disappoint. The weather was fantastic for the first week then the temperature plummeted. We were very glad we had brought warm clothes and rain coats. It came good again by the time we finished. 3 weeks you are sure to get all weather eh!

PS Our friend Wayne in New Zealand was curious about her name and discovered that it translates to “gorse”

Thank you for reading our story!

Canal boat named AJONC with yellow flowering plants on top, two dogs at the front, and a woman steering from the back.

How Did We Get Here?

The Story Of The Cruise Ship

After a few months in Europe, we start looking at ways to get back down under. We are wanting to go to Vieques, Puerto Rico, on the way home (yes, I know! It is hardly “on the way” haha, but oh well!) to visit friends we have made during the 2 six-month house sits we have done there. Flights from Portugal to San Juan? Amsterdam to Miami? Or should we get to London and then try for Boston or New York, then down to Puerto Rico? It is all very expensive. I mentioned this in my last story that we feel travel has become a lot more expensive since COVID and a lot more troublesome, flight schedule changes etc etc. But we don’t give up and ponder for a few days then come up with this AWESOME plan.

We are both boatie people; we love being on the water – why don’t we go by boat!! So that is how the plan was hatched. On investigation we find there is a Transatlantic cruise with Norwegian Cruise Line, leaving Southampton on 13 February, arriving in Miami on 24 February. This is perfect. Cost? Yes, it is a bit more expensive than flying, but you get 11 days accommodation, full board i.e. we WILL get the all-inclusive bar package, and we get from A to B in the process. Perfect! The deal was really good but ending in a few days. We just needed a couple of days to think about it. The deal ended, but the new deal was even better, it dropped another 200 Euro each. No more thinking – BOOKED! We are sailing all the way to the USA from The United Kingdom.

Transatlantic, WOW this is quite a trip. It will take 11 full days at sea, no ports to call into, just plain sailing non-stop. I feel this trip is quite close to my heart and I never thought I would ever do something like this. My Father crossed the Atlantic as part of the trip with his family back in 1960. He was only a teenager at the time and the family were immigrating from Scotland to Australia and New Zealand on the five-pound passage incentive programme. Big deal for them back then and I think the whole trip took 6 weeks. So, I feel I am following a little bit in their footsteps.

Chris has done this crossing before. He was on a refrigerated ship carrying Kiwi fruit for export from New Zealand to Europe. They went through the Panama Canal and then across the Atlantic, in the opposite direction, his trip took 4 weeks, in 2013.

The day comes for us to set sail. We are house sitting in Shoreham-by-Sea so have to get a train to Southampton. There is a lot of industrial action going on with the English rail workers at the moment and our train is now going to be “part bus” But we still make it in plenty of time to make our embarkation slot of 1230. We walk the 1 km from the train station to the port. It is raining and as we round the corner we see her, the Norwegian Joy! She is so big; she will be our home for the next 11 days.

This is brand new for us, neither of us have been on a cruise before so do not know what to expect regarding ……. well, anything!!  We had checked-in online, our bags get tagged and taken away and we join the queue. Passport control is just like an airport and is a very slick operation, they have 1000’s of passengers to process and it goes quickly. Then onto security and same, really easy; hand luggage through the Xray, laptops out and belts off, through the person Xray, done! We are cruising!

Following the corridor to the ship, up, up, up we go, everyone is so welcoming and smiling, there is happy music playing, I am feeling so excited I can hardly contain myself.

We booked a window cabin and found out 2 days before sailing that we had been upgraded to a balcony cabin, we went from level 5 to 13 on this 20-level ship. We are so happy with the cabin; it is a 3 berth which means there is extra room, and the balcony has a table and chairs. Lots of storage space, TV, fridge and a big bathroom, WOW this is awesome!

We find the buffet restaurant and have a late lunch and of course we have a glass of wine with lunch, then go to the main lobby area where a lot of people are gathering. This looks like the place to be and there is a bar. We test our key cards again and ask for bubbly – of course madam/sir – ok cool! We found a couple of very comfy chairs right by the floor to ceiling windows on the starboard side, we can see out over cloudy rainy Southampton, and we sit here and literally pinch ourselves! Is the really happening?? How did we get here? A waiter makes sure we are not without a cocktail and the set-sail party begins. Lots of music, laughter, the atmosphere is awesome, and then we move slowly off the dock, next stop Miami! This is going to be so much fun!!!

Thank you for reading our story!

More coming soon!!!