Le Boat – Cruising World https://www.cruisingworld.com Cruising World is your go-to site and magazine for the best sailboat reviews, liveaboard sailing tips, chartering tips, sailing gear reviews and more. Fri, 18 Oct 2024 16:27:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.cruisingworld.com/uploads/2021/09/favicon-crw-1.png Le Boat – Cruising World https://www.cruisingworld.com 32 32 Le Boat Announces “Discover France” https://www.cruisingworld.com/charter/le-boat-announces-discover-france/ Wed, 02 Oct 2024 12:00:00 +0000 https://www.cruisingworld.com/?p=55808 New for 2025, the company is offering additional experiences in the historic canals of France.

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Le Boat chartering the Canal du Midi
Le Boat charterers can explore the Canal du Midi, a UNESCO World Heritage site with a 300-year history. Courtesy Le Boat

Le Boat has unveiled new experiences for 2025 that showcase the historic canals of France.

The company offers bareboating options in multiple regions of France. They include the Canal du Midi, The River Lot, Camargue, Alsace-Lorraine and the Charente Valley. New for 2025 are moorings in Narbonne and Angoulême.

Narbonne, a town in the Canal du Midi, is home to France’s largest outdoor food market. The market, called Les Halles, has stalls with local wines, olives, tapenades, cakes and pastries. Narbonne also has ancient buildings such as the St. Just and St. Pasteur Cathedral and the Archbishop’s Palace.

Angoulême, located in the Charente region, has numerous fortifications that were built during historical conflicts. Today, it is home to restaurants and boutiques. Downtown, visitors can discover monuments such as the City Hall, a former castle.

Is France the only place to book a bareboat through Le Boat? Not even close. The company operates in various parts of Europe as well as Canada, with a fleet of boats that are suitable for couples, families and groups of friends. No boat license or prior boat experience is required.

Where to learn more: go to leboat.com

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Le Boat Adds “Skipper for Hire” https://www.cruisingworld.com/charter/le-boat-adds-skipper-for-hire/ Wed, 31 Jul 2024 20:59:25 +0000 https://www.cruisingworld.com/?p=54585 The program is intended to make the bareboating experience easier for first-time cruisers.

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Le Boat
The Skipper for Hire service is exclusively available on 2025 departures across all boat types. Courtesy Le Boat

Le Boat, which offers bareboats in Europe and Canada, has launched a Skipper for Hire program to make boating easier for first-time cruisers.

“Many of our North American guests have expressed interest in having a skipper available, as the idea of piloting a boat for the first time can be daunting,” Lisa McLean, long haul marketing manager for Le Boat, stated in a press release. “In response to this feedback, our Skipper for Hire program aims to enhance the boating experience and provide unparalleled support to our valued guests. Whether you’re a novice or a seasoned cruiser, our skilled skippers are dedicated to helping our customers feel more confident and ensure their journey is stress-free and enjoyable.”

McLean stresses that all of Le Boat’s vessels are easy to drive, and that no boat license or prior boating experience is required. Le Boat’s base teams provide in-depth orientation, safety briefings and hands-on training before bareboaters set off.

Le Boat’s vessels have a steering wheel for left and right turns, and a throttle for forward and reverse motion. Certain boats in the Comfort Plus, Premier and Luxury categories are also fitted with bow and/or stern thrusters.

The Le Boat skipper program will cost $199 per day. On the first full day of the voyage, the skipper will provide guests with hands-on instruction on boat operation, navigation techniques and maneuvering through locks. The idea is to empower guests to navigate independently for the remainder of their excursion.

Paddleboarder next to Le Boat charter
Skippers for Hire are dedicated to helping Le Boat customers feel more confident and ensure that their journey is stress-free and enjoyable. Courtesy Le Boat

Skippers will provide their own lunch and refreshments on board, and will leave at the end of the first day. Le Boat assumes liability for any accidental damage incurred while the skipper is on board.

For the initial program launch, skippers will be stationed along the Canal du Midi, departing from Le Boat bases in Castelnaudary, Carcassonne (Trèbes), Homps and Port Cassafières. They will be proficient in English and French.

If the program is successful, Le Boat plans to expand it to other cruising grounds in Europe or Canada after 2025.

Le Boat is offering a 2025 early-booking deal: Cruisers can save as much as 25 percent on Budget, Comfort and Comfort Plus rentals across Europe, or as much as 15 percent on the Horizon Fleet in Canada, France, Holland, Belgium and Germany.

For more information: head over to leboat.com

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Le Boat and Groupe Beneteau Ink Deal https://www.cruisingworld.com/charter/le-boat-and-groupe-beneteau-ink-deal/ Fri, 12 Jul 2024 15:22:25 +0000 https://www.cruisingworld.com/?p=54125 The international fleet will see more than $125 million in investments during the coming decade.

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Liberty Cruiser rendition
Artist rendition of new Le Boat luxury Liberty Cruiser. Courtesy Le Boat

Le Boat, which offers river and canal cruise vacations, has inked a deal with Groupe Beneteau that will see more than $125 million of investment into the international fleet during the next 10 years.

Of the 400 Delphia-brand boats that Groupe Beneteau is scheduled to build for Le Boat in the coming decade, 100 will be completed in the next three years, including at least 25 in the year 2025. These boats will include the current Horizon range as well as 34 hulls of a premium new one- to two-stateroom boat called Liberty that is scheduled to launch in 2025.

In addition, Le Boat and Groupe Beneteau intend to develop an industry-leading three- to four-stateroom model for launch in 2027. It is expected to have private and charter versions, with the charter version exclusive to customers who book vacations with Le Boat. These models will have air conditioning and an upgraded flybridge.

“We’re delighted to be building upon our long-standing relationship with Groupe Beneteau to support the next stage of Le Boat’s growth journey,” Cheryl Brown, Le Boat’s managing director, stated in a press release. “It will allow us to continue developing high-quality river cruisers which our customer will love, and enable us both to expand into North America.”

Liberty Cruiser interior rendition
Artist rendition of new Le Boat luxury Liberty Cruiser. Courtesy Le Boat

Brown added: “With these innovative new boats and stunning potential cruising grounds, this offers us a fantastic opportunity to grow both the charter and boat sales sides of our business.”

In addition to the new boats and models, the agreement between the two companies will allow customers to invest in the new boats. This program promises owners guaranteed income from charters, along with an average of 14 weeks’ worth of vacation time on board each year—either on their own boat or on a sister boat at one of Le Boat’s 17 cruising regions in Europe and Canada.

Since 2016 and the launch of the Horizon fleet, Le Boat has seen a threefold increase in its boat ownership program in Europe. The Le Boat Ownership Program was also recently rolled out to the North American market as well. The Liberty boats are for sale now and will be available to cruise from some Le Boat bases in France, Germany, England and the Netherlands in 2025.

Liberty Cruiser rendition
Artist rendition of new Le Boat luxury Liberty Cruiser. Courtesy Le Boat

“Le Boat has been a key partner for many years with the premier fleet of Horizon models,” Erik Stromberg, vice president of power and motoryachts for Groupe Beneteau, stated in the press release. “This next step continues the supply of Horizon models, as well as a new co-developed boat to support Le Boat’s charter business and boat ownership program.”

Also look for new bases in North America. The companies say they are working to expand in that regard, too.

Where to learn more: Visit www.leboat.com.

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September 2019 Chartering Update https://www.cruisingworld.com/september-2019-chartering-update/ Wed, 11 Sep 2019 22:42:18 +0000 https://www.cruisingworld.com/?p=44885 Monthly news and notes from the charter and vacation sailing industry.

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Diamant
Enjoy tall-ship sailing? Caribbean charter adventures are available aboard the schooner Diamant. Courtesy Island Windjammers

Windjammer Sailing Lives On

Island Windjammers offers fans of the tall-ship chartering experience six- and 12-night itineraries throughout the Virgins, Leeward and Windward islands of the Caribbean. With all-inclusive per-person rates, the company—which was formed in 2008 by veterans of the former Windjammer Barefoot Cruises—operates with a fleet including the schooner Diamant, the triple-masted Vela and the motorsailer Sagitta. Diamant, just longer than 100 feet, accommodates 10 guests; Vela is 156 feet and takes 26 passengers; and Sagitta is 120 feet and hosts 24 guests. Rates are based on season, and include meals, beverages, cabin service, port charges and taxes, as well as snorkel gear. Cabins are air-conditioned, and feature 110-volt outlets and blow dryers.

Itineraries are flexible; guests have time to explore each port of call. Onboard activities include swimming and snorkeling from the ship, taking a turn on the rope swing, and using the ship’s paddleboards and kayaks. In addition to the traditional weekly cruise offerings, specialty theme cruises are offered, including Taste of the Islands Caribbean Cuisine Cruise, Rum Cruise, Solo Sojourns, Island Hops Beer Cruise, and Pirate Week. For details, visit islandwindjammers.com.

The Big 5-0

Five decades have passed since the Moorings was established by Charlie and Ginny Cary in the British Virgin Islands. The Moorings today is a globally recognized yacht charter brand. To mark its 50th anniversary in 2019, two rendezvous events take place in Croatia and the British Virgin Islands. The Croatia anniversary celebration is October 12-19, and the British Virgin Islands celebration is November 10-16.

Each of the events features a special itinerary, and a lead Moorings boat guides each flotilla. For details, visit the website. For more on the Moorings over the years, visit the website.

Le BOAT seeS 50 TOO

Inland waterways charter company Le Boat celebrates 50 years of self-drive canal-cruise vacations in Europe and in Canada in 2019. Le Boat launched in 1969, and the fleet has grown to more than 940 boats offering 18,000 cruises each year in nine countries around the world. Le Boat expanded to North America in 2018, opening in Smiths Falls, Ontario, on the UNESCO World Heritage Rideau Canal. In 2019, a second base on the Rideau Canal was opened at Seeley’s Bay, Ontario. For information visit the website.

Flotillas with Med Sailing

Med Sailing Adventures has expanded its flotilla offerings. The company, founded by Jean and Mila De Keyser, started with multiboat trips along the Dalmatia coast of Croatia, and has expanded to the Balearic Islands of Spain and the Tuscany coast of Italy. De Keyser is an instructor certified through the American Sailing Association curriculum and can assist sailors in obtaining permits required for Mediterranean bareboat chartering. Med Sailing participants pay by the cabin; if they are a family or a group of friends, they can take an entire boat. For details, consult the website.

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Canal Cruising, Canadian Style https://www.cruisingworld.com/canal-cruising-canadian-style/ Thu, 21 Mar 2019 02:58:24 +0000 https://www.cruisingworld.com/?p=43664 For a change of pace, a band of sailors try a fresh-water Canadian holiday on the Rideau Canal.

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Canal Cruising, Canadian Style Jon Whittle

To an already long list of life’s ­imponderables, an absolutely remarkable week floating about on Ontario’s Rideau Canal brought me to this: Is 5 mph fast or slow?

For the record, I’d not gone to North America’s oldest continually operated waterway and UNESCO World Heritage Site last July in search of an answer to that quandary. In fact, as I drove eight hours northwest from Boston to Le Boat’s newly opened base in Smiths Falls with my wife, Sue, and daughter, Rebecca, I had many more immediate things on my mind: In particular, how much of the 124-mile-long waterway could we see? From Smiths Falls, the largest town on the canal and roughly at its midpoint, should we voyage north toward Ottowa for an urban experience, or south toward the canal’s other end in Kingston for a more rural and wild adventure? And would the rest of our crew — my brother, Dave, his wife, Peggy, and photographer Jon Whittle — arrive in time to help us to provision before checking in and moving aboard a Horizon 3 canal boat the following afternoon?

Here’s the dilemma that came to perplex me, though, as we navigated 100 or so miles across vast lakes, through forests and towns, rolling farmland, and sprawling marshes: Five mph seemed quick in the narrow parts of the waterway, especially when approaching other vessels or the granite block walls at any of the 13 locks we navigated, though I grew more confident by the mile that the vessel’s powerful bow and stern thrusters would keep the boat ding-free. That same speed seemed plodding, though, as we motored into head winds and crossed long open-water portions of the Rideau. And so, with speed and distance both relative, it seemed the only certainty was that at 5 mph, we had all the time in the world to sit back, relax and savor the experience of a very different sort of floating holiday.

The Rideau Canal was built in the aftermath of the War of 1812 to guarantee the British a secure military and commercial supply route to Kingston, on Lake Ontario. British Lieutenant Colonel John By and the Royal Engineers designed and oversaw its construction, which began in 1826. Thousands of Scottish and Irish immigrants came to work on the project, and many stayed on as settlers once it opened in May of 1832. While in name a canal, the Rideau is actually a waterway comprised of predominantly lakes to the south of Smiths Falls, and to the north, the Rideau River, which flows to Ottawa. Just 12 miles of the canal were cut by hand. From Kingston, the Rideau rises 166 feet through nine locks to reach its summit at Upper Rideau Lake. From there it drops 275 feet in elevation to the Ottawa River, through a series of 19 locks. The rise and fall is important, because when navigating, red buoys are kept to the right when headed upstream to the water’s source, the aforementioned Upper Rideau Lake. As a reminder, at Newboro Lock, where the direction of flow reverses, a red-painted flowerpot is to starboard and a green pot is to port when pulling into the lock from the Upper Rideau. At the other end, the colors of the pots are switched as you enter Newboro Lake and start locking down toward Kingston.

Horizon canal boat
Le Boat’s ­Horizon canal boats are purpose built, surrounded by bumpers and ready for a party. Jon Whittle

Throughout the waterway, the vast majority of the locks are still operated by hand, using the same mechanisms the tenders have used since 1832. Massive wooden doors at either end of the ­chamber are opened and closed by lockkeepers turning stout black metal hand cranks. Similar mechanics control the sluices that let water flow in and out. A minimum depth of 5 feet is maintained throughout the Rideau, which is open from mid-May to mid-October.

Allison Scheuermann
Allison Scheuermann lets us sample the wares at her family-owned Westport vineyard. Jon Whittle

We arrived in Smiths Falls on Friday and checked into the Best Western, just down the street from Le Boat’s base in the historic Lockmaster’s House that sits alongside the waterway. There was a full-on summer party underway behind the hotel, with pontoon boats, kayaks, canoes, runabouts and houseboats tied along the shore, and a park full of Harleys, camping trailers, tents and pickups between us and Le Boat’s new docks downtown.

At the Smiths Falls Lock, we watched a small powerboat navigate through. With a rise of 26 feet, it is the tallest single step on the waterway. Inside every lock ­chamber, thick plastic-coated steel cables run top to bottom every few feet. A ­woman at the bow and a man at the stern of the runabout led dock lines around their respective cables to hold the boat in place as lockkeepers opened the sluices and let the water flow out. The modern Smiths Falls Lock replaces three original locks nearby and is unusual because it’s one of the few on the system that operates at the push of a button.

That evening, we dined at Matty O’Shea’s Pub and sampled local delicacies such as smoked meat sandwiches and poutine — cheese curds and gravy over fries — all washed down with Canadian beer. Jon went a step further and tried the Matty’s Burger, a hamburger smothered in jalapeños and peanut butter, an incongruous combo that he deemed delicious.

In the morning, we toured the Rideau Canal Visitors Center, provisioned at the nearby Independent grocery store and paid a visit to the Beer Store, one of a handful of outlet chains permitted to sell spirits in the province of Ontario. Then, with several dock carts worth of supplies, we went off to find our boat.

mahogany lake boat
Well-kept ­mahogany lake boats are in abundance on the Rideau Canal. Jon Whittle

Purpose-built, the Horizon 3 has a relatively narrow beam to accommodate the often-limited space in the canal’s crowded locks. In place of a toe rail and boot stripe, there are rugged rubber bumpers that run fore and aft with four additional vertical pads on each side, plus one on the stem and another across the stern, completely eliminating the need for fenders.

The boat has a small aft deck, with a sliding glass door that opens into the saloon. Inside to starboard is the galley; to port sits a table that can be converted into a bed. A helm station is to starboard amidships. We never used it during our trip, but it looked useful for cold-weather days. Forward and a step down there are double en suite cabins to either side, and an enormous berth with separate head and shower compartments in the forepeak. Comfortable and bright as the interior was, most of our driving, living and lounging took place on the flybridge, which is set up with a helm station ­forward, and a grill and dining table astern. Le Boat’s Horizon range also includes smaller models for more intimate crews. It took us just minutes to confirm the vessel’s design intent: Party and enjoy.

Island camp
Island camps of all variety are to be found on the lakes. Jon Whittle

Still undecided on our itinerary, I asked a lockkeeper where he would go with a week to explore. Why not, he suggested, get a taste of the Rideau River by starting off with a visit to Merrickville, about two hours and three locks north, then return and head south to play in open lakes for a few days. Sounded good to us.

RELATED: Cruising Canada’s Gulf of St. Lawrence

So after a briefing dockside, and with Le Boat’s handyman Sterling Brown beside me at the helm on the flybridge, Jon and Dave slipped our stern lines and we were off. With a bump of the throttle, the boat crept ahead until we were clear of those sandwiched in on either side. In the open basin adjacent to the lock, we stopped. I tried backing, then gave the joystick a twist and spun a doughnut to get the feel of things. No time like the present, I thought, and pointed the boat into the waiting lock.

Rideau lock
Massive wooden doors hold back the higher water in the next step of the Rideau. Jon Whittle

As we entered, lockkeepers were on hand to take our lines and I used the thrusters to push us sideways to the wall. Le Boat’s brochure was right: “No experience required.” Behind us the doors closed, Sterling bid us bon voyage and gravity lowered us to the canal below.

RELATED: The Wild West Coast of Vancouver Island

The next two locks were navigated with similar ease, even when we caught up to another crew on a Le Boat and had to tie side-by-side. We reached the third lock, Kilmarnock, well before closing time, as advised. Hours of operation are a ­navigational consideration not to be ­overlooked. Travel on the canal ends abruptly when the keepers go home for the night. As we approached, a highway bridge blocked the entrance. While we watched and waited, a lone lockkeeper leaned against it and single handedly pushed the two-lane span out of the way. Talk about a well-greased operation!

metal handcrank
A metal handcrank and notched bar raise the sluice in a lock’s door. Jon Whittle

The ride to Merrickville was breathtaking. The river wound through woodlands and rolling farms, past sprawling wetlands with swaying grasses and birds. In places cornfields descended to the water; in others, small camps or houseboats sat nestled in the trees along the shore.

In Merrickville, we took a left fork just ahead of the lock in the center of town and found an open, though tight space at a dock right next to a sign warning we were about to reach the edge of a dam. Yes, my knuckles were just a little white as I grasped the thruster’s joystick to spin us and crab sideways to the pier.

The sun was low in the sky as we set dock lines. Beside us, the town common was filled with people enjoying a fine summer evening. It had been a long day and no one felt like playing chef. Instead, we took a stroll and found dinner at the Goose and Gridiron, an establishment that dates back to the 1850s and where, at the bar, the beer taps sprout from hockey goalie helmets.

Aylings Boat Yard
In Merrickville, the Aylings Boat Yard is a home to wooden boats and big dreams. Jon Whittle

Having arrived too late to really see the town, on Sunday, the crew opted to stay put. We had a couple of Le Boat’s bikes aboard, and Sue and I rode a ways out into the country. In town, we visited a few of the many galleries and shops, and then on a whim, crossed the canal and followed a dirt road down to a stretch of rapids that the lock and canal bypass on the north side of town. The road ended at Aylings Boat Yard and Marina, a living wooden boat museum, with all manner of classic cruising lake boats in various stages of repair. Inside a shed, a do-it-yourselfer gave us a tour of his replanking project, a labor of love that was clearly being measured in years. Beside him, a just-refinished 40-something-foot cabin cruiser sat waiting to be launched. It was such a good show, I returned to the boat and got the rest of the crew. We paid a second visit to Aylings, and then followed a path along the river to another yard, Sirens Boatworks, which specializes in restoring old Chris-Crafts and new boat builds. Its owner talked excitedly about the ongoing wood revival on the canal.

Monday we were off the dock early and waiting at the first lock when it opened for business. South of Smiths Falls, the canal at first was much the same: a narrow winding waterway surrounded by forests and marshes. Once through Poonamalie Lock, though, we turned a corner and Lower Rideau Lake lay before us. The breeze was blustery, with gusts into the 20s; combined with the chop, it cut our speed by a half a knot or better. No ­matter, the view was grand and the ­channel across the lake was well marked and easy to follow. We passed the small town of Rideau Ferry, a relatively narrow spot that marks the boundary between Lower Rideau and Big Rideau lakes. The ferry had long since been replaced by a highway bridge, but the name lives on.

marsh
Marshes encompass many parts of the canal. Jon Whittle

Big Rideau is about 20 miles long and three wide, and sprinkled with islands. Cottages dot the shore amid bold granite outcroppings. Our destination was Colonel By Island, where Parks Canada maintains docks and moorings, all nestled in behind several tiny islets, each of which somehow held equally small summer camps. There was one other boat tied up when we arrived and a few kayakers had set up tents on the lawn above. In the evening, with a new moon and clear sky, the Milky Way was spectacular. So much so, Jon headed for solid ground to set up a camera to shoot the night sky.

The wind died completely by morning and the lake was like glass. We attempted a hike inland but were quickly driven back to the boat by voracious mosquitos. After breakfast and a swim, we pushed upwards through the Narrows Lock and into Upper Rideau Lake, the high point of the waterway.

At Newboro Lock, the keepers gave us a friendly reminder about the change in aids to navigation. Separated by a short, narrow stretch of canal, Newboro Lake couldn’t have been more different than the broad and open Rideaus. Here long granite islands run in rows, as though some ancient hand had used fingernails to scrape out the slices of water between them. Across Newboro, the channel became twisted and took us through two much smaller lakes, Clear and Indian, before we arrived at Chaffey’s Lock, our destination for the night. Most of the locks we visited had just a lockkeeper’s house on site, but at Chaffey’s, the shores were lined with small cottages and we spotted a marine repair shop and store. The docks at the lock were busy with several boats already tied up for the day. Here, as at many of our stopovers, curious onlookers asked about our Le Boat and gladly came aboard for a tour of the curious looking craft.

Rideau Canal map
The Rideau Canal Map by Shannon Cain Tumino

Nearby, we found The Opinicon, a ­recently restored and reopened circa 1870s hotel, a point of pride with the locals and a good place for a cold beer on a warm day. As dark fell and the mosquitos came out to feast, we fled the boat and returned to the resort to test out the skills of its bartenders.

There’s a point in every charter vacation when you realize you’re running out of time. Our “uh-oh” moment came Wednesday morning. Before starting back north to visit Westport, a recommended tourist spot on Upper Rideau Lake, we very much wanted to see Jones Falls, where a man-made dam and four waterway steps have been described as one of the “Wonders of the Rideau.” Though we got an early start and passed through two sets of locks quickly, when we ­arrived at the falls several boats were already circling. We would have to wait at for least two or three lock-throughs, each of which might take a half hour or longer. Adding up the delay plus the hour or so we’d need to look around, we weren’t certain we could make it back though all the locks and still make Westport by evening. Time, then, to retreat.

Westport lies off to the west of the main channel that crosses Upper Rideau Lake and, surrounded by farms, is easy to spot from afar. We arrived midafternoon at the town marina, located on a tiny island connected to shore by a footbridge. A couple of cheerful dockhands showed us to a spot for the night, pointed out the favored ice cream parlor (every Canadian village has one) and suggested that if we wanted to take a walk, we should visit the local winery.

As in any lakeside tourist town on a July afternoon, the downtown was bustling with small shops, restaurants and traffic, but we quickly escaped all that as we followed the highway out into the country. After several days on the boat, we welcomed the couple-mile walk to Scheuermann Vineyard and Winery, which we found up a dirt road that took us past acres of grapes that Allison Scheuermann and her chef husband, Francois, had planted nearly a decade earlier.

Lockkeepers
From the lockkeepers’ building to the locks themselves, not much has changed since the Rideau opened in 1832. Jon Whittle

After a brief tour, the six of us sat at a long open-air table while Allison introduced assorted bottles of whites and reds. Nearby sat a large stone oven where pizzas are grilled and a recently built awning that shades tables set up for family style dining. The wine was delicious and the views out across the hills were magnificent on this blue-sky afternoon.

At the boat we took a swim to cool off, then sat on the flybridge to watch the sunset and enjoy Peggy’s Thai basil fish dinner. Afterward, we wandered back into town and caught the last set of music at The Cove Country Inn, a nearby restaurant and watering hole.

Rideau River
The Rideau River opens wide in parts en route to Merrickville. Jon Whittle

Since we had to have the boat back at the dock in Smiths Falls early on Saturday, before the locks opened, our options for Thursday were limited. We wanted to be within an easy day’s run on Friday, so after paying $10 to fill our water tanks, the crew voted to head back to Colonel By Island, where the night sky had been so dazzling.

All week, boat traffic on the Rideau had gotten busier. This time approaching the lock at the Narrows, rather than sweeping right through, we found a waiting queue. At By, the docks were full, so we picked up a mooring ball instead. It was a hot afternoon, and the lake water was refreshing. Rebecca perfected her cannonballs from the flybridge, and we tried out the pool noodles she’d bought at a dollar store in Westport. Damselflies and loons entertained us as we cooked a last dinner aboard and watched the sun set. What a life!

Friday, the breeze was at our backs as we cruised north past Rideau Ferry again. With a bit of time to kill, we checked out Beveridges locks at the entrance to the Tay Canal, which leads to Perth, a reportedly lovely town that would have to await another visit. We motored to the center of the lake, killed the engine and drifted while we cooked lunch. Then with afternoon shadows lengthening, we headed back to the base, hit the gas dock and tied up for our last night across the basin from the Le Boat docks, alongside a park in the center of town.

A week on the Rideau had worked its magic. We were rested. We were happy. We’d tried something entirely new on a waterway built nearly 200 years ago. In the end, our 5 mph pace had proven to be pretty near perfect.

Mark Pillsbury is CW’s editor.

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Cruise Canada’s Canals https://www.cruisingworld.com/cruise-canadas-canals/ Thu, 19 Oct 2017 03:09:06 +0000 https://www.cruisingworld.com/?p=39580 Le Boat, the European selfdrive canal-boat charter company, is opening its first North American operation in 2018, with a base in Canada serving Ontario’s Rideau Canal.

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Le Boat
Le Boat’s selfdrive canal boats are coming to Canada. Le Boat

Le Boat, the European selfdrive canal-boat charter company, is opening its first North American operation in 2018, with a base in Canada serving Ontario’s Rideau Canal. Reservations are now being taken for the season, which runs May through October. Opened in 1832, the canal is a designated UNESCO World Heritage site. With 47 locks over a total 125 miles, it’s the oldest continuously operating canal in North America. It is also a Canadian National Historic Site and a Canadian Heritage River.

The charter platform is a fleet of 16 Le Boat Horizon cruisers. Equipped with bow and stern thrusters for easy maneuvering in and out of locks, the Horizon is also completely fendered for safety and has a capped speed just over 6 mph.

For details, contact Le Boat at www.leboat.com.

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