Low water levels mean fresh closure for locks

Image shows the rows of locks going upwards at Foxton Locks. There is green grass either side of the locks and people walking and standing on both sides of it. The front of red barge boat can be seen approaching the first lock.
Image caption,

Foxton Locks had to temporarily close during the summer

  • Published

The Canal and River Trust has warned it is likely Foxton Locks will need to close again due to low water levels.

The locks, in Leicestershire, were closed temporarily on 29 July due to low rainfall, leaving some boats stuck in the bottom lock.

They were reopened on Monday to allow boaters to get where they need to before winter.

The trust said they will stay open next to "allow enough time for people to get home" but low water levels remained a problem.

Image shows Aaron Atwal standing facing the camera and smiling, wearing a black raincoat.
Image caption,

Aaron Atwal said engineers were seeing what could be done about the problem

Aaron Atwal, boating manager at the trust, said: "We are open as long as we can stay open, I think that's the key message here.

"There will come a time when we'll have to close because we've not had enough rain and our reservoirs are empty."

He added that in terms of the long-term picture "specialist teams are looking into it and looking at our reservoir holdings and what we can do next year to try and ensure that we've got full capacity".

Rebecca Howard is standing facing the camera smiling in front of her red boat and she is wearing a dark green fleece.
Image caption,

Rebecca Howard made the decision to sell her boat two months ago

The closure had left many stranded boaters worried about getting out before Christmas.

Rebecca Howard, 27, was among those looking to move her boat when the locks reopened on Monday.

She told the BBC she had decided to put it up for sale but had not been able to "because it's stuck down here".

Xavier is stood facing the camera with a slight smile, wearing a green fedora and denim shirt with a brown waistcoat over the top. He is stood in front of the canal.
Image caption,

Xavier Sargenti has been paying for two moorings

Xavier Sargenti, 25 was trying to get back to Mancetter in Warwickshire via the Coventry Canal.

He said "For three months I've been paying two moorings because I'd paid upfront in Mancetter and you can't really give that mooring up.

"So I'd paid six months there and to be stuck here means it's been an additional cost."

Get in touch

Tell us which stories we should cover in Leicester

Follow BBC Leicester on Facebook, external, on X, external, or on Instagram, external. Send your story ideas to eastmidsnews@bbc.co.uk, external or via WhatsApp, external on 0808 100 2210.

Related topics

Related internet links