BROADS OF NORFOLK & SUFFOLK***


This ebook was transcribed by Les Bowler.

                         [Picture: Wroxham Broad]

                       Jarrolds’ “Holiday” Series.

                                * * * * *





                               THE HANDBOOK
                                  TO THE
                            RIVERS AND BROADS
                                    OF
                           NORFOLK AND SUFFOLK.


                                    BY
                          G. CHRISTOPHER DAVIES,
  _Author of_ “_Norfolk Broads and Rivers_,” “_The Swan and her Crew_,”
                               _etc., etc_.

                                * * * * *

                          REVISED AND ENLARGED.

                                * * * * *

                           EIGHTEENTH EDITION.

                                * * * * *

                            JARROLD AND SONS,
                    3, PATERNOSTER BUILDINGS, LONDON;
                  LONDON AND EXCHANGE STREETS, NORWICH.

               BRANCHES: 182, KING STREET, GREAT YARMOUTH;
                           THE LIBRARY, CROMER.

                         (_All rights reserved_.)




CONTENTS.

_Chapter_                                                     _Page_
              INTRODUCTION.                                       xi
          I.  THE BROAD DISTRICT.                                 17
         II.  DOWN THE YARE—NORWICH TO REEDHAM.                   22
        III.  REEDHAM TO YARMOUTH.                                43
         IV.  YARMOUTH TO ACLE.                                   51
          V.  ACLE TO WROXHAM.                                    57
         VI.  WROXHAM BROAD.                                      68
        VII.  WROXHAM TO COLTISHALL.                              75
       VIII.  UP THE ANT, TO BARTON AND STALHAM.                  81
         IX.  WOMACK BROAD.                                       91
          X.  HICKLING BROAD.                                     98
         XI.  HORSEY MERE AND SOMERTON BROAD.                    106
        XII.  BACK TO YARMOUTH.                                  114
       XIII.  YARMOUTH TO SOMERLEYTON, UP THE WAVENEY.           117
        XIV.  FROM SOMERLEYTON TO BECCLES.                       124
         XV.  OULTON BROAD.                                      129
        XVI.  ORMESBY AND FRITTON.                               136
                             APPENDIX.
RAILWAY ACCESS TO FISHING STATIONS                               138
NORFOLK AND SUFFOLK FISHERIES ACT                                143
TABLES OF RIVER DISTANCES                                        148
TIDES                                                            151
FISHING GENERALLY                                                151
   ROACH                                                         155
   BREAM                                                         161
YACHTING                                                         165
SHOOTING AND SKATING                                             170
FAUNA OF THE BROADS                                              171

ILLUSTRATIONS.

                                                   _Page_
WROXHAM BROAD                           _Frontispiece_
A POOL IN SURLINGHAM BROAD                            xvi
PULL’S FERRY                                           22
BISHOP’S BRIDGE                                        25
BOOM TOWER                                             26
THORPE GARDENS                                         29
A NORFOLK WHERRY                                       30
ON THE YARE, AT BRAMERTON                              33
ON ROCKLAND BROAD                                      36
LANGLEY DYKE                                           38
ST. NICHOLAS CHURCH, GREAT YARMOUTH                    41
THE QUAY, GREAT YARMOUTH                               45
A “ROW,” GREAT YARMOUTH                                49
ST. BENET’S ABBEY                                      54
COTTAGE, SOUTH WALSHAM BROAD                           58
HORNING VILLAGE                                        60
RANWORTH CHURCH                                        61
HORNING FERRY                                          67
BELAUGH CHURCH                                         73
DYKE NEAR COLTISHALL                                   76
LUDHAM BRIDGE                                          78
RIVER BURE AT HAUTBOIS                                 79
A WOODLAND POOL—IRSTEAD                                82
ENTRANCE—BARTON BROAD                                  87
CARRYING REEDS—BARTON                                  88
BARTON STAITHE                                         90
ORMESBY BROAD—LANDING STAGE                            91
DRAINAGE MILL—RIVER THURNE                             92
RIVER THURNE                                           92
HICKLING BROAD                                         99
DYKE AT POTTER HEIGHAM                                100
HICKLING STAITHE                                      104
MARTHAM BROAD                                         105
SOUND ASLEEP                                          108
SOMERLEYTON HALL                                      120
RIVER WAVENEY                                         128
OULTON BROAD                                          130
FRITTON DECOY                                         137
ORMESBY BROAD—LANDING STAGE                           152

INTRODUCTION.


Since the first appearance of this Handbook, and the larger volume on the
same subject, which the preface to the first edition stated to be in
contemplation, the Broad District has become highly popular.  Each year
the tourist stream increases, but, happily, there is still plenty of
room.  No doubt some of the old _habitués_, who liked to have the whole
landscape to themselves, grumble at the change, but the less selfish
persons, who happily constitute the majority, do not object to seeing a
dozen yachts where formerly they saw but one, or a score of anglers where
in past years but half-a-dozen might be seen.

A large trade has arisen in the letting of yachts, boats, and pleasure
wherries for cruising purposes; but the inn accommodation has made little
advance, and is still too meagre, and insufficient for the demand.  The
yachts have made great strides in speed and in number.  The Norfolk and
Suffolk Yacht Club has flourished exceedingly, and its regattas are
popular.

Artists have found out the charm of the quiet scenery of the Broads, and
visit us in great numbers.  Notably Mr. E. H. Fahey and Miss Osborn have
given exhibitions in London devoted to the district.  Then _littérateurs_
without number have written magazine and newspaper articles, and others,
after a few days’ scamper, have written exhaustive guide-books; and so
the ball, which the present writer set rolling in earnest some years ago,
is helped merrily forward, and the Rivers and Broads of Norfolk and
Suffolk are fast becoming one of the most popular of English playgrounds.

I should like to put the brake on a little in one respect.  One
guide-book writer appears to treat the riverside meadows as commons, and
suggests that yachtsmen should bring lawn-tennis sets and cricket
materials with them.  Pray don’t take such absurd advice.  All riparian
owners adhere stoutly to their just rights.  It must be remembered that
the rights of the public are limited to _passage along_ the navigable
rivers and the navigable broads, and the use of the banks of navigable
waters for mooring purposes and for towing.  The soil of the greater part
of the river-beds is vested in the Crown, therefore angling is free to
the public.  Strictly speaking, the shooting over the Crown rivers is
free, but this does not give persons a right to shoot an inch over the
banks.  Looking to the fact that the Bure is very narrow, and passes
through private game preserves, let me earnestly entreat visitors not to
fire off guns either at birds or at bottles (which last amusement appears
to be a favourite one) above Acle bridge.  The sport to the visitors is
_nil_, while the annoyance to the riparian owners is extreme.  The
riparian owners are generally willing to afford the well-behaved public
all reasonable facilities for enjoyment.  Let this be repaid by the
public refraining from potting away at waterhens and pigeons, or other
birds on the banks.

It may be well to add that, up to about the year 1830, the Broads and wet
marshes were simply waste; but by the Enclosure Acts and Awards, these
watery commons were allotted and divided among the neighbouring
landowners.  In some cases the rights of navigation and staithes were
expressly reserved.  In others no reservation was made, and the Broads
are absolutely in the hands of private owners.  In other cases again,
staithes and rights of way have grown into disuse, and channels have
become choked up by mud and vegetation.  In no case, however, has the
right of the Crown to the bed of the common river been affected or
changed by the Enclosure Awards.

A great point to remember is, that the possessors of the Broads set as
much store by their bulrushes and water lilies as the admiring visitor;
therefore, do not gather any off the Broads.  All flowers and grasses
which grow in such luxuriance by the riverside, within the river wall, or
the three yards from the river margin where the navigator has an
indefeasible right, may as well be gathered for pleasure as die and rot.
Here there is abundance for everyone; but to penetrate into quiet nooks
of Broads and help oneself to other people’s valued property, is an
indefensible act, which by oft repetition has much irritated owners
against the public.  It is in this respect also that visitors from a
distance are most prone to err, because, without reflection, it appears
that no harm is done.  Nor would there be much harm in a single instance,
but “many a little makes a mickle.”

As a general rule, visitors from a distance behave exceedingly well,
being educated persons with a due sense of law and order.  The bottle
shooters, coot potters, and noisy revellers, the swan’s egg robbers and
grebe destroyers, the persons who use one’s boat-houses as luncheon rooms
or dust bins are, unfortunately, home products.  Of course, I hear of all
offences that are committed, and by some people I am actually saddled
with the responsibility of any breach of good manners on the part of the
public, because I am supposed to have brought the latter to the Broads.
I therefore beg the large unknown public (of whose friendliness to me as
an author I have had so many proofs), when they visit the Broads, not to
allow the exhilaration of an enjoyable holiday to interfere with a due
propriety of behaviour.

The hitherto unwritten rules of the Rivers and Broads are these:—

Do not, in the neighbourhood of other yachts or houses, indulge in songs
and revelry after eleven p.m., even at regatta times.

Bathe only before eight o’clock in the morning, if in sight of other
vessels or moored in a frequented part of the river.  Ladies are not
expected to turn out before eight, but after that time they are entitled
to be free from any annoyance.  Young men who lounge in a nude state on
boats while ladies are passing (and I have known Norwich youths to do
this) may be saluted with dust shot, or the end of a quant.

Adhere strictly to the rule of the road when boating, according to the
instructions contained in a subsequent chapter, and when angling, moor
out of the way of sailing craft, as afterwards explained.

Do not throw straw or paper overboard to float to leeward and become
offensive; but burn, or take care to sink all rubbish.

Do not light fires, place stoves, or throw refuse on the banks in the
path of others, whose yachts may be moored to the same bank.

Steam launches must not run at full speed past yachts moored to the bank,
particularly when the occupants of the latter have things spread out for
a meal.

Don’t take guns on board unless you have leave to shoot on somebody’s
land.

Remember that sound travels a long way on the water, and do not criticise
the people you may encounter with too loud a voice.

Don’t go on a friend’s yacht with nailed shoes (the commodore of a Thames
sailing club once came on board mine in cricket shoes armed with spikes).
Don’t knock the ashes out of your pipe into his boat, and don’t catch
small fish and litter his decks with them, leaving them for him to clean
up after you.

                  [Picture: A pool in Burlingham Broad]

Don’t moor outside another yacht without the permission of its owner.

Ladies, please don’t gather armfuls of flowers, berries, and grasses
which, when faded, you leave in the boat or yacht for the unfortunate
skipper to clear up.  Don’t play the piano in season and out of season
(the reedbird’s song is sweeter on the Broads); and don’t turn out before
eight o’clock in the morning when other yachts are near.

Observing all these simple maxims, any number of visitors will find
plenty of room for their own enjoyment, without offence to anyone.

               [Picture: View of Sailing boats and Yachts]




CHAPTER I.
THE “BROAD” DISTRICT.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] It is somewhat difficult to analyse
the charm which the “Broad” District of Norfolk and Suffolk has for those
who have once made its acquaintance in the only way in which an intimate
knowledge of it can be gained.

In a journey through it by rail, you see nothing but its flatness; walk
along its roads, you see the dullest side of it; but take to its
water-highways, and the glamour of it steals over you, if you have aught
of the love of nature, the angler, or the artist in you.

One reason may be that the rivers are highways.  From them you view
things as from a different standpoint; along them flows a current of life
differing from that on either rail or road: the wind is your servant,
sometimes your master; there is an uncertainty in the issue of the day’s
proceedings, which to an idle holidaymaker is most delightful, and the
slowly-moving water is more like a living companion than any other
inanimate thing can be.  Houses are few and far between.  Oftentimes
within the circle of your sight there is neither house nor man visible.
A grey church tower, a windmill, or the dark-brown sail of a wherry in
the distance breaks the sense of utter loneliness, but the scene is wild
enough to enchain the imagination of many.  Long miles of sinuous
gleaming river, marshes gay with innumerable flowering plants, wide
sheets of water bordered with swaying reeds, yachts or wherries, boats,
fish, fowl, and rare birds and plants, and exquisite little bits to paint
and sketch—these are the elements out of which a pleasant holiday may be
made.

I wrote these lines whilst at anchor on Salhouse Little Broad.  The
evening was most still and placid, and the boat lay motionless among the
lily leaves which covered the water around.  The white lilies had so
closed their petals that but the faintest morsels of white peeped out;
but the yellow, which were most numerous, did not close so completely,
and the dark interspaces of water were thickly starred with the golden
globes.  Beyond the lily leaves was a belt of tall reeds, swayed only by
the birds which have their home among them.  The yellow iris flowers made
the narrow neck of marsh ablaze with colour.  Bounding the view was a
cordon of trees; on the one side a wooded bank; on the other, but out of
sight, the river.  A rustic boathouse nestled amid the trees, white swans
lighted up the dark shades, moorhens led their broods across the pool;
the western clouds were edged with sunset glories, and the reflections in
the water were as perfect as the things they copy.  But though there was
absolute calm, the lily leaves were not still, but moved tremulously, and
sent ripples on either side.  Looking closely, you saw that the leaves
were covered with small insects, and the small roach were busily plucking
them off the under side.  You could hear the little snap or suck the
fishes made, and once you caught the sound you found the air was full of
these snaps, and a most weird effect the sound gave.  The roach crowded
eagerly round to eat the crumbs that I threw them.  So fearless were
they, that when I put my hand into the water and held it quite still for
a while, they came and snapped at my fingers, and funny little tickling
scrapes they gave.  I actually succeeded in grasping one or two of the
boldest.  A piece of paper, which had been crumpled up and thrown on the
water, was being urged to and fro by the hungry little fish, who tried to
find it eatable, and tugged at it bravely.

The clouds darkened.  I went into my cabin as a squall of wind and rain
came on.  The thunder grew louder and louder, and there, alone, with the
tempest raging, I could yet write that the end of the evening was as
pleasant as the beginning, so great to me is the charm of the water.

I slung my hammock, hoping that on the following day the sun would shine,
the wind would blow, and the hours would pass as quickly as the boat
sailed, and slept as sound as man may.

It has happened that I have written a good deal about these waters—too
much, some people say.  One result has been that I have been pretty well
overpowered with correspondence arising from persons making enquiries
about the district, with a view to visiting it; therefore, when the
publishers requested me to write a kind of handbook or guide to the
Broads and Rivers, I thought it a good idea, in that enquirers might, by
buying such a book, save themselves the trouble of writing to me, and
getting necessarily short and inadequate replies.  I am afraid, however,
the guide-book style is rather beyond me, and I shall be most at home if
I try to convey the requisite information by describing one of the
numerous cruises in which I have sailed as guide to those friends who
have trusted their holidays to my care, and I will select one lasting but
a fortnight, during which time we covered most of the available ground.

Before doing so, a few words, descriptive of the situation of these
rivers and lakes, will not be amiss.

From Yarmouth, looking inland, three main water-highways radiate.  The
chief is the Yare, flowing from the westward; then comes the Bure,
flowing from the north-westward, and having her large tributaries, the
Ant and the Thurne, flowing from the northward.  From the south-west come
the clear waters of the Waveney.  All these rivers are navigable for
considerable distances, and on the Bure and its tributaries the greater
number of the Broads are situate.  These Broads are large shallow lakes,
connected with the rivers, and are many of them navigable.  Flat marshes
follow the lines of the rivers, and while higher and well-wooded ground
rises near the upper portions of the rivers, near the sea the country is
perfectly flat, and vessels sailing on all three rivers are visible at
the same time.

The level of the marsh is frequently below that of the rivers, and at the
outlet of each main drain is a drainage pump, or turbine wheel, sometimes
worked by a windmill, and sometimes by steam, which pumps the water out
of the drains into the rivers.

The fall of the river is about four inches to the mile.  The ebb and flow
of the tide are felt for thirty miles inland, but its rise and fall are
very little indeed.  There are no impediments to navigation of any
consequence, so it may be imagined what a “happy hunting ground” this is
to the boat-sailor, the naturalist, and the angler.

                [Picture: Decorative chapter end divider]

               [Picture: Decorative chapter header divider]




CHAPTER II.
DOWN THE YARE.  NORWICH TO REEDHAM.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] “Do you mean to say,” said Wynne,
“that these Broads are worth my giving up a few days to seeing them?”

“If you will give up a fortnight, I promise you that you will find it too
short.  You went to the Friesland Meres years ago, and enjoyed it.  You
will like these quite as well.”

                         [Picture: Pull’s Ferry]

So he promised to come for a fortnight, rather reluctantly, and when, on
his arrival in Norwich, he took a preliminary canter by rail to Yarmouth,
he refused to say anything about what he thought of the country, which
looked ominous.  We had hired a ten-ton cutter, and she was lying at
Thorpe, a mile and a half below the city.  The man we had engaged rowed
the jolly-boat up for us, and as Wynne was enthusiastic about old
buildings, we rowed him up the river to the New Mills, a very old mill,
which spans the river Wensum near its entrance into the city.  From
thence we came back along the narrow sinuous river, overhung with
buildings, many of them ancient and picturesque, under numerous bridges,
wharves where wherries were loading or unloading, using the half-lowered
mast as cranes, past the Boom Tower, still keeping watch and ward over
the river; quaint Bishops’ Bridge; Pull’s Ferry, where there is a ruined
water gate, often sketched and photographed; past the railway station,
into the reach parallel with King Street, where gables, and archways, and
courts delight the painter.  Here, on the left bank, is another Boom
Tower, built of flint, the universal building-stone of Norfolk, faced by
another tower on the opposite bank, whence runs a fine piece of the old
city wall up the hill to another and larger tower, in better
preservation, on the summit.  Then we next passed the very extensive
works of Messrs. J. and J. Colman, and below them innumerable stacks of
choice wood, out of which the boxes to contain the mustard, etc., are
made.

                        [Picture: Bishop’s Bridge]

                          [Picture: Boom Tower]

“You speak of this as the Wensum,” said Wynne; “I thought it was the
Yare.”

“This river is the Wensum, but this smaller stream coming in on the right
is the true Yare, and from this point the united river takes the name of
the Yare.  This spot is called Trowse Hythe, and half a mile up it, where
there is a mill, was once a famous spot for smelts, where they were
caught by large casting nets, used at night by torch-light, but the town
sewage has effectually spoiled the smelting.  The pool below the New
Mills was also a place where the smelts were caught in large numbers, but
it is not so good now.”

                        [Picture: Thorpe Gardens]

Presently we came to Thorpe, where a bend of the river has been cut off
by two railway bridges, and a straight new cut made for the navigation.
We took the old river, and Wynne was charmed with the view which then
unfolded itself.  The long curve of the river was lined on the outer bank
by picturesque houses, with gardens leading to the water’s edge, while
behind them rose a well-wooded bank.  In the autumn of 1879 this reach
was found to be swarming with pike, and it speedily swarmed with anglers,
who had generally good sport until, apparently, all the pike were caught.
At intervals since, there have been similar immigrations of pike to this
reach when tides unusually high or salt drive the fish up from the lower
reaches.  At the lower end of the reach is a favourite resort on summer
evenings, a waterside inn, known as Thorpe Gardens, where we pulled up.
Here there are also boat-letting stations, where cruising yachts can be
hired.

Just through the bridge, {29} we joined the main river again, and noticed
several yachts moored against the bank, amongst which was ours.

Wynne stepped on board, curious to inspect a Norfolk yacht, and he freely
commented on her enormous counter, short keel, great open well, and tall
pole-mast.  In a short time we stowed all our belongings, and set
sail—mainsail, jib, and topsail—the spread of canvas rather startling
Wynne, who had only been used to sea yachts.  There was a light
north-westerly wind, and we glided swiftly away before it.  But ere we
had sailed a couple of hundred yards, Wynne insisted on our stopping to
sketch the White House, at Whitlingham, which, with the trees on the
hill, the wood-shaded reach of river, and the huge brown sails of the
wherries, formed a picture we might well wish to carry away.  Wynne often
stopped in this way, to the intense disgust of our man, who liked to make
his passages quickly, and had no sympathy with artistic amusements.

The dyke leading out of the river by the White House is a regular harbour
for pike, which is continually restocked from the river.  It is private
property, but just at the mouth of the dyke, in the navigable river, is a
good spot.  At least three hundred pike were taken here last winter by
Norwich artisans.

“What graceful craft these wherries, as you call them, are!” remarked
Wynne, as he rapidly sketched the high-peaked sail of one which was
slowly beating to windward or “turning,” as the vernacular hath it, up
the narrow river.

[Picture: A Norfolk Wherry] And he was quite right.  There is not a line
that is not graceful about a Norfolk wherry.  She has a long low hull
with a rising sheer to stem and stern, which are both pointed.  She has a
tall and massive mast supporting a single large sail which is without a
boom, but has a very long gaff launching out boldly at an angle of
forty-five degrees.  The curve of the brown or black sail from the lofty
peak to the sheet is on all points of sailing a curve of beauty.  The
wherries are trading crafts carrying from twenty to fifty tons of cargo.
They are manned generally by one man, who sometimes has the aid of his
wife or children.  They are nearly as fast as yachts, sail closer to the
wind, and are wonderfully handy.  The mast is weighted at the keel with
one or two tons of lead, and is so well balanced that a lad can lower or
raise it with the greatest ease, when it is necessary to pass under a
bridge.  Wherries are the most conspicuous objects in a Norfolk broad
landscape, and are in sight for miles, as they follow the winding courses
of the rivers, often nothing but the sail visible above the green marsh.

Very many of these wherries have been converted into sailing house boats
or pleasure barges, and so constitute most admirable floating homes for
those who like cruising with greater comfort than small yachts can give.

It was an hour before we got under way again, and when, after sailing
down the long straight reach by Whitlingham, we came in sight of the
eminence known as Postwick Grove, Wynne wished to land in order that he
might see the view from the top.  The man burst into open grumbling, so
we asked him if the trip were undertaken for his pleasure or ours, and on
his reluctantly admitting that it was for ours, we told him it was our
pleasure to do as we liked, and he resigned himself to his fate.  The
watermen on these rivers are very civil, but they look with disfavour
upon anything which interferes with actual sailing.

Well, the view from Postwick was worth seeing.  The curving reaches of
the river, animated with yachts, wherries, and boats, lay beneath us, and
the green marshes were bounded by the woods of Thorpe, Whitlingham, and
Bramerton, while the ruined church of Whitlingham stood boldly on the
brow of the opposite hill.

Under way again, we presently reached Bramerton, where the “Wood’s End”
public-house offers good cheer to the wherryman and boating-man.

The pleasure-steamers which run between Norwich and Yarmouth afford a
quick but less pleasant way of seeing the river, and stop at Bramerton
nearly every day in the week.

Now the higher ground falls away from the river on each side of us, and
the belt of marshes widens, the river is higher than the surface of the
land, and the water is lifted out of the many drains and dykes by means
of turbine wheels, worked by the windmills which form such conspicuous
objects in the landscape, and by more pretentious steam drainage mills.

                   [Picture: On the Yare, at Bramerton]

Surlingham Ferry, 6 miles by river from Norwich, next came into view.
The house, with its picturesque gables, lies in the shadow of a group of
fine trees.  A horse and cart was being ferried across on the huge raft
as we approached, and the chain was only just dropped in time for us to
pass.

There is a good inn at the Ferry, with limited but comfortable staying
accommodation; and excellent roach fishing is often obtainable.  The
shore above the Ferry on the same side is suitable for mooring yachts to,
as there is a fair depth of water close to the bank.

“What numbers of boats there are with people fishing?” said Wynne.  “Do
they all catch anything?”

“Oh, yes, any quantity, as far as number goes, of roach, and bream, and
some good fish too, but the larger fish are caught in the deeper water,
lower down.”

Coldham Hall is the next fishing station of importance.  There is a good
inn there, and plenty of boats for hire at a cheap rate.  Fishing and
other boats can also be obtained at Messrs. H. Flowers and Co.’s new
boating station, where yachts can be moored and laid up.  As the railway
station (Brundall) is close to it, it is very convenient for anglers.
The mooring places at Brundall and Coldham Hall are not many, as the
banks are very shoal.  In the reach between Brundall and Coldham Hall
only the middle third of the river is navigable for yachts; and the same
may be said of the long reach below Coldham Hall.  We could see
half-a-dozen fishing boats under the lee of the point above the station.
It seems a favourite place, for I never passed it without seeing
fishermen there.  But as the man had to sail the yacht round the great
curve of the river, we took a short cut across Surlingham Broad in the
jolly.

This Broad lies within a horse-shoe bend of the river, and has a
navigable channel across it.  It is not deep enough, however, for yachts
or laden wherries.  The Broad is largely affected by the tide, which
sometimes leaves its shallows exposed.  The river, as I should have said,
is tidal up to Norwich, and the force of the tide increases with every
deepening of Yarmouth Haven.  We rowed up the dyke which leads on to the
Broad, a small sheet of water, overgrown with weeds and very shallow, but
a capital nursery for fish and fowl.  The fishing upon it is preserved.
Rowing across it, we entered another dyke, and emerged into the river
again, and caught up the yacht.

                       [Picture: On Rockland Broad]

Snipe abound on the marshes here, and their drumming can always be heard
in the early summer.  The flat, far-reaching marshes glowed with a
thousand tints of flower and grass, and the iris gleamed brightly in the
lush margins of the river.  We sailed quietly on, down the curving
reaches of the widening river, watching the slow-seeming flight of the
heron, the splash of fish, the bending reeds, and the occasional
boat-loads of anglers, until we came to the mouth of a dyke, about a mile
long, up which we again rowed in the jolly, to explore Rockland Broad,
where the open water is much more extensive than at Surlingham.  Here
there are several eel-fishers’ floating abodes, Noah’s-ark-like
structures, with nets and “liggers” dangling about them.  The fishing and
shooting on the Broad are, at present, open to all.

This Broad is also much affected by the tide, as, notwithstanding its
distance from the river, there are numerous connecting dykes permitting
easy flow and re-flow of water.

Back in the yacht again, we reached Buckenham Ferry (ten and a half
miles), a favourite angling rendezvous, with a railway station of the
same name close by.  A long row of trees on the left bank is the cause of
daily trouble to wherrymen and sailormen, as it shuts off the wind.  The
man who plants trees by the side of a navigable river, where the
navigation depends upon the wind, is the very reverse of a benefactor to
mankind, and only selfishness or thoughtlessness can permit such an act.

There is fair mooring for yachts just below the Inn, on the same side,
but they must be kept well off the shore by poles, or as the tide ebbs
they will strand and perhaps fall over.  The Ferry Inn is noted for its
comfort; and its limited staying accommodation is good.  The fishing is
very good both up and down the river, and there are good boats for hire
for fishing purposes.

The river now becomes very wide and deep, and the shoals near the banks,
which abound in the higher reaches, are not so frequent.  I would call
the especial attention of the river authorities to the disgraceful state
of the river as far as Buckenham Ferry.  Each year the shoals and weeds
increase, and the channel narrows, until in some places not more than a
third of the river-width is available for the navigation.  The natural
consequence will be that the navigation must gradually cease to be made
use of, as it becomes a matter of difficulty, and the railway will take
the trade, which might be kept to the river if a more energetic care of
the navigable stream were taken.  This is a most serious matter, and
ought to be attended to.

                         [Picture: Langley Dyke]

Next is Langley Dyke, near which are the reaches of the river where the
principal regattas are held, and by the river side is Cantley Red House
(fourteen miles).  Cantley railway station is very close to the river,
and as the water is deep close to the bank, and there is some fairly firm
ground, this is a favourite yachting station, with good mooring to the
banks.  Comfortable quarters may be had at the Red House, and the fishing
is good all about.  A little lower down, on the same side of the river,
is another house, “Peart’s,” where one may obtain comfortable
accommodation, and a “dock” where small boats may be safely left.

We delayed so long on our way that the wind was falling, as it usually
does towards five o’clock on summer days: the tide had also turned, and
we had it against us, so our progress was slow.  We passed the mouth of
the Chet on our right, navigable some four miles up to Loddon.  Its mouth
is marked by Hardley Cross, which forms the boundary between the Norwich
and Yarmouth jurisdictions over the river.  We barely made headway as a
public-house on the left, called Reedham Ferry, was reached, and a little
lower down we lay to against the “rond,” or bank, and made all snug for
the night.  A little further is Reedham village (eighteen miles), which
is picturesquely situated on high ground on the north bank of the river.
The railway station is close by, and is the junction between the
Yarmouth, Lowestoft, and Norwich lines.  There is staying accommodation
to be had at Reedham.  Yachts can be moored against the south bank above
the bridge, but should not be left unguarded, as the tide runs strong,
and wherries tacking through the bridge often jam up against the bank.

[Picture: Roach] The stove was soon alight, and the kettle on, while we
walked to the village for eggs and milk.  As the gloaming deepened, Wynne
grew poetical over the scene of wide space there was about us, filled
then with an orange glow from the west, while the swallows skimmed the
river, and struck red drops of spray from the surface.  Then when the
awning was spread over the stern sheets, and the lamp lit up the snug
cabin, Wynne smoked contentedly, to the envy of the writer, who cannot
smoke; and it was later than it ought to have been ere we lay down in our
respective bunks, and were lulled to sleep by the ripple of the water
against the planks.

             [Picture: St. Nicholas’ Church, Great Yarmouth]

                   [Picture: Decorative Chapter header]




CHAPTER III.
REEDHAM TO YARMOUTH.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] The next morning we were up betimes to
take the last of the ebb down to Yarmouth, and catch the tide up the
Bure.  As there was a fresh breeze from the east, we had to tack nearly
the whole of the way.

At Reedham there is a swing bridge, over which the railway passes, and if
the wind is foul it is always a difficult matter to sail through,
particularly if the tide be against you.  On the present occasion we had
the tide with us; therefore, on reaching the opening of the bridge, we
could shoot the yacht up into the wind, and carry her way on until
through, when her head was paid off on the proper tack.

“I tell you what, these Norfolk waters are capital places to learn to
steer in.  An inch either way, and we should have torn our sail against
the bridge.”

“Yes, and what with getting the utmost on every tack, without going
ashore, shaving wherries by a yard or two, and watching for every puff as
it comes over the grasses on the marsh, so as to make the most of it,
there is more fun in sailing here than on more open waters.”

Just below the bridge is the _New Cut_, a perfectly straight canal, three
miles long, connecting the Yare with the Waveney, and so saving a round
of some eighteen miles, which would otherwise be necessary to get from
the one river to the other, as a reference to the map will show.

Now came a steady beat for several miles, until we reached the Berney
Arms (on the right is the mouth of the river Waveney), when Breydon water
opened out before us, with Yarmouth in the distance.  When the tide is
in, this is a remarkable sheet of water, four and a-half miles long by a
mile broad.  There are mud flats on either side of the wide channel,
where herons and sea-fowl greatly congregate.  The strong wind against
the tide raises a respectable sea, and the tacks being longer we made
rapid progress, and the motion was exhilarating.  A sail across Breydon
in a strong wind, is a thing I always consider a great treat.  The
channel is marked out by stout posts at intervals of two hundred yards or
thereabouts, but it is not safe to sail too close to all these posts
unless the tide be high, as the shoals stretch out beyond them, and, in
default of local knowledge, it is best to give them a wide berth.

                   [Picture: The Quay, Great Yarmouth]

The spires of Yarmouth grow more distinct, and at last we arrived at its
quays, just as the tide was on the turn.  We made fast alongside a wherry
moored to the quay, and while our man, with the assistance of one of the
loiterers on the quay, lowered the mast, and quanted the yacht up the
narrow mouth of the Bure and under two bridges, we took a stroll about
the quays, the quaint “rows” and streets of the old part of the town, and
had a peep at the splendid church.

The ebb tide runs very strongly, and, to avoid being carried against the
bridge which spans the contracted harbour, it is prudent for the stranger
to have an anchor in readiness.  The public quays are on the north side
next the town, and a berth alongside a wherry or other yacht can be
chosen.  There are private moorings laid down alongside the south shore
off “Cobholm Island,” and it is customary, in case of need, to bring up
to one of these, if vacant; but a yacht must not be moored there, or
alongside another yacht there, without permission.  If the visitor is
nervous or inexperienced, he can avail himself of the services of one of
the watermen loafing about the quays, to help him through the fixed
bridges which block the entrance to the river Bure, which here enters the
harbour.

[Picture: Bream] The river bends to the south at an acute angle with its
former course, and for about three miles runs very close to, and almost
parallel with the sea.  It is interesting to row past the wharves and
quays, where many quaint and picturesque bits present themselves, but on
account of the rapid flow of the tide, it is not a part of the river much
frequented by the river yachts.

                    [Picture: A “row”, Great Yarmouth]

As Yarmouth has guide-books all to itself, it is not necessary here to
expatiate upon its attractions.

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




CHAPTER IV.
YARMOUTH TO ACLE.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] On going back to the yacht, we found
that she was moored in the North River, or Bure, having been quanted
under the two fixed bridges, and the mast was being slowly raised.  The
big pole masts of these river yachts are very heavy and unwieldy, and I
am always glad when the operation of lowering and raising them again is
safely over.  Sometimes they have lead weights permanently fixed to the
heel of the mast (which latter swings in a tabernacle), but generally,
lumps of ballast have to be shifted and hooked on, a troublesome
“pinch-finger” business which I avoid in my own yacht by using a tackle
and blocks.

Of course the wind was fair, as our course up the Bure lies north for a
mile or two, and then due west as far as Acle; and it is well when it is
fair, for the next twelve miles are very uninteresting.  There is nothing
whatever to see, except eel sets and boats.  These Noah’s-ark-like craft
are generally made out of old sea boats, with a hut built on them.  They
are shoved a little way up a dyke, out of the way of wherries, and the
eel net is stretched across the stream, waiting for the eels, in their
annual migrations seawards, to swim into it.  Those two wooden buoys, one
on each side of the river, mark its position.

Almost at our first starting, we got aground; hard and fast too, for the
shoals are frequent hereabout.  We waited for the tide to float us off,
and to help it we sent a rope ashore to a man on the bank.  The rope was
not quite long enough, and Wynne undertook to bend another to it.  The
man set all his weight on it, the knot parted, and the man disappeared on
the other side of the embankment, where there was, we knew, a deep ditch.
Presently he reappeared, dripping wet, and in a towering passion.  He
refused to assist us any more, so we waited a little longer, and as the
tide rose, we were again afloat.

Once round the bend by the Two-mile House we sped away at top speed to
the westward, with frequent jibes as the river bends.  The great boom
came over with tremendous force, and made the yacht quiver again,
although we eased it all we could by rallying in the sheet.  The low,
dull banks passed rapidly by, the only land-marks being solitary houses,
known as the three-mile, four-mile, five-mile, six-mile, and seven-mile
houses.  Then we came to Stokesby Ferry, where there is a group of
houses, which would make a picture, and an inn, where there is tolerable
accommodation, called the Ferry House.  Then, on the right, are some
sluices, marking the entrance to the “Muck Fleet,” a shallow, muddy dyke,
only navigable for small boats, which leads to the fine group of Broads
known as Ormesby and Filby Broads.  Of these we shall have something to
say afterwards.  A separate excursion has to be made to them, as they do
not come within the round of a yachting trip, unless you drag your jolly
over the sluices, and row the four-miles-long Muck Fleet.  Having once
tried this experiment, I cannot recommend others to do it.

A mile and a half further on, and we came to Acle bridge, twelve miles
from Yarmouth.  Here is a fixed bridge, where the mast has to be lowered.
When we got through this we stopped for dinner, and then, although we
might have sailed up to Wroxham with the wind before dark, we were fated
to spend the night here, in consequence of a freak of Wynne’s.  In the
exuberance of his spirits, he attempted to jump a wide dyke, using the
quant as a leaping-pole.  As a matter of course, the pole sank deep into
the mud, and when it attained an upright position, it refused to depart
from it, and so checked Wynne in mid-air.

“Whatever is going to happen now?” he exclaimed, and after a frantic
gymnastic exercise on the top of the quant, it slowly bent, and finally
broke, depositing Wynne on his back in the middle of the dyke.

We fairly shrieked with laughter, and, as Wynne said, it served him
right, for laughing as he did at the man rolling into the ditch, when the
rope gave way.

As we had to get a new quant from Yarmouth, we had to wait here until the
morning, and amuse ourselves with fishing for bream, of which large
quantities may be caught here, and of good weight.  Acle is a capital
fishing station, and is now accessible from Norwich by the new line to
Yarmouth, branching off at Brundall.  Acle is a charming village, and
offers many residential facilities to those who are fond of country life
and aquatic amusements.  It is within easy reach of all the best Broads,
lying on the rivers Bure and Thurne, and not far by water to Yarmouth.
There are three good inns—the “King’s Head,” the “Queen’s Head,” and the
“Angel.”  The most convenient is the one by Acle bridge (the “Angel”),
kept by Mr. Rose, who well understands and can supply the needs of
yachting men and anglers.  There is staying accommodation at the inn, a
wagonnette to meet the trains, fishing boats to let, and every attention
from the host.  As there is good mooring to both banks, especially above
the bridge, and the river is wide and deep, Acle is rapidly becoming a
favourite yachting and angling station.

                       [Picture: St. Benet’s Abbey]

Owing to the wide breadth of marsh there is a true wind for sailing, and
the reaches above Acle to Thurnemouth are wider and finer than any other
parts of the Bure.

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




CHAPTER V.
ACLE TO WROXHAM.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] The wind, on the next morning, was
from the north-west, a head wind for us, and there was little of it; so
little, indeed, that we could not stem the tide, and had to quant for
three miles.  Then we came to the mouth of the river Thurne, leading to
Hickling Broad, up which we intended to sail on our return from Wroxham.
The Bure turns off sharply to the west, and as the wind gradually gained
in strength, we were able to dispense with the unwelcome labour of
quanting.

The first noteworthy spot that we came to was St. Benet’s Abbey, situated
on the north bank of the river.  Once upon a time it must have been a
mighty building, covering much ground, as its scattered ruins testify.
Now nought reminds us of its founder, sensible King Canute, but a fine
archway, with some contiguous walls, upon which a windmill has been
erected, but which is now itself in ruins, and two massive parallel
walls, standing about two hundred yards to the eastward; also, there are
arched doorways, and strong walls in the house by the riverside, whose
cool recesses speak of ancient days.  This house was once a public-house;
we landed to get a drink of buttermilk, and lay in a store of eggs and
butter.  We also climbed to the top of the ruined arch, whence a wide
prospect is visible, and one may count a goodly number of churches.

Opposite the ruins is a dyke, down which a wherry turned.

“Where does that lead to?” asked Wynne.

“To South Walsham Broad, which is a mile and a half down it; and,
although wherries can sail down, this boat, which draws about five feet
six inches, cannot.  Still, we can go down in the jolly, or, if you like,
stay here, and fish for perch.  This is a noted spot, because there is a
hard gravelly bottom, and, by the way, we might have stopped at Thurne
mouth, which is a good place for pike.”

“I like exploring these dykes, so I vote we go down to the Broad.”

                 [Picture: Cottage, South Walsham Broad]

So we started, and overtook the wherry, which had been aground, and she
gave us a tow down.  The Broad, which was formerly one sheet of water,
has, by the growth of reeds and plants, been divided into two portions.
There was nothing particular to be seen in the first one; but on rowing
into the further Broad, we saw a cottage on the right bank, which, with
its long, low thatch, deep eaves, its honeysuckles and roses, its trees
and its landing-place, formed a most tempting object for a sketch, and
one the artist would do well to seek.  The Broad is private, save for the
navigation across one part of it to South Walsham, and the fishing is
preserved.  The old course of the river formerly made a horse-shoe bend
down towards South Walsham, and the present straight channel by the Abbey
ruins is an artificial cut.  The site of the Abbey is an island of solid
ground in the midst of a great extent of marsh.  When we got back to the
boat we saw the man fast asleep on the counter, with his rod in the
river, in tow of a large perch, weighing one pound and a half, which we
secured.

About a mile further, on the right hand, as we ascend the river, is the
mouth of the river Ant, leading to Barton Broad and Statham, of which
more anon.

“The river is getting uncommonly pretty,” said Wynne, “and this slow
tacking enables me to see it to advantage, eh!  How close we steer to the
fishing boats! and, pray tell me, why do fishermen in Norfolk wear such
extraordinary hats!  Here is another dyke.  Can we sail down it?”

“If we only drew four feet of water, we could go on to Ranworth Broad.”

“Then, on my next cruise here, I will get a yacht that does not draw more
than a wherry does.  It is absurd to have such deep draught yachts where
there are so many shallows.  Let us row down.”

Ranworth Broad is a very pretty Broad, but grown up so that it is divided
into two.  The eastern half is navigable to the village of Ranworth, but
otherwise private, as is the other portion of the Broad.  This is very
strictly preserved, on account of the wild fowl which frequent it.  It is
a favourite fishing place, although permission has first to be obtained
from the owner, who, however, cannot be expected to give leave
indiscriminately.  It is not worth while seeking to fish in private
waters in this district, for other fish than pike, seeing that the free
fishing in the rivers is as good as any one could wish for.  From the
eastern part of the Broad, a very pretty picture, with the church in the
background, on a wooded height, is visible.

                        [Picture: Horning Village]

Then to Horning Ferry, where, as we approached, a horse and cart were
being ferried across, and we had to lie to for a few minutes, until the
huge raft was safely across, and the chain lowered.  The public-house at
the ferry is a very comfortable one, with a nice sitting-room and garden
in front, and is a capital place to make one’s head-quarters.  It is
about nine miles drive from Norwich, and four from Wroxham railway
station.  A little further on is Horning village, a picturesque group of
houses, straggling along the river bank, with a large windmill on the
hill behind, making a good picture.  Here our ears were greeted with the
song which, for generations past, the small children of the village have
chanted to passing yachts—

    “Ho! John Barleycorn: Ho! John Barleycorn,
    All day long I raise my song
    To old John Barleycorn.”

That is all.  It is simple and effective, and extracts coins from too
easily pleased holiday-makers.

                        [Picture: Ranworth Church]

The river turns to the left, at right angles to its former course, as it
passes the village, and on the north bank is a reedy sheet of water,
called Hoveton Little Broad, where there is a small colony of the
black-headed gulls.  On the south side is a small, but pretty Broad,
called the Decoy Broad.  Then the river turns still more sharply to the
left, and we sailed due south, after having come due north by Horning.

“What a number of anglers there are!” said Wynne, “and the singular thing
is, that they always seem to be catching fish.—How many have you caught?”
he called out to two fishermen in a boat.

“About six stone, sir,” was the reply; “but we have been at it since
daylight, and they bite very slow.”

“I must say I think Norfolk a very favoured county, with all these
splendid rivers and free fishing; and one place seems as good as
another.”

“Yes, as long as you pick deepish water, and get under a lee.”

“Do they groundbait the place where they fish?”

“Not before they come, but while fishing they throw in a good deal of
meal, mixed with water and clay.  If they were to groundbait one or two
suitable places on both sides of the river, so as to be sure of getting a
lee, for a day or two before they fish, they ought to get even more than
they do now.  Here is a boat-load trailing for jack.  Ask how many they
have caught.”

Wynne did so, and the reply was, “Fifteen, but all small: they run from
two pounds up to seven.”

“People here either fish for pike with a live bait or trail with a spoon.
You rarely see anybody spinning by casting, or even using a dead bait on
a spinning flight.  Now, I know that in the hands of one or two people, a
paternoster has proved very deadly.  With three large minnows on your
tackle, and roving about close to the bank, you may get many pike and
perch.”

“I’ll try it in the morning before breakfast,” said Wynne.

In another mile the river again turns westward.  On the north is a very
large Broad, called Hoveton Great Broad, whence comes the clangour of a
large colony of black-headed gulls.  The Broad is not navigable for
anything of greater draught than a small sailing boat; and now all access
to it has been barred by chains across the dykes, and it is strictly
preserved, chiefly in consequence, it is said, of the disturbance of the
gulls by visitors.  The gulls flew, screaming, overhead, in a white
cloud, so that the air seemed filled with them, and the half-grown young
ones floated on the water, as lightly as thistle-down.  Although this
colony is nothing like so large as the famous one at Scoulton Mere, near
Hingham, in Norfolk, yet it is extremely interesting, and particularly
when the eggs are being hatched off, and the little fluffy brown balls,
which represent the young birds, are running and creeping about the reeds
and grasses, and swimming in and out of the water-divided tussocks.  Air
and water and grasses seem thrilling with abundant life, and the ear is
deafened with abundant noise; a noise, however, which, discordant as it
is, has for a naturalist the music of the nightingale.  The water is very
shallow at the east end, where the gulls are, but the soft mud is of an
exceeding great depth.

Some years ago the American weed, _Anacharis alsinastrum_, that pest of
our inland waters, so completely filled this Broad, that a duck could
walk upon the surface.  It then suddenly decayed, at the same time
poisoning the fish so that they died by thousands.  Since this time the
Broad has been comparatively free from it.

During Wynne’s visit the Broad was still open, and we visited it in the
jolly.  After rowing about for some time, we turned to go back to the
yacht, and Wynne said, “I don’t see the sails of the yacht anywhere.
Where can she have disappeared to?  I know that the river is over there,
because there is the sail of a wherry over the reeds, but there is no
channel through the reeds, and it is no use your rowing that way.  You
have lost your way, my boy.”

We only laughed at him and rowed on.

“I tell you that there is no way into the river here.  Oh, yes, there is;
I beg your pardon, but I should have rowed about until doomsday before I
found the way off.”

“And you couldn’t have landed, for I don’t think there is a bit of solid
ground all round the Broad.  But where is the yacht?”  For there was no
sign of her.

The wide opening on the opposite side of the river suggested that perhaps
the man had taken her on to Salhouse Broad.  So we rowed on, disturbing a
kingfisher, which was perched on a bullrush, and there was a picture.
Wynne cried, “OH!” with delight, and, although I have seen the like so
many times, the scene is always fresh in its beauty.  On the placid bosom
of the small lake the yacht lay motionless, while a pair of swans, with
their brood of cygnets, swam near her.  Outside the ever-present boundary
of green reeds, was a darker circle of trees, and crowds of yellow lilies
made a bright bit of colour in the foreground.  On the further shore was
a thatched boat-house, and behind it a wooded bank.  The thud of the
jolly against the yacht’s side aroused a wild duck; a shoal of rudd broke
the still surface, as they sprang from a pursuing pike, and the
red-and-white cows, which had pushed through the reeds to drink, stood
looking at us contemplatively.

We dropped the anchor, and got tea ready, and Wynne worked hard at a
water-colour sketch, brush in one hand, bread and butter in the other,
palate, plate, and sketch-block mixed up, and the brush going as often
into his teacup as into the mug of water.

After tea, we landed, and walked into the long and straggling village of
Salhouse, in search of bread and fresh meat, and on our return, climbed
to the top of the bank, whence a fair prospect met our eyes.  At our feet
were Salhouse Broad, and the smaller Broad next to it, which I call
Salhouse Little Broad, a lakelet covered with water lilies; outside
these, the sinuous river, doubling upon itself, as though loth to leave
so pleasant a land; Hoveton Broad to the right, and Wroxham Broad to the
left; many white sails flitting about on the latter, and more yachts
coming slowly up the river.

There is a navigation across Salhouse Broad to Salhouse Staithe, but the
present owner of the Broad discourages sailing upon it, and the reader is
advised not to anchor or moor there.  The old times when one could come
and go upon the Broads as a matter of apparent right are now past.

We went to Girling’s farm, close by, to get milk, and eggs, and butter,
and I may mention that Mr. Girling has comfortable rooms to let, suitable
for a family, whilst the situation is unsurpassed for prettiness.

We quanted off the Broad, and found just sufficient air moving on the
river to take us gently on.  We had a little surprise in store for Wynne.
As we came up to Wroxham Broad, I asked him to reach me something out of
the cabin.  When he was safe inside, I put the helm up, and we slipped
through the ‘gatway’ into the Broad.  When Wynne came out of the cabin,
instead of the river banks, he saw the wide-stretching Broad, the Queen
of the Broads, for her beauty, size, and depth of water combined.

“This is lovely.  I had no idea that we had left the river.  What a
string of fishing boats!  Are they having a match?”

“Yes.  Angling matches are very favourite amusements here, and the prizes
are sometimes valuable, and sometimes very miscellaneous in their nature.
They are very sociable, well-conducted gatherings, and I think the
Norfolk anglers would meet with old Izaak’s approbation, as being honest
and peaceable men.”

“They all look very happy.  But, tell me, are there always so many yachts
here as there are to-day?”

“Not quite.  The fact is, there is a regatta of the Norfolk and Suffolk
Yacht Club here to-morrow, and it is always a genuine water frolic.  This
is a favourite place at all times; Wroxham is only seven miles by rail
from Norwich, and the Broad is only a mile and a half from Wroxham by
water.”

We drifted across to the other side of the Broad, and there dropped our
anchor, and made all snug.

                         [Picture: Horning Ferry]

It was a lovely evening, and yacht after yacht came upon the Broad, and
anchored; anchoring, by the way, meaning, in the majority of cases,
dropping some pigs of ballast overboard, at the end of a rope, for the
mud is so soft that an ordinary anchor would drag through it.  We visited
our friends on various yachts, and then the moon shone so brightly out of
a cloudless sky, that, late as it was, we did not turn in for a long
time, but floated about in the boat, and yarned about old times, until it
was very late indeed.

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




CHAPTER VI.
WROXHAM BROAD.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] I had scarcely closed my eyes, it
seemed to me, ere I was awakened by Wynne moving about.

“What are you up to?” I cried.

“I am going to paternoster for perch, and I’ll take the casting-net to
get some small fry.”

“Oh, dear! why can’t you wait until the morning?”

“It is morning.  It is four o’clock and broad daylight.”

“Then go, and don’t come back until breakfast time.”  And I drew the
curtains over the windows, and tried to think it was quite dark, and to
get to sleep again.

On awaking I heard the sound of a piano.  My first thought was, “Where am
I?”  I found that I was on the boat, sure enough, and it was seven
o’clock.  There was no more sleep for me, for a wherry, fitted up as a
yacht, was lying near, and her crew had not only got a piano on board,
but played upon it at seven o’clock in the morning.  It is an excellent
plan to rig up a wherry in this way for a cruise, as good accommodation
for a large party is secured, and the interior can be well divided into
several sleeping-rooms.  The presence of ladies aboard the wherry, and up
so early, was rather a nuisance, as one had to row away for one’s dip.
Up to eight o’clock, the Broad is generally sacred to the men, who can
take their plunge overboard with safety.

Presently Wynne came back.

“Well, what have you caught?”

“Two jack, about five pounds each, and three perch, about a pound each.
If I could have got some minnows I should have done better, but the roach
I got were too large for paternostering, and not lively enough.  I got
into a row, too.  I found a bow net set among the weeds, and there were
three large tench in it.  As I took it up to look at it, its owner
appeared, and slanged me considerably at first; but when he cooled down,
he got talkative, and told me that the reaches of the river by Salhouse
and Hoveton Broads are the best for pike, but that all the way down to
Horning Ferry is good.  By the way, I saw a lot of boats fishing on the
Broad when I set out, and they went on to the river when they saw me.
The Broad is not preserved, is it?”

“No; but one of the owners, Mr. Chamberlin, levies a tax of 2s. 6d. on
fishermen, and as it goes to the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital, one ought
to pay it willingly.  Poor men can’t pay it, so they fish on the Broad in
the early morning, and then leave for the river.  They walk here from
Norwich, overnight, and begin to fish before daylight, and as they can
get a boat at Wroxham for a shilling a day, it is not an expensive
pastime for them.”

“I saw some notice boards at Salhouse, but there was so much on them, and
the letters were so small, that I could not read them, but I suppose they
were meant to warn people off.”

“Yes, there is unfortunately too great a disposition amongst owners to
try and close the Broads against the fishing public, and even to
interfere with the old navigation rights, but there are praiseworthy
exceptions, and here comes one, the owner of this end of Wroxham Broad.”
{70}

As the sun rose higher, so it grew hotter in too great a ratio, and the
breeze was too light to afford much excitement in the way of racing.
Still, it was a wonderfully pretty sight, such as could be seen on no
other English inland water, save Windermere: the yachts, too, are very
much like the Windermere yachts, but carry even more canvas than the
latter do.  The following are the dimensions of a 10-tonner of that time:
length on keel, 25 feet; over all, 34 feet; beam, 10 feet.  Ordinary
canvas would be, mainsail luff, 23 feet; head, 28 feet 6 inches; foot, 35
feet, and leech, 42 feet; jib, leech, 23 feet; foot, 36 feet; and luff,
48 feet, with a topsail yard of 23 feet.  For racing, these dimensions
are largely increased.  For fast sailing and quick turning to windward,
these boats are justly celebrated, but the Broads are so rapidly growing
shallower, that their draught, about five feet, closes many of the Broads
to them.  A much more sensible type of a large boat for pure comfort in
cruising (though not for sport in sailing) is one founded on the wherry
plan, with a large mainsail, and drawing not more than three feet of
water.  For such boats under 10 tons, the “Una” type is the best.  Its
shallow draught would enable it, with the centre-board up, to go
anywhere, and penetrate into the most charming recesses of this wild
country, which the deeper yacht can never see.  Its beam gives safety,
and also minimises the inconvenience of the centre-board case in the
cabin, and a high booby hatch would give head-room.  The one sail is very
handy, and if her owner has but ordinary skill and energy, he could sail
her alone, and so dispense with the expense of keeping a man.  Without
this expense, yachting in these waters is a reasonable and very cheap
amusement.  These remarks are for the benefit of the great number of
people who have written to me at one time or another, to know what
facilities for economical boat-sailing and living exist in these waters.
For fast sailing and ease of handling by a _skilled_ person, the present
improved type of sloop or cutter cannot be surpassed on any waters.

Well, 10-tonners and 4-tonners, open cutter-rigged sailing-boats of a
very fast type, canoes with battened sails, luggers and boats, and
wherries sailed to and fro, and steam launches puffed noisily about, and
marred the beauty of the scene, as well as upset the glasses and dishes
of breakfast or luncheon by the swell which they caused.  The people paid
very little attention to the racing, but set themselves heartily to enjoy
this great water picnic.

Wynne went ashore, and discovered some pretty woodland vistas, with
glimpses of the Broad, and the glancing sails between leafy boughs of
oaks, and under lofty arms of Scotch firs.  Also, he discovered that at
the farm at the lower end of the Broad, Mrs. Newman’s, there were rooms
to let, and that an artist friend of his had taken them, so there he
stayed for a long time, and kept the jolly, in spite of vigorous hails
for it.

Of the adventurous journeys of yachts up to divers Wroxham Regattas, of
the exploits of elated yachtsmen, and the mishaps of careless ones, of
the fun and merriment attendant on these annual gatherings, the writer
has written in another place.  At present, we must hurry on.

In the evening we sailed, or rather quanted, up to the Bridge.  These
reaches of the river were lovely in the extreme.  The clear and brimming
river reflected the marginal flowers and groups of trees, while acres of
marsh shone with the yellow iris flowers.  But, alas! the woods and the
sloping fields kept off the wind, and made one wish that the _upper_
entrance to the Broad were widened and made navigable.

We came to the Bridge at last, and moored to the bank, watching the
homeward-bound holiday makers arrive in yachts, and boats, and wherries;
a goodly number of the latter having numerous passengers.

                        [Picture: Belaugh Church]

Wroxham has two decent inns, where good boats and bait may be
obtained—Jimpson’s (the “King’s Head”), and Whittaker’s, the former the
largest, but both comfortable.

                        [Picture: Chapter Header]




CHAPTER VII.
WROXHAM TO COLTISHALL.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] The bridge at Wroxham is very narrow
and low.  The mast, of course, had to be lowered, and the yacht quanted
under the road and railway bridges.  A wherry passing under raised her
mast too soon, and damaged the ornamental vane, which consisted of the
inevitable figure of a Welsh girl with a high hat and holding a bunch of
leeks.

“There, I must have a new Welsh girl,” said the wherryman.

“Why is such an emblem chosen in Norfolk, of all places?” asked Wynne.

“Some thirty years ago there was a wherry named after the famous Jenny
Morgan of the song, and she had such a vane.  It took the fancy of the
wherrymen to such an extent that they all adopted it in the course of
time.”

The river here is very narrow, and Wynne, who was steering, put the yacht
“on the putty” twice, before he could be induced to give up the helm to
the man, who professed to know the exact depth of every part of the
river.  The river makes a very long loop to the south, just above
Wroxham.  In this loop is Belaugh Broad, said to hold some very large
carp, but it is preserved.  On the neck of the loop, on a high bank,
stands Belaugh Church, a prominent object for some miles, as you follow
the river.  It is very picturesquely situated, and the view from it is
characteristic.  Close by the church is a draw-well, with a pent-house
over it, well worth sketching.  There is a pretty backwater, or old
channel of the river, near here, called “Little Switzerland,” which is
worth rowing up, but unfortunately the owner objects even to artists
visiting it, and hence it must be considered as sacred ground.

It came on to blow very hard, as we finished the three-mile loop of
river, half a mile from where we entered it, and as the wind was fair,
the corners sharp, and the river narrow, we lowered the mainsail, and ran
up under the jib alone, to Coltishall, where we at once made a rush for
the butcher’s, just in time to secure a piece of meat for our dinner
to-morrow, which, being Sunday, we intended to spend at Coltishall.  The
village is superior to most Norfolk villages, and contains some old
houses with rounded gables, and a fine church.

                     [Picture: Dyke Near Coltishall]

The great business of the place is malting, and many men labour as
maltsters in winter and boat-builders in summer, so that summer is the
time to get a boat built at Coltishall, when either Allen or Collins will
build you one at a reasonable rate.

The fishing is very good in this portion of the river, and there are
great numbers of jack here, although they run rather small.  In the
spawning season, the bream head up here in large numbers, and as there is
no close season in Norfolk, many anglers follow them up.

The first lock on this river is just above the village, and on the
bye-stream stands Horstead mill, a very fine specimen of the Norfolk
water-mill.  It stands upon arches, and the stream runs under it, the
wheels, of course, being undershot.  It makes a very effective picture,
seen from below, and, in fact, if you row your jolly up the left-hand
stream, as you go up, you will see very many lovely bits worth the
painter’s attention.  I have photographed some of them, as I can’t
sketch, but photographs cannot depict the colour.  It is in the soft
living light of these Norfolk scenes that their chief beauty lies, but
they cannot be depicted without the aid of colour, and only imperfectly
then.

The river is navigable for wherries and yachts drawing but little water,
right up to Aylsham, some eleven miles further; but there are two more
locks before reaching Aylsham.

                         [Picture: Ludham Bridge]

Coltishall is accessible by rail from Norwich, being the next station to
Wroxham, and lodgings are obtainable there.  The jack fishing is very
good all the way.

                      [Picture: River Bure—Hautbois]

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




CHAPTER VIII.
UP THE ANT, TO BARTON AND STALHAM.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] Wynne had undertaken the office of
steward, and so far we had fared sumptuously, but as we were tidying up
on Monday morning, the fact became apparent that the provision lockers
were nearly empty.

“The fact is,” he said, “I thought there would be a better chance of
buying things, as we went along, than there appears to be, for with the
exception of butter and eggs, we might as well be on the prairies.  What
shall we do?”

Now, provisioning is a very perplexing thing, particularly when it is for
several days, and as I knew that at Norwich made-up hampers of provisions
for fishing-parties could be obtained, we telegraphed for one to be sent
to us at Wroxham station, and departed in hope, with a light but fair
wind.  We trailed a pike-bait behind, and caught several jack, and two or
three good perch.  We were three hours getting to Wroxham, and while the
mast was being lowered, Wynne went to the station to meet a train then
coming in.  He returned in glee with a hamper of good things, and our
difficulty was at end.  Once we spent a Sunday at Wroxham, with nothing
procurable to eat but biscuits, and once, at Barton, we were obliged to
fish for our meals.  Meat so soon goes bad on board a boat, and one does
not always care for tinned things.  A good wrinkle is to have a bottle
containing a strong solution of permanganate of potash on board, and then
a few drops placed in a pint of water will make a most efficient
deodorising liquid, with which you may safely sprinkle the meat, and wash
out the lockers.

As the day advanced, the breeze got up, and by two o’clock we were at the
mouth of the river Ant, ten miles from Wroxham.

As we turned up its narrow and shallow waters, our man said,

“We shan’t get very far up this river, sir, with a craft drawing so much
water as this.”

“No, but we can get to Ludham Bridge, and there I have arranged for an
old lateener to be waiting for us.”

[Picture: Woodland Pool—Irstead] We touched the ground several times
before we got to the bridge, about a mile up, thus showing that a very
fine Broad is practically closed to the possessor of a large yacht of the
usual type.  We left the yacht below the bridge in charge of the man, and
Wynne and I transferred ourselves on board a six-ton lateener, very broad
and very shallow, with bluff bows; a boat sixty years old, if a day, only
drawing about two feet of water.  She had an enormous lateen foresail,
and a mizen, and she subsequently formed a picturesque object in Wynne’s
sketches.  A wherry was coming through the low and narrow bridge, and, as
the water was high, she had some difficulty in doing it.

The wind was fair for a large portion of the way, and we bowled along
very fast.  Where it was ahead, owing to a bend in the river, there was
no room to tack, and one of us would jump ashore with a line, and tow.
The Ant is just like a canal, except that it has no tow-path.  The
fishing in it is remarkably good, particularly at Irstead shoals, where
there is a stretch of water about half a mile long, with an even depth of
four to five feet, and a firm, level, pebbly bottom, a curiosity in this
land of boggy streams.  This is an excellent spot for perch and pike.  It
is marked by the presence of a church on the western bank, and is one of
the few places on these waters where a person who cannot swim can bathe
with safety or comfort.  The muddy bottom, of course, prohibits wading.
As you approach the entrance to Barton Broad, the bottom becomes muddy
again, and the Broad itself is full of mud; there being large “hills”
where the water is not more than two feet deep.  The navigable channels
wind between these hills, and are marked out by posts.  The Broad is a
mile long, and very pretty, and the entrance to it is four and a half
miles from the mouth of the Ant.  In our light-draught lateener, we
ignored the channels, and sped about all over, often, however, finding
our speed diminished, as the keel cut through the soft mud, and turned up
yellow volumes of mud behind.  It is a curious fact that in some Broads
and portions of Broads, the mud is of a light yellow colour, and in other
portions black.  As all this mud is the result of decayed vegetation,
this difference is singular.

There is an artificial island in the Broad, where a picnic party were
then enjoying themselves.  We sailed away into the long bight which leads
towards Neatishead, where the bowery woods, fringing the water, spoke of
welcome shade, but we were brought to a stop by the mud, and had some
difficulty in getting back.  On this very lovely Broad, we found we had
much better stick to the channels, which were wide enough, and explore
the shallows in the jolly.  The fishing here is remarkably good.  I do
not think any objection is made to angling for coarse fish, but
permission must be obtained for pike fishing.  The Broad, though the
water is fresh, is affected by the rise and fall of the tide.  Going on
one night in the dark, I missed the channel, and ran so hard on to a
“hill,” that in the morning when the tide was at its height, we had to
lay the yacht on her side by means of lines and tackles to the nearest
channel posts ere we could float her off.  The Broad is easy of access,
by going to Stalham railway station, and hiring boats at Stalham, whence
a row of about two miles will bring you on to the Broad.

                     [Picture: Entrance—Barton Broad]

At the north end of the Broad, a wide dyke leads northwards.  This
divides into two about a mile from the Broad; the left-hand one leads to
Dilham and North Walsham, becoming a canal, with locks and water-mills.
We took the right-hand one, and on coming to another sub-division, took
the left-hand one, the right leading to a grown-up piece of water, known
as Sutton Broad.  The course we chose led us over Stalham Broad, which,
though marked on maps as a piece of open water, now only consists of a
tract of marsh, with a dyke kept open through it.  Stalham is at the end
of this dyke.  Here there are two good inns, the “Swan,” and the “Maid’s
Head,” and there are plenty of good boats for hire at the waterside.
Stalham has a station on the Yarmouth and North Norfolk Railway, and as a
fishing station is considered very good.

We caught a pike in the dyke, at luncheon time (ours as well as his), and
a big fellow of about fourteen pounds in weight was said to haunt the
spot.  We saw a large fish strike at some roach, but he would not look at
our spinning-bait.  Within sight of the dyke end is a tumble-down house,
with a thatched roof, broken-backed, and altogether so jumbled and
ancient-looking, that it makes a capital subject for a sketch.

In the afternoon we sailed quietly back to the cutter, and took both
boats back to the Bure, and down it to St. Benet’s Abbey, which we
reached by moonlight.

[Picture: Carp] Wynne had taken a great fancy to the lateener, which had
been lent to me by a friend, and as we wished to explore the Broads about
Hickling, all too shallow for the cutter, we decided to take both yachts
up the Thurne to Heigham Bridges, and leave the cutter there, while we
took the lateener up on the wide, wild waters above the bridge.  The next
morning we devoted to pike fishing, at the mouth of the Thurne, getting
our bait with a casting-net.  We got up very early, and were moored in a
convenient spot, and all rigged up ready to start before the mist had
risen off the water.  I do not intend to go into the details of our
sport, which was not out of the way, but by one o’clock we got six pike,
from four to ten pounds in weight, and put back four under-sized fish.
This was with live bait, without moving more than one hundred yards from
the same spot.

                    [Picture: Carrying reeds, Barton]

                        [Picture: Barton Staithe]

                         [Picture: Stalham Dyke]

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




CHAPTER IX.
WOMACK BROAD.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] Being tired of fishing, we had a swim,
and then dinner; and, late in the afternoon, we hoisted sail, to a stiff
breeze, Wynne and the man in the cutter, and I in the lateener.  They ran
away from me so quickly, however, that I could not stop them at the
entrance to Womack {91} Broad, as I had intended, and was obliged to go
in chase of them up to Heigham Bridges.  The round, bluff bows of my old
lateener, designed to support the heavy mast, which raked forward over
them, made such a hollow in the water, and raised such a big wave, that
sailing very fast was impossible.  As it was, the nose of the boat sank
so that it seemed as if she must run under, a fate not uncommon with
lateeners, when running before a stiff breeze.  It was this peculiarity
of theirs, combined with the large foreyard, more than twice the length
of the boat which caused the rig to fall into disuse.  For turning to
windward, however, they are uncommonly handy, and easily managed
single-handed.  The Thurne is a fairly wide stream, with deep water, so
that you can tack close up to the banks.  It is four miles from the mouth
of the Thurne to Heigham Bridges, and the cutter was there ten minutes
before me.

                  [Picture: Drainage Mill—River Thurne]

“I say, Wynne, I wanted you to stop at that dyke, half way up, but I
could not make you hear me.  There is a charming little Broad there,
called Womack Broad, and a picture ready composed, so bring your
paint-box, and we will beat back in the lateen.”

We reached the dyke in half an hour, tacking in that narrow channel with
great celerity.

                       [Picture: The River Thurne]

“This boat turns more quickly than the cutter, I think; at all events,
there is less trouble in managing her,” said Wynne.  “Do you know that I
think a fine-bowed lugger, with main and mizen rig, would be a handy boat
for these waters.”

“Some of the old lateeners have been turned into luggers, and sail very
well.  Here is the dyke, nearly a mile long, and fringed with ferns and
flowers, reeds and bulrushes, iris and forget-me-nots.”

“Here comes a wherry.  What shall we do?  There is no room to pass.”

“We must go to windward of her, or her sail will take the mast out of us.
Here is a place made wide to admit of wherries passing, and we can hold
on here until she gets by.  There, that was a tight fit.”

The boat sailor must be very careful to keep to windward of the wherries
in narrow waters, as their huge gaffs and sails take up a great deal of
room, and if they catch your mast, they may carry it away, or capsize
you.  It is still more important not to get across the bows of a wherry,
as she would get the best of the encounter, and a small yacht very much
the worst of it.  It is not often that accidents happen through any
collision, but occasionally the crew of a row-boat get bewildered and row
across the bows of a wherry, sailing fast, and a day of pleasure is
turned into mourning.  A special Providence seems to watch over amateur
boat-sailors, and it is marvellous to see how they come unharmed out of
predicaments which seem most serious.  The wherries are sailed remarkably
well, and you can generally rely on their carefulness, so that you may
sail your yacht rigidly according to the rule of the road.  One thing
should be remembered, the wherry’s sailing is a matter of business, and
the yachtsman’s is a matter of pleasure only; therefore, it is well to
give way to a wherry, if there is any doubt on the point, and not hamper
her unnecessarily.

The dyke we were then sailing down is about a mile long, leading westward
to Womack Broad, which was once a nice sheet of water, but is very
rapidly growing up, each year seeing an accretion to the growth of spongy
marsh, and an additional layer of mud on the bottom.  At present, the
channel is navigable for wherries, which ply to Ludham village, at the
further end of it.

On the right-hand side, as we entered the Broad, is a bit of an old-world
picture: a boat-builder’s shed, large and old, and of picturesque
construction, stands on the margin, amid low bushes and under the shade
of mighty trees.  Beneath it is a large boat, of an age and type unknown,
and a wherry sleepily awaiting repair.  Behind the boat-house is a barn,
whose high-thatched roof is shaded by the branches of a cherry tree.  By
the side of the boat-shed is a dyke, where sundry small craft are
ensconced.  Behind all, and peeping out of a garden run wild, are low,
thatched cottages, and scattered about, among the tall grasses, are
trunks of trees, curved “knees” of oak, suitable for boat-building, and
broken-up boats and punts.  On the still water in front is moored a
floating eel-fisher’s hut, and all around is the sense of the repose of
the past.  The former busy life has left its emblems resting in
acquiescence with the fate which contracts the sphere of their
usefulness, day by day, and year by year, as the vegetation slowly, but
surely, drives out the water.  That dense growth of reeds lies upon a
skim of soil which would not bear the weight of a dog, and now undulates
with the movement of the water, but in three years’ time it may bear the
weight of a man.

[Picture: Gudgeon] An old man who lives near there, grumbles because the
artists come and paint his cottage and broad, and take away pounds’ worth
of sketches, and never think of sending him a picture in acknowledgment.

It was a lotos lake to us that afternoon.  Wynne painted, and I fished,
and we sailed back to Heigham Bridges by moonlight.

Womack Broad is not shown upon some maps and charts, but those who are
susceptible to a lovely scene should not pass it by.

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




CHAPTER X.
HICKLING BROAD.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] Heigham Bridge is a small stone one,
with not much room to get through, and a little above it is the railway
bridge, over which the Eastern and Midlands Railway runs, with a station
not far off—Potter Heigham.  Near the station is the “Falgate” Inn, where
there is comfortable accommodation.  A gate hangs over the inn by way of
a sign, and on its bars is inscribed the following—

    “This gate hang high
    But hinder none,
    Refresh and pay
    And travel on,”

The omission of the _s_ in the third person singular of the verb is truly
Norfolk, and common even among the middle classes.  At the bridge is the
“Waterman’s Arms,” where one or two bedrooms, and a small parlour, all
scrupulously clean, are obtainable.  Just by the bridge, in a sort of
wooden “Peggoty’s Hut,” lives Applegate, who has good boats, sailing and
rowing, for hire, stowed away in a remarkably neat boat-house.  The
fishing all round is as good as it can be, and I never fail to get a jack
near the bridge, while, within four miles lie Hickling and Somerton
Broads, Heigham Sounds, and Horsey Mere.  For myself, I should prefer
this as a fishing and boating station, to any other, because of the
wildness of the district.

                        [Picture: Hickling Broad]

The tide ebbs and flows strongly; and I caught Wynne standing on the
bridge, and looking in a perplexed way at the rate the perfectly fresh
water of the river was running up stream.  The exit of these waters—at
Yarmouth—was twenty miles away, by water; Heigham Bridge is only between
four and five miles from the sea, in a direct line, and the water was now
running eastward, towards the sea, and the lakes, which daily rise and
fall, though only a few inches, actuated by the salt tide, “so near, and
yet so far.”

“Verily, this is a strange country,” said Wynne, “and not, I should
think, beyond the possibility of a sudden visit from the sea.”

“No, those light-coloured mounds in the distance are the sea-banks, of
sand, only held together by scanty marram grasses.  We will pay them a
closer visit.”

We got the lateener through the bridges, taking sufficient things for a
night’s absence, and sailed away up the Thurne, which seems now to lose
its name as a river, and take that of the “Hundred Stream.”  About half a
mile above the railway bridge is the mouth of Kendal, or Candler’s, Dyke,
a narrow winding stream, up which we turned, soon to find ourselves
bordered by tall reeds on either hand, and then sailing through a
wilderness of water and reeds so tall that they bounded our view.  This
is Heigham Sounds, now greatly overgrown, and a capital place for wild
fowl; also for rudd, which here attain a very large size, and go in
immense shoals.  Out of the channel the water is extremely shallow.  In
the channel, particularly in Kendal Dyke, I have caught a good number of
pike.

The fishing on all these Broads—Hickling, Horsey, and the Sounds—is
nominally preserved, but fair anglers do not seem to be interfered with.
At all events, in the channel and the dykes one may pretty well do as one
likes, and no attempt has ever been made to set up an exclusive right to
the rivers.  I note that a Fishery Preservation Society has been formed
to abolish illegal netting, and to overlook this district, and under the
auspices of this it is probable that riparian owners will not object to
anglers taking a share of the superabundant fish out of the Broads.  I
call the fish superabundant advisedly, and will adhere to the term until
anglers can assure me that they know what to do (usefully) with the
number of fish they catch, and cease from throwing them away on the bank,
after ascertaining their weight and number.

                    [Picture: Dyke at Potter Heigham]

Well, we sailed as close to the wind as we could—and nothing goes closer
than a lateener—and could just lie the channel through another reedy
lake, called Whiteslea, on to the vast expanse of Hickling Broad, a lake
400 acres in extent, and looking three times as large, owing to the
extreme lowness of its shores, the absence of any landmarks, and the
great concave sky, which seems to fit close down all around it.  A
channel across it is marked by posts, which we left to starboard, as we
sailed over it.  The width of the channel you will have to determine by
experiment, as there is no guide.  At a guess, it is twenty yards wide,
and all the rest of the Broad is so shallow that you might wade over it,
and find a hard, yellow, gravel bottom almost everywhere.  Trusting in
our two-feet draught, we sailed hither and thither, and felt our way
checked, as the keel cut through masses of weed, and then the bound
forward, as the boat entered a part clear of weeds.  These bunches of
weed have lately increased greatly in Hickling Broad, which used to be
comparatively free from them, and the promontories of reeds are pushing
themselves further and further into the lake, and the bays between are
getting shallower.  Still, the lake is large enough, as yet, to be able
to stand a little filching from.

We sailed down to Catfield staithe, on the western side of the Broad, and
not far from Catfield railway station, on the line already alluded to.
Then we went to Hickling staithe, at the north end, where there is an
inn, the “Pleasure Boat,” and walked into the village to post letters,
and to receive some.

Boats of a rough kind can be obtained here for fishing purposes.  They
are long, narrow, and flat-bottomed, and the usual method of propulsion
is by “_setting_.”  The setter sits in the extreme stern, and pushes the
boat along with a light pole, at a great rate.  There are often setting
races at local regattas, and great fun they are.

                       [Picture: Hickling Staithe]

The number of broken-up lateeners on the shores of the Broad attest the
decay of large pleasure-boat sailing on these remote waters, but the
smaller class of centre-board boats are coming into favour, and are,
perhaps, more suitable.

After lunch we had to reef the great foresail, which was not an easy
operation, as the reef was taken in along the yard, and we had to go into
the jolly boat to get to the end of it.  The jolly boat committed a joke
its species is very fond of, under similar circumstances; that is, it
slipped away from under one of us, and left him clinging to the yard,
with his legs in the water.

                         [Picture: Martham Broad]

I shall never forget three days I spent, on Whiteslea and Heigham Sound,
for the fishing and fowling, one December with a friend.  I stayed in the
little cottage on the small island in Whiteslea.  We had two boats and
two men to attend to us during the day, but at night we were left to
ourselves in the lonely house, where the water oozed through the floor,
and the beds were so damp that I slept completely clothed in my oilies.
There was a bitter north-easter sweeping over the dry reeds under a
leaden sky, and the sport was of the slowest.  I never felt the cold so
much, accustomed though I am to winter pike-fishing.

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




CHAPTER XI.
HORSEY MERE AND SOMERTON BROAD.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] It was exhilarating work sailing over
Hickling Broad, and we were very loth to leave its wind-swept waters.  We
had a rare run back along the channel, and over Whiteslea, and then
turned sharp to the left, up the Old Meadow dyke leading to Horsey Mere.
This dyke is a mile long, and of fair depth, but so narrow that people
fishing on the banks had to hold up their rods as we passed, while our
sail swept the tops of the reeds.  Then we shot into Horsey Mere, a lake
of 130 acres in extent, with a small island in the middle.  It was very
clear, and very shallow, the channel for wherries lying along the west
side of it, into Palling dyke, which leads north-westward for several
miles until it reaches almost to the sea.

The white sand-hills on the coast were plainly visible, and the thunder
of the surf was audible, as the sea was but a mile and a half away.  We
did what nearly every one else does who visits Horsey in a yacht; landed
at the east end of it, and walked to the coast, but it was too rough to
bathe.  These sand-hills form a very curious barrier between the salt and
fresh water.  They are steep and high, and make one wonder by what force
of wind and waves they attained their present shape and dimensions, in so
flat a country, and why the like forces do not dissipate them over the
plain.  Breaches have been made in them by the sea, from time to time,
notably in the winter of 1791, when a very high tide made several gaps,
and threatened to overwhelm the marshes inland.

“I like this Mere as well as any of the Broads,” said Wynne, when we
returned to the yacht.  “It is so very still and lonely, and its quiet is
in such contrast to the roar and unrest of the sea close by.  Is the
fishing free here?”

“No, it is supposed to be preserved, though I don’t suppose anyone will
object to our catching a pike for supper, if you wish.  There are no pike
like those in Horsey, the proverb says.”

But the wind had fallen as suddenly as it arose, and the glamour of a
fiery sunset shone over the silent mere.  An occasional cry of coot, or
duck, or splash of fish, and the distant sound of the sea, but emphasized
the stillness around us.  We sat on the cabin roof, and talked lazily, as
the dusk came slowly on, and our voices were low, in unison with the
evening hush.

“I do not wonder,” said Wynne, “that you are so fond of these waters.  An
evening like this, in such watery solitude, makes a strong impression
upon one.”

Horsey Mere is only accessible by water.  There is a railway
station—Martham—about four miles off, but if you walked from there you
could get no sight of the Broad without a boat, and boats are not
procurable.

“What are these cushions stuffed with?” asked Wynne, as we lay down for
the night.

“Horse-hair, I expect; but then age has made them hard and crabbed.”

“Well, I think that the sleeping accommodation might be vastly improved
in your Norfolk boats generally.  Canvas cots or hammocks, air beds and
pillows, would all be better than the thin cushions there are in the
cutter.  I sha’n’t sleep to-night, for I have pins and needles all over
me already.”

And in five minutes he was snoring!  One could sleep on a deal plank, or
even on an oak one, after a few days and nights on the Broads.

We woke very early in the morning, and found that a brisk breeze had
sprung up, and that the lateener had dragged her moorings and drifted
into the reeds.  She had taken no harm, for, short of being run down by a
wherry, there are no dangers of shipwreck on the Broads, and you might
drift about unmoored, for all the hurt there is likely to accrue.

                         [Picture: Sound Asleep]

After a hurried breakfast we hoisted the foresail, and tore down the dyke
into Heigham Sounds, across which we sped fast, throwing the shallow
water into waves, which shook the reeds mightily.  When we emerged from
Kendal dyke into the main stream, we turned to the left, and in less than
a mile reached Martham Ferry, which was stretched across the river while
some wagons were passing across.  This ferry is a large raft, which is
kept in a recess on either side of the river, and floated across,
reaching from bank to bank when required.  There is no one to tend it,
and if it happens to be on the other side, a wayfarer must wait until
some one appears on the other side to get it across.  It is a wonderfully
clumsy thing to look at, and is not regarded with friendly eyes by the
wherrymen, who run their wherries full tilt against it too often at
night, or when, with the wind astern, they are unable to stop.  One
wherryman, exasperated beyond endurance, let his wherry go at it with all
her force when running before half a gale, but only smashed the bows of
his vessel, not moving the ferry a bit or injuring it, for it is heavily
bound with iron to withstand such experiments.

We sailed to and fro until the wagons had passed, but a wherry coming up
had to lower her sail in a hurry, and then struck the raft with great
force before it could be drawn away.  This jammed it diagonally across
the river, and it was half an hour before it could be moved.

At the other side of the ferry, and at the mouth of a dyke, is a capital
place for pike and large eels, and I can conceive of no better-looking
pike place than the mile of stream between here and Somerton or Martham
Broad.  The water is deep and clear, with a stratum of lily leaves, about
four feet below the surface, and here and there lilies on the surface.
As we sailed over its glassy surface, not ruffled by the crossing wind,
on account of the high reeds and grasses, we could see thousands of fish
of all sizes darting away beneath us; and at the end of the main dyke,
where it divides into two, is a deep, clear pool, with a hard, gravelly
bottom, where there are any quantity of perch and large roach.  It is the
beau-ideal of a spot for bottom-fishing, but “fine and far off” must you
fish, for the water, though deep, is passing clear.  It is easily
accessible from Martham railway station, and preferably from Potter
Heigham, where, too, you could procure a boat.

The right-hand dyke leads to Somerton Broad, another reed-surrounded
lake, possessing no particular merit.  From Martham ferry we walked up a
steep road to the village, lying around a broad green, and had we time we
would have ascended the tower of the church, which is a conspicuous
object for miles, and from which a splendid view of sea and lake is
attainable.

In the church we noted a tablet to one Burraway, whose history is told
there, but is too unpleasant to be more than referred to here.

After being so long on board a small vessel, one’s legs become cramped
and unfit for walking, and the walk to Martham and back, only a couple of
miles, quite tired us, and we were glad to get back to our little craft.
In half an hour’s time we were passing under Heigham Bridge, and watching
our man playing a seven-pound pike in the pool below.  On the bank, by
the cutter, he had arranged for our inspection a score of bream, from one
pound to three pounds in weight, which he and another had caught early
that morning and the night before.

Before turning our faces again towards Yarmouth, it may be mentioned that
yachts may safely be moored to the bank anywhere above Acle, care being
taken to avoid the obviously shallow parts.

In many places you will notice the eel-sets, which are fixed nets across
the river for the purpose of intercepting the silver-bellied eels on
their migration to the sea.  These nets are only set at night, and there
is a man in charge (sheltered in a rough sort of house-boat or hut), to
lower the nets when craft are passing, so that they do not obstruct the
navigation.  Immense quantities of eels are caught in these nets, and it
has been proved by an inquiry conducted by the Yare Preservation Society,
that other fishes are not caught therein, and that the sport of the
anglers is in no wise interfered with.

                    [Picture: Decorative chapter end]

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




CHAPTER XII.
BACK TO YARMOUTH.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] It was two o’clock when we hoisted a
reefed sail on the cutter, leaving the lateener in charge of the owner,
who had joined us, and it was three o’clock when we reached Acle bridge,
having done the seven miles in the hour, wind and tide with us.  We left
Acle at four, being much delayed in lowering and raising the mast, and
reached Yarmouth (12 miles) by half-past five; so we made a pretty quick
passage.  We laid by the “Ale Stores” for the night, and were very
careful to have the yacht strongly moored, for the tide runs fast.  We
were interested in the way the wherries dropped down out of the North
River, with lowered masts, and a chain or weight out over the bows, so as
to retard their speed, as they drifted stern first, steering, of course,
by the pressure of the faster-flowing tide against the rudder.  We had
intended to drop down in a similar way, through the swing bridge just
below us, and to go, by sea, to Lowestoft, a distance of only eight
miles; but as the wind kept getting up, and Breydon was white with foam,
we put off making up our minds until the morning, for the
disproportionate bowsprits and open wells of the river yachts are not
very suitable for sea work.

Of course, we strolled upon the pier, and then returned to the quay-side
by moonlight.  We found that it was dead low water, and that the yacht
had receded so much below the level of the quay, that no plank within
reach would touch her.  The man was in the forepeak fast asleep, and it
was a long time before we could wake him, and then we jumped on to some
wherries lying near, and he brought the jolly to us.

[Picture: Perch] We woke at times during the night, and felt the boat
swaying, and heard the wind howling in the rigging to a very pretty tune.
In the morning there was no abatement, and although it was off the land,
we shirked the wetting we should get at sea, and decided to go over
Breydon, and up the Waveney.  As the tide would not make until the middle
of the morning, we took the jolly and rowed down to the harbour mouth at
Gorleston.  It is interesting to note how, for three miles, the river
flows parallel with the sea, and, on the average, under half a mile from
it, the dividing land being nothing more substantial than shingle and
sand.  Deeply interesting is it, also, to read of the early struggles of
the inhabitants of Yarmouth to maintain a navigable waterway.  Sometimes
the river would open a new outlet for itself, and sometimes they made a
new one for it; and, time after time, the river mouth got silted up with
the wearing away of this soft eastern shore.  Even now there is often
insufficient water at the bar for deeply-laden vessels of ordinary size,
and the entrance is particularly unsafe for sailing vessels to enter
unassisted at certain times.  Picturesque sights abound on the river, and
the quays.  Fishing smacks taking their brown nets on board from carts
ranged alongside; boats of every form and size hauled up on the beach;
vessels building; and vessels in dry docks, undergoing repairs; a regular
covey of smacks, in tow of a powerful steam tug, and hundreds of similar
sights of deep interest to a man bitten with the joint love of the water
and the picturesque.

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




CHAPTER XIII.
YARMOUTH TO SOMERLEYTON.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] On reaching the yacht, after rowing
back with the first of the flow, we started with two reefs down to beat
over Breydon, on which the wind against the tide raised a respectable
sea.  There was a great deal of weight in the wind, for it was veering
towards the south-west, having been north-west all night, and a strong
south-west wind is generally full of puffs and squalls.  Many times we
had the water over the coamings of the well, and the lee plankways were
always awash.

“This is something like fun!” gasped Wynne, as he eased off the jib sheet
to a squall, and the salt foam dashed in his face; “but there won’t be
much skin left on my hands by the time we get to the top of Breydon.
These enormous jibs are horrible things to have to work.  If the yachts
had finer bows, they would not want nearly so much head-sail, and would
go as fast, if not faster.”

This was heresy to our man, who had seen no other rig for river boats all
his life, and he and Wynne had a heated argument on the matter, without
either being much the wiser.

On reaching the top of Breydon, we turned to the left, up the Waveney,
for half a mile, as far as Burgh Castle, passing over the dreaded Burgh
flats, where a wherry and a yacht were both hard aground, waiting for the
tide to float them off.  The deep water channel is not near the line of
posts as one would imagine, but close along the west shore.  We touched
two or three times, but did not stick, and at last moored alongside a
wherry, and landed to inspect the ruins on the top of the hill.  No one
passing along these waters should miss the ruins of Burgh Castle, a Roman
station of great interest.

There is a very extensive stretch of massive wall, with towers at
intervals, and at the corners; and we spent a considerable time in making
sketches of the ruins, and admiring the extensive view.

We could, if we chose, continue on up the Waveney, but the next five
miles of river are narrow, uninteresting, and with a heavy run of tide,
while at the end is a fixed bridge—St. Olave’s, where the mast would have
to be lowered.  So we turned back into the Yare, and sailed up to the
mouth of the new cut at Reedham.  This is a ship canal, about three miles
long, connecting the Yare with the Waveney.  The tide flows and ebbs from
the Reedham end of it.  It is perfectly straight, and if the wind should
be straight up or down it, there is nothing for it but to tow.  Now,
however, we had a beam wind, and tore along merrily enough.  But trouble
was in store for us.  The canal is wide enough, but it is not kept
“didled” out (“didling,” or “dydling,” being a Norfolk term for dredging,
with scoops at the end of poles, and lifting the mud on to the banks),
and the sides are very shallow.  In the distance, we saw a large
_billy-boy_, or topsail smack, from the Thames, and as we approached, it
became only too plain from the rake of her mast, that she was aground in
the very middle of the channel.  We got the mainsail down directly, and
ran along under the jib, and then, as we expected, ran aground alongside
of her.  A wherry coming behind lowered her sail, and stopped in time.
The smack was laden with rice for Messrs. Colmans’ Works, and her
skipper, instead of going round by Yarmouth, had tried the short cut by
Lowestoft.  After much shoving and towing we got past, and left the smack
patiently waiting the rise of the tide, or the arrival of a tug.

[Since the foregoing was written, the Cut has been much improved in depth
by dredging, and piling the banks.]

There is very good fishing to be had in the cut, and the banks are sound
and dry, which is a rare thing on these rivers.  There is a lift-bridge
at Haddiscoe railway station, near the end of the cut, which takes some
time to get opened; this is a great inconvenience, and even a serious
matter when you are sailing fast, as there is not room to come about.
They also sometimes fail to open the bridge wide enough, and some time
since a large yacht had her mainsail torn as she passed through, by its
catching on the corner of the uplifted bridge.  A toll of 1s. for each
yacht is taken, and a man holds out a bag on the end of a pole to receive
it.  The toll for wherries depends in amount upon whether they have the
bridge opened for them or go through with mast lowered, and at night a
chain used to be put across to prevent them stealing through unobserved,
but the chain was frequently “charged” at full speed, and broken.

In a quarter of a mile we emerged into the Waveney, and, looking back, we
could see St. Olave’s bridge, a rather handsome structure.  There are a
few houses grouped rather prettily, and a good inn, the “Bell,” close by
the Bridge, a quarter of a mile from Haddiscoe station, and about a mile
from Fritton Decoy, a favourite lake for fishing, which we shall
afterwards mention.

                       [Picture: Somerleyton Hall]

We then passed through a railway swing bridge, where the East Suffolk
Railway passes over, and sailed without further incident some two miles
further to another swing bridge at Somerleyton, where the Lowestoft line
passes over.  This bridge is the worst on the rivers to pass when wind
and tide are against you, as they so frequently are, and I am always glad
to be well clear of its piles and projections, through which the tide
swirls so swiftly.

The reach below the bridge used to be the best in the whole river for
pike, but the greater run of tide in recent years and the salter water
has spoiled the pike fishing, for which one has now to go higher up the
river.

There is a very good inn at the top of the bank to the west of the line,
called the “Duke’s Head,” and a very beautiful belt of woods skirts the
marshes on the east side of the river, where some delicious “bits” may be
obtained, and birds, butterflies, and flowers abound.

[Picture: Dace] Somerleyton village is well worth a visit, for the owner
of the estate has built some most artistic cottages and houses, which,
with another score of years’ wear, will be beautiful.  The hall, occupied
by Sir Savile Crossley, M.P., stands in a sylvan park.

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




CHAPTER XIV.
FROM SOMERLEYTON TO BECCLES.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] The angling in all this part of the
Waveney is extremely good, and the bream and roach are of large size.  It
is not nearly so much frequented as the other rivers or the upper part of
the Waveney, and is practically unfished, on account of the difficulty in
obtaining boats, there being no boating-station nearer than Oulton Broad,
five miles away.  Still, it is worth while rowing from Oulton Broad, half
way to Somerleyton, for the takes of bream there lately have been
wonderful, both as to size and number.  The river is broad and deep, and
one part is as good as another, provided that you select a sufficient
depth of water.

We had no time to fish, and as a matter of fact I cannot stay to fish, if
there is a good breeze blowing; sailing first, fishing after!

We lay to at the mouth of Oulton dyke, to get our lunch, which we had put
off rather too long.  The dyke is nearly as broad as the river, and a
mile and a half long, leading to Oulton Broad, which we intended to
visit, after going up the Waveney to Beccles.  At the junction of the
dyke with the river there is an excellent fishing spot, with a great
depth of water.  While we lay there, a large two-masted vessel, a
brigantine of 100 tons, came along the dyke at a good pace, with topsails
only set, and looked as if she were going to scoop all the water out of
the river with her great bluff bows.  Her crew were pointing out to us,
as we lay on the Waveney, and presently the hail came across the narrow
neck of marsh, “Do we turn up past you to go to Beccles?”

“Yes, sharp to port; right around!”

The topsails came down, and the mainsail went up with great celerity, and
with the aid of her aft canvas, and the helm hard over, she came round
the acute angle of the sharp bend with creditable quickness, looking a
veritable Goliath on those comparatively narrow waters.  As she was now
head to wind, down came her canvas, and half-a-dozen men went ashore with
a long line to tow, and tow they did all the way to Beccles, 13 miles, by
which time they must have had enough of it.  She was in sight all day
over the marsh.

After lunch, we sailed up the Waveney, having to tack a good portion of
the way; but the river is so tortuous that some of the reaches can be
sailed whichever way the wind is, without tacking.

“How remarkably clear the water is!” remarked Wynne.

“Yes, those weeds you see are 14 feet at least below us, and the river is
deep close up to the banks.  It is a very pleasant river to sail upon.”

“And what a lot of small fish there are!”

“Yes.  The Waveney ought to be the best bottom-fishing river in England,
it is so deep, clear, and sweet, but the poachers used to harry it
dreadfully, with their long, small-meshed nets, and it was even _trawled_
up by smacks, to get bait for sea-fishing, but the Norfolk and Suffolk
Fisheries Act has stopped all that, or nearly all, and the river is
rapidly recovering itself.  There are some very large perch in it, and
wherever you see the bank gravelly and free from reeds, the bottom will
be hard too, and a haunt of perch.  Look at those bulrushes.”

“What huge ones, and what a quantity of them!”

“Yes, the marshmen sometimes dry the heads, and rub them up to stuff
pillows and cushions with.”

On the north bank is the church of Burgh St. Peter, the tower of which is
built in gradually-lessening steps, and presents a very strange,
un-English appearance.

The sail up to Beccles is a very pleasant one, and pretty bits
continually present themselves.  Two miles below Beccles there is a swing
railway bridge, which is tolerably easy to get through, as there is not a
great rush of tide through it, as under the bridges lower down.

Beccles church had been a prominent object all the way, and when we
arrived at Sayer’s Grove, so prettily sylvan a place that we decided to
stay there the night, we went in the useful jolly another mile to Beccles
bridge, 23 miles from Yarmouth, until lately a narrow arched stone
structure, but now replaced by a wider and more convenient bridge.
Passing through, we skirted the town of Beccles, until we came below the
church, a sight no one should miss who is in the neighbourhood.  Viewed
from the river, it stands on the brow of a hill, in a commanding
position.  Landing, we climbed up a series of steps and reached the
churchyard, whence a splendid view westward is obtained, the river
winding in and out through the green marshes towards Bungay.  The south
doorway of the church is richly ornamented, but the peculiar feature of
the church is that the tower, a very high and massive structure, is
separate from it.

Beccles is a quiet, old-fashioned place, with good railway accommodation,
as a glance at the map will show.  It is a cheap place to live in, as
there are no heavy rates, these being defrayed by the letting of valuable
marshes belonging to the town.  It is a healthy little place, and pretty
withal, and would, I think, be a capital place for retired persons with
small incomes to settle in.

The river is navigable for wherries and small yachts, for about ten miles
further up to Bungay, but the navigation is rather troublesome, and there
are two or three locks to be passed through.

It is worth while to row up the river a few miles to Shipmeadow lock.
The river all the way is very pretty, with crystal clear water, and the
lock itself is quaint and old-fashioned.

                         [Picture: River Waveney]

After laying in some stores we returned to the yacht, and spent a
peaceful evening in the shadow of the wooded hill, beneath which we were
moored.

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




CHAPTER XV.
OULTON BROAD.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] In the night we were awakened by the
sound of very heavy rain pattering on the deck and cabin roof, and
presently we discovered that the recent very dry weather had opened the
seams of the wood, and sundry persistent droppings evaded our attempts to
escape them.

“My nose is wearing away with one dreadful drop.”

“Then open your mouth and catch it.  Oh!”

“What’s the matter?”

“A drop went splash into my eye!”

We made merry for a time, but presently it clearly became a case of “a
drop too much,” and we sat up in despair.  Just as things were getting
uncomfortably wet, the storm passed off, and the morning dawned with a
wondrous clearness and brilliance, while the air was full of the sweet,
earthy scents that arise after rain.  The reeds were fresher and greener,
and the grasses and flowers glittered in the sun, like the radiant
ripples on the water.  And so, amid the songs of birds and the quickened
joy of nature, we bowled along down the Waveney at a merry pace, and in
two hours we had reached the mouth of Oulton Dyke, the sharp turn into
which necessitated a heavy gibe.

                         [Picture: Oulton Broad]

A mile and a half of this and Oulton Broad opened out before us.  This is
the most civilized of all the Broads, and is always gay with yachts
sailing about, and populous with yachts lying at their moorings.  It is
of an irregular shape, and in the bight, or “ham,” at the north-east end
of it, the yachts are thickly clustered.  Also, for what reason it is
hard to say, many of the old and worn-out fishing smacks of Lowestoft are
brought into this corner, and moored against the bank, where very many of
them have sunk, and all are picturesque in the extreme.  Some large sea
yachts also use this bight as a laying-up place for the winter.  The
river yachts and sailing boats are of every size and rig, and a paddle in
and out among them is of interest to a nautical mind.  At the lower end
of the lake is a lock which gives access for sea-going vessels to Lake
Lothing, which is a tidal lake, two miles long, ending in Lowestoft
harbour and the sea.  By the lock is one of the most charming hostelries
it is possible to conceive.  It ought to be called the “Angler’s Rest,”
were it not already called the “Wherry Hotel.”  Here there is capital
accommodation for anglers, and boats, bait, etc., are provided at
reasonable rates.  There is also another comfortable inn, called the
“Commodore,” and there are two smaller inns, the “Waveney Hotel”—the
landlord of which, George Smith, is an excellent waterman—and the “Lady
of the Lake.”  The railway station is close by, and is now called Oulton
Broad Station, but was formerly Mutford, that being the name of the
village at the east end of the Broad.  The village is very prettily
situated between the two lakes, and is only two miles from the sea.
There are lodgings to be had there, and for a place combining the
attractions of lake, river, and sea, it has few equals.  Of course, the
Broad is within easy reach of Lowestoft, the most attractive
watering-place on the coast of Norfolk and Suffolk.  It has a fine pier,
good houses, cliffs, a capital harbour for yachts, a harbour for fishing
vessels, where the artist will find much that is picturesque, and an old
part of the town on the higher ground to the north, which has many
features of interest.  It has not the noise and bustle of Yarmouth, but
it is gay enough for reasonable people.

At Lowestoft, facing the harbour, is the club house of the Norfolk and
Suffolk Yacht Club, and annual visitors to Lowestoft would find it an
advantage to join the Yacht Club for the sake of the conveniences
afforded by the club-house.

Oulton Broad has plenty of fish in it, and the fishing is free.  When the
rivers are flooded, and the rank water off the marshes pours into the
river, the fish of all kinds crowd into the purer waters of the Broad in
surprising numbers.  Formerly it was noted for its perch, but for some
time they appear to have decreased in numbers.  Lately, however, they
have been more freely caught.  In a few more years the benefits of the
Norfolk and Suffolk Fisheries Act will be more widely felt, as the
abundance of small fish in the rivers plainly testifies.  Pike are
present sometimes in great quantity, but the supply seems to fluctuate
considerably.  For a few weeks each season they seem to be uncommonly
numerous, and large catches are made.  Then they fall off, and none are
caught for some time.

The shooting on the Broad is also free, and in the large room at the
“Wherry Inn” is a most attractive collection of fishes and birds, which
have met their death in this locality.

The most interesting and tantalizing inhabitant of the Broad is the grey
mullet, large shoals of which may be seen disporting themselves on the
surface.  They run to a large size, and seem to average two or three
pounds in weight.  Anglers cannot catch them as a general rule, but some
persons say that they have succeeded, using small hooks baited with
strange baits, such as the beard of an oyster, or a bit of boiled cabbage
stump.  I fancy that by using a fly cast, buoyed at intervals by bits of
cork, and having small hooks baited with gentles, and then paying out a
long line so as to cover a shoal, some sport might be had.  At all
events, the experiment is worth trying some day when there is no wind for
sailing.  The mullet, when alarmed by a net or other obstruction, has a
habit of leaping high out of the water, and frequently leaps into boats.
Once, while I was sailing through Reedham Bridge, a grey mullet, of four
pounds in weight, leaped into the jolly-boat towing astern, and was
captured.

[Picture: Ruffe] At Oulton the mullet are often shot with arrows having
heavy lines attached, while they are accidentally confined in the lock
between the Broad and Lake Lothing.

Well, we spent the rest of our holiday at Oulton, and as I was saying
good-bye to Wynne at the station, I asked him what he thought of the
Broads.

“The finest places for boat-sailing and bottom-fishing in England.  I
shall bring a boat here in the winter for wild-fowl shooting on Breydon,
and I shall certainly come again next summer.”

So ended our cruise.

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




CHAPTER XVI.
ORMESBY AND FRITTON.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] There are still some very important
Broads in Norfolk and Suffolk, which I could not mention in an account of
a cruise, because they are not accessible from the navigable waters, and,
as a matter of fact, I know comparatively little about them for that
reason.  There are the Ormesby, Filby and Rollesby Broads, lying together
in a straggling group four or five miles north-eastward of Acle.
Altogether, they contain 800 acres of water, but much of this is
overgrown by reeds.  The Muck Fleet, which we passed below Acle Bridge,
is their outlet into the river Bure.  They are very easily accessible
from Yarmouth by rail to Ormesby station, on the North Norfolk Railway,
and boats may be obtained at the Eel’s Foot, and the Sportsman’s Arms,
the former having fair staying accommodation.  The fishing is free, at
all events to persons going to the houses named, and uncommonly good
sport is to be had amongst pike, rudd, and bream, the number of a catch
being counted by the hundred, and the weight by the stone.  For fishing,
pure and simple, Ormesby Broad is as good a place as any to visit.

                         [Picture: Fritton Decoy]

The other lake I have not described is Fritton Decoy, a long curving
lake, about a mile from St. Olave’s station, on the Yarmouth and
Lowestoft Railway, and Haddiscoe station, on the Norwich and Lowestoft
Railway.  It is only open to anglers from April to September, being
closed the rest of the year, to protect the wild-fowl decoys, which are
still worked on it, by the two proprietors.  For a note upon these
decoys, and others in Norfolk, I must refer the reader to a paper upon
decoys, written by Mr. Thos. Southwell, F.Z.S., published in a new
edition of that most fascinating book, Lubbock’s “Fauna of Norfolk,”
issued by the publishers of this book, and for descriptive accounts to my
own larger book, “Norfolk Broads and Rivers,” published by Wm. Blackwood
and Sons.

Fritton is an exceedingly beautiful Broad, and its waters are very deep.
It is, in fact, a lake, rather than a Broad proper.  It is extremely well
stocked with fish, and good sport may generally be obtained there.  Boats
can be obtained at “Fritton Old Hall.”

                    [Picture: Decorative chapter end]

                   [Picture: Decorative chapter header]




APPENDIX.
RAILWAY ACCESS TO FISHING STATIONS.


[Picture: Decorative drop capital] To begin with, it may be well to state
that Norwich itself can be reached from London by two lines of
railway—one via Colchester and Ipswich, and the other by Cambridge and
Ely, the journey taking from three to four hours.  From Norwich, Yarmouth
and Lowestoft may be reached in an hour of slow travelling, and as the
line runs by the river the whole way, and every station is convenient for
fishing purposes, it will be desirable to give a list of them, with
remarks upon the adjacent fishing places.



WHITLINGHAM.


This is too close to Norwich for very good fishing, although occasionally
the fish seem to head up, and good takes are to be had.  Good rowing
boats may be obtained at Thorpe Gardens, five minutes’ walk from the
station.  Omnibuses ply between the Gardens and Norwich every hour.  The
reach of the old river is very lovely.



BRUNDALL


Is the station for “Coldham Hall,” at which inn visitors can be
accommodated.  The inn is ten minutes’ walk from the station down the
river, and across the ferry.  There are plenty of boats, and the place is
much frequented.  From here down to Buckenham Ferry there are large
numbers of pike, and it is customary to row down trailing a bait behind.
Roach and bream are plentiful.



BUCKENHAM FERRY.


From this station you have ten minutes’ walk down to the Ferry, where
boats are to be obtained, and the fishing generally is good.



CANTLEY.


Close by the station is the “Red House” Inn, where there is good
accommodation for visitors.  Boats can be had.  The fish, as a rule, run
larger here than higher up.  The water is deep and the tide swift.  When
the water is fairly clear, some good pike may be had.



REEDHAM.


The “Ferry” Inn is ten minutes’ walk.  Good accommodation.  The bream run
large, so do the perch, of which there used to be large numbers _under
the ferry boat_.

The line divides at Reedham, one part going to Yarmouth and the other to
Lowestoft.  There is no fishing place on the Yarmouth branch, but on the
Lowestoft line there are—



HADDISCOE,


whence the Cut may be fished.  Boats are difficult to obtain, but the
landlord of the “Bell” Inn, at St. Olave’s bridge, might procure you one.
This is the station for Fritton Decoy.



SOMERLEYTON.


This would be an excellent fishing station if boats could be procured,
but you cannot rely upon being able to borrow one.  The porters at the
swing-bridge, or the landlord of the “Duke’s Head,” might direct you
where to obtain a boat.  I think the latter has one or two.  The bream
are very large and numerous.  The good fishing in this part of the river
has been exemplified by Mr. Winch, of Norwich, who has taken 8 stone in a
day—five bream weighing 20 lbs., and one bream weighing 6¾ lbs.



OULTON BROAD.


See the last chapter for full information as to this important fishing
station.

Another line from Norwich leads to—



WROXHAM.


7 miles.  The river is full of roach, bream, perch, and pike, although it
is much fished.  Boats at Jimpson’s or Whittaker’s, where there is also
fair accommodation for visitors.  The Broad is a mile and a half down
stream, from the bridge.  It can be fished by permission only.  Tickets
to fish on the Broad can be obtained through Mr. C. J. Greene, Fishing
Tackle Maker, London Street, Norwich, at 2s. 6d. per boat.



COLTISHALL.


Two miles further.  The fishing is much better here than is generally
supposed, but boats are not plentiful.  Enquire at the waterside who is
likely to have one at liberty.

The Eastern and Midlands line runs from Yarmouth through the heart of the
Broad District to North Walsham, on the Norwich, Wroxham, and Cromer
line.  The stations from Yarmouth are—



ORMESBY.


A mile and a half from its Broads, about 200 acres of which are free.
The fishing is as good as it can be for pike, rudd, roach, and bream.
Boats at the “Eel’s Foot” and “Sportsman’s Arms.”  Staying accommodation
at the former.



MARTHAM.


Not far from the river Thurne, but the next station is more convenient.



POTTER HEIGHAM.


Inns, the “Falgate” and “Waterman’s Arms,” where there is staying
accommodation.  Good boats at Applegate’s.  The river Thurne and the
channels through Heigham Sounds and Hickling swarm with bream, rudd,
perch, roach, pike, and eels.



CATFIELD.


The nearest station to Hickling, but not so convenient for boats.



STALHAM.


Barton Broad is within a mile and a half, where the fishing is excellent.
Plenty of boats obtainable at the end of the dyke.  Inns, the “Maid’s
Head” and the “Swan,” both very comfortable.  Stalham is a pretty
village.

Thence to North Walsham there is no fishing station of interest.

On the direct line between Yarmouth and Lowestoft, ST. OLAVE’S is the
nearest station to Fritton.



ACLE


Is now a station on the new line between Norwich and Yarmouth, joining
the old line at Brundall.

Of places not accessible by rail, the chief is Horning Ferry, on the
Bure, where there is a capital inn to stay at, kept by a good host and
sportsman, Mr. Thompson, who can be relied upon to make his visitors
comfortable.  At Horning village, the “New” Inn deserves mention, and
boats can be procured there.  Horning is about four miles’ drive from
Wroxham, and ten from Norwich.

The reader is requested to look at the Map, and note the relative
position of the various places.  As to fishing, it can hardly be said
that one is better than another, for all are so good.




NORFOLK AND SUFFOLK FISHERIES ACT.


Under this Act, which was passed in 1877, certain Bye-laws have been
made, with which the reader should make himself acquainted.

                            APPROVED BYE-LAWS.

                       CLOSE TIME—ALL WATERS.

1.  No person shall fish for, catch, take, or kill, or attempt to
catch, take, or kill, otherwise than by rod and line, within the
limits of the above Act, any Trout, between the 10th day of
September and the 25th day of January, both days inclusive, or any
other kind of fish, between the 1st day of March and the 30th day
of June, both days inclusive, except Smelts, Bait, and Eels, as
hereinafter provided.
                          NETS GENERALLY.
2.       No person shall, for the purpose of taking Fish within the
         limits of the above Act, do any of the following things:—
         1.        Use or attempt to use any Net between one hour
                   after sunset and one hour before sunrise, except
                   in the River Ouse below Denver Sluice, and in
                   the River Nene below Wisbeach Bridge.
         2.        Use or attempt to use, at any time before the
                   30th day of June, 1890, for the purpose of
                   taking Fish, other than Tench, Smelts, Bait, and
                   Eels, any Net having a mesh of less dimensions
                   when wet than three inches from knot to knot,
                   measured on each side of the square, or twelve
                   inches all round.
         3.        Use or attempt to use any Net having a wall or
                   facing, with a mesh of less dimensions when wet
                   than seven inches from knot to knot, measured on
                   each side of the square, or 28 inches all round.
         4.        Use or attempt to use, in any navigable river,
                   any Bow Net.
         5.        Use or attempt to use, in any navigable river,
                   any Drag Net having a poke or pocket.
         6.        Use or attempt to use a drag net of any kind in
                   the under-mentioned waters:—
                   1.  The River Yare or Wensum—

                   2.  The River Waveney—

                   3.  The River Bure, below the lower entrance
                   into Wroxham Broad—

                   4.  The River Ant, below the lower entrance into
                   Barton Broad—

                   5.  The River Thurne, below the entrance into
                   Somerton Broad—
                   except with the previous permission in writing
                   of the Board of Conservators, under their Common
                   Seal.
3.  No person shall, within the limits of the above Act, use or
attempt to use, any net for taking Fish, unless it is sufficiently
weighted to sink vertically in the water, or take, or attempt to
take, Fish by placing two or more Nets behind or near to each
other, or use any other device or artifice so as practically to
diminish the size of the mesh of any net allowed to be used by
these Bye-Laws, or to evade this provision.
       PROHIBITING USE OF TRIMMERS, &C., IN NAVIGABLE RIVERS.
4.  No person shall use, or attempt to use, any Trimmer, Ligger,
Dead Line, or Snare, or any like Instrument or Engine, for the
purpose of taking Fish in any navigable river within the limits of
the above Act, except Lines for taking Eels as hereinafter
provided.
               TAKING SMELTS.—RIVERS YARE AND WENSUM.
5.  No person shall, within the limits of the above Act, use, or
attempt to use, any Net in the River Yare or Wensum for the purpose
of taking Smelts, except a Cast Net or Drop Net, between the 10th
day of March and the 12th day of May, both days inclusive, and then
only between the New Mills, in the parish of Saint Swithin, in the
City of Norwich, or Trowse Bridge, in Trowse, or Trowse Newton, and
the junction of the Rivers Yare and Wensum at a place known as
Trowse Hythe, and between Hardley Cross and the junction of the
Rivers Yare and Waveney.
6.  No person shall use, or attempt to use, a Cast Net or Drop Net
exceeding 16 feet in diameter, in the River Yare or Wensum, within
the limits of the above Act.
                   TAKING SMELTS.—RIVER WAVENEY.
7.  No person shall, within the limits of the above Act, use, or
attempt to use, in the River Waveney, above the Burgh Cement works,
any Net for the purpose of taking Smelts, except between the 10th
day of March and the 12th day of May, both days inclusive, and then
only at the places and by the means hereinafter mentioned, viz.,
between Rose Hall Fleet, and the Boat-house Hill, near Beccles, and
in the pen of Shipmeadow Lock, by a Cast Net or Drop Net not
exceeding 16 feet in diameter, and if any such Net be used between
one hour after sunset and one hour before sunrise, the same shall
be used with a light or flare, and not otherwise.
             TAKING SMELTS.—RIVERS OUSE, NAR, AND NENE.
8.  No person shall, within the limits of the above Act, take or
kill, or attempt to take or kill, Smelts in the Rivers Ouse, Nar,
or Nene, between the 1st day of April and the 31st day of August,
both days inclusive.
9.  No person shall, within the limits of the above Act, use or
attempt to use, in the Rivers Ouse, Nar, or Nene, for the purpose
of taking Smelts, any Net having a mesh of less dimensions, when
wet, than five-eighths of an inch from knot to knot, measured on
each side of the square.
                   TAKING SMELTS.—BREYDON WATER.
10.  No person shall, within the limits of the above Act, use, or
attempt to use, in the water known as Breydon Water, for the
purpose of taking Smelts, any Net in the months of May, June, July,
and August, or any Net between the 1st day of September and the
30th day of April, both days inclusive, having a mesh of less
dimensions, when wet, than five-eighths of an inch from knot to
knot, measured on each side of the square.
                   TAKING BAIT.—NAVIGABLE RIVERS.
11.  No person shall, for the purpose of taking Bait in any
navigable river within the limits of the above Act (except in the
River Ouse below Denver Sluice, and in the River Nene below
Wisbeach Bridge), use any Net other than a Cast Net, or any Cast
Net having a mesh of less dimensions, when wet, than five-eighths
of an inch from knot to knot, measured on each side of the square.
                      TAKING BAIT.—ALL WATERS.
12.  No person shall, within the limits of the above Act, use, or
attempt to use, any Cast Net exceeding twelve yards in
circumference, between the 11th day of October and the 1st day of
April in each year, or any Cast Net exceeding eight yards in
circumference at any other time of the year, or any such net,
having a sack, or purse exceeding fourteen inches in depth, when
extended, for the purpose of taking Fish for Bait; and the word
“Bait” shall mean Roach, Rudd or Roud, Bream, Dace, Ruff or Pope,
Gudgeons, and Minnows, measuring less than eight inches from the
nose to the fork of the tail.
13.  No person shall, within the limits of the above Act, Net for
Bait at any time on a Sunday; and no person shall, within such
limits, Net for Bait at any time on a week-day except between one
hour before sunrise and one hour after sunset, nor unless such Bait
is for use in angling, or trolling, or taking Eels within the
limits of the above Act.
     TAKING EELS.—RIVERS YARE AND WENSUM, ABOVE HARDLEY CROSS.
14.  No person shall, for the purpose of taking Eels in the Rivers
Yare and Wensum, above Hardley Cross, do any of the following
things:—
              1.        Use or attempt to use in the months of
                        April, May, and June, a line with a hook or
                        hooks, except in connection with a rod used
                        for the purpose of Angling.
              2.        Use or attempt to use any Net in the months
                        of April, May, and June.
              3.        Use or attempt to use at any other time of
                        the year, a Line, whether fixed or not,
                        with more than one hook, except in
                        connection with a rod used for the purpose
                        of Angling.
              4.        Use or attempt to use any Net other than a
                        Skim or Skein Net.
                   TAKING EELS.—ALL OTHER WATERS.
15.  In all other waters within the limits of the above Act, lines
with one hook only, whether fixed or not, and fixed Nets, but no
others, may be used at any time for taking Eels only.
16.  No person shall use or attempt to use, in any water within the
limits of the above Act, a Dag or Spear, for the purpose of taking
Fish other than Eels.
                            ALL WATERS.
17.  Any person, within the limits of the above Act, taking any
Fish except Smelts, Eels, or Bait in any Net allowed by the Bye
Laws to be used for taking Smelts, Eels, or Bait respectively,
shall immediately return such first-mentioned Fish to the water
without avoidable injury.
18.  The foregoing Bye-laws shall not apply to any other than
fresh-water Fish, or to the water known as Breydon Water, except as
to Smelts, as hereinbefore provided.

_I hereby certify that the foregoing is a true Copy of the Bye-laws made
by the Board of Conservators under the above Act, and that such Bye-laws
have been approved by one of Her Majesty’s Principal Secretaries of
State, and have been duly advertised as approved Bye-laws in newspapers
circulated in the Counties of Norfolk and Suffolk, and have been
otherwise published as the Board directed._

_Sealed by order of the Board._




TABLE OF RIVER DISTANCES.

                       FROM CARROW BRIDGE.
                              YARE.
                                                       _Miles_.
To Trowse Hythe                                                 ½
,, Thorpe Second Bridge                                        1½
,, Whitlingham Ferry                                            2
,, Corby’s Dyke                                                2¼
,, Postwick Grove                                              3¼
,,     ,,    Hall                                              3¾
,, Wood’s End                                                  4¼
,, Wilde’s Cottage                                             4½
,, Surlingham Ferry                                            5¾
,, Coldham Hall                                                7¾
,, Walpole’s Reed Bush                                          9
,, Buckenham Ferry                                             10
,, Hassingham Dyke                                            10¾
,, Langley Dyke                                               11¾
To Cantley Red House                                          12¾
,, Devil’s House                                              13¼
,, Hardley Mill                                                14
,,    ,,    Dyke                                              14¼
,,    ,,    Cross                                             15¼
,, Norton Staithe                                             15¼
,, Reedham Ferry                                              15½
,,    ,,    End of New Cut                                     17
,, Upper Seven Mile House                                     18½
,, Berney Arms                                                20¾
,, Burgh Flats                                                 21
,, Yarmouth Drawbridge                                         25
,, Gorleston Pierhead                                         27¼
                      FROM REEDHAM BRIDGE.
                            WAVENEY.
To Herringfleet Bridge                                          3
,,  Somerleyton Bridge                                         4½
,,  Oulton Dyke                                                7½
,,    ,,    Broad                                              8¾
To Mutford Lock                                                9¾
,,  Lowestoft Bridge                                          11½
,,     ,,      Pierhead                                       11¾
                      FROM YARMOUTH BRIDGE.
                              YARE.
To Berney Arms                                                 4¼
,,  Reedham Town                                                8
,,  Norton Staithe                                             9¾
,,  Hardley Cross                                              10
,,  Cantley                                                   12½
,,  Buckenham Ferry                                            15
,,  Coldham Hall                                              18¼
,,  Surlingham Ferry                                          19¾
,,  Bramerton Wood’s End                                       21
,,  Postwick Grove                                             22
,,  Whitlingham                                                23
,,  Carrow Bridge                                              25
                            WAVENEY.
To Burgh Cage                                                  4¾
,,  St. Olave’s Bridge                                         9½
,,  Mouth of New Cut                                           9¾
,,  Somerleyton Bridge                                        12¼
,,  Mouth of Oulton Dyke                                       15
,,  Carlton Share Mill                                        16¼
,,  Seven-Mile Corner                                         17¾
,,  Six-Mile Corner                                           18¾
,,  Worlingham Staithe                                         20
,,  Aldeby Staithe                                            20½
,,  Beccles Mill                                               21
,,  Sayer’s Grove                                              22
,,  Beccles Bridge                                             23
,,  Nine Poplars                                              24¼
To Dawson’s Dip House                                         24¾
,,  Barsham’s Boat House                                      25¾
,,  Mouth of Oulton Dyke                                       15
,,  Horse Shoe Point                                           16
,,  Oulton Broad                                              16½
,,  Mutford Bridge                                            17¼
,,  Lowestoft Bridge                                           19
,,  Length of New Cut                                          2½
BURE.
To Three-Mile House                                             3
,,  Runham Swim                                                5½
,,  Six-Mile House                                             6½
,,  Seven-Mile House                                           8½
,,  Stokesby Ferry                                             10
,,  Acle Bridge                                                12
,,  Fishley Mill                                              12½
,,  Thurne Mouth                                              15¼
,,  St. Benet’s Abbey                                          17
,,  Mouth of Ant                                              17½
,,  Horning Ferry                                              21
,,  Horning Point                                              22
,,  Wroxham Broad                                             25½
,,  Wroxham Bridge                                             27
,,  Belaugh                                                    31
,,  Coltishall Bridge                                          34
,,  Aylsham Bridge                                             45
                             THURNE.
To Thurne Mouth                                               15¼
,,  Potter Heigham Bridge                                      19
,,  Candler’s Dyke                                            19½
,,  Hickling Staithe                                          22¼
                              ANT.
To Mouth of Ant                                               17½
,,  Ludham Bridge                                             18¼
,,  Mouth of Barton Broad                                     21¾
,,  End of Barton Broad                                       22½
,,  Stalham                                                   23½
,,  Stalham Staithe                                           24¼
From Yarmouth Bridge to Runham Swim                            5½
   ,,    ,,         ,,      Six-Mile House                     6½
   ,,    ,,         ,,      Seven-Mile House                   8½
   ,,    ,,         ,,      Stokesby Ferry                     10
   ,,    ,,         ,,      Acle Bridge                        12
From Acle Bridge to Fishley Mill                                ½
   ,,    ,,     ,,      Thurne Mouth                           3¼
   ,,    ,,     ,,      St. Benet’s                             5
   ,,    ,,     ,,      Mouth of Ant                           5½
   ,,    ,,     ,,      Horning Rectory                        7½
   ,,    ,,     ,,         ,,    Ferry                          9
   ,,    ,,     ,,         ,,    Point                         10
   ,,    ,,     ,,      Entrance to Wroxham Broad             13½
   ,,    ,,     ,,      Wroxham Bridge                         15
From Wroxham Bridge to Belaugh                                  4
   ,,    ,,     ,,      ,,  Coltishall                          7
   ,,    ,,     ,,      ,,  Aylsham                            18
From Yarmouth Bridge to Wroxham Bridge                         27
   ,,    ,,     ,,       ,,  Coltishall                        34
   ,,    ,,     ,,       ,,  Aylsham                           45
From Thurne Mouth to Heigham Bridge                            3¾
   ,,    ,,     ,,    ,,  Kendal Dyke                          4¼
   ,,    ,,     ,,    ,,  Hickling Staithe                      7
From River Ant to Ludham Bridge                                 ¾
   ,,    ,,    ,,  ,,  Mouth of Barton Broad                   4¼
   ,,    ,,    ,,  ,,  End of     ,,      ,,                    5
   ,,    ,,    ,,  ,,  End of Stalham Broad                     6
   ,,    ,,    ,,  ,,    ,, ,,      ,,   Staithe               6¾

TIDES.

                                      h.       m.
It is high water at Lowestoft             0       43  later than at
                                                      Yarmouth Bar
,,    ,,       ,,   ,,  Cantley           3        0     ,,     ,,
                                                      ,,    ,,
                                                      ,,
,,    ,,       ,,   ,,  Coldham           4        0     ,,     ,,
Hall                                                  ,,    ,,
                                                      ,,
,,    ,,       ,,   ,,  Oulton            4        0     ,,     ,,
                                                      ,,    ,,
                                                      ,,
,,    ,,       ,,   ,,  Horning           4        0     ,,     ,,
                                                      ,,    ,,
                                                      ,,

The Tide flows and ebbs in the Bure one hour later than at Yarmouth
Bridge.

                               Springs.       Neap.
The rise at Yarmouth is        6 feet         4½ feet
,,   ,,   ,,  Lowestoft ,,     6½ ,,          5¼   ,,
,,   ,,   ,,  Cantley   ,,     2½ ,,          1½   ,,
,,   ,,   ,,  Oulton    ,,     2  ,,          1¼   ,,


The Tides, however, vary according to the strength and direction of the
wind and the quantity of flood water in the river.




FISHING GENERALLY.


In the rivers it is customary to fish in 10 to 14 feet of water, and the
shortness of the swims necessitates the line being heavily weighted, in
order that it may sink rapidly.  The floats are necessarily large,
particularly when used for the lower reaches, where there is a
considerable tidal current.  The boats are moored in a line with the
stream, not across it, as on the Thames, and the swims are thus very
short.  For the upper and clearer waters, the Nottingham system of
angling might be advisable, but in the more turbid lower reaches the
Norfolk style is practically the best.  Worms are used for bream, and
paste for roach.  Worms are procurable at some of the tackle shops, but
anglers will do well to provide them for themselves if possible.

Boats are charged for at the rate of from 1s. to 2s. a-day, but are
rather rough concerns, except at Oulton.

Ground-bait, consisting chiefly of meal and clay, is largely used, but a
place is rarely baited beforehand.  As there is ample choice of stations,
always moor so that the wind is at your back, and you will thus have
smooth water in front of you.

Small roach as bait for pike, are procurable at most of the waterside
inns, at 1s. to 1s. 6d. a score, but to get the best sport obtain fish
from other waters, particularly dace and gudgeon.

Pike are, of course, the chief fish in Norfolk, and are plentiful
everywhere.  In the rivers they do not run very large, a ten-pound fish
being considered a good one, but in a few years’ time, with the freedom
from netting the rivers now enjoy, we may expect some very large ones to
be caught in the rivers.  In private waters there are veritable monsters,
but the stranger is not likely to make acquaintance with them.

Live-baiting and spinning with a spoon, or artificial bait trailed behind
a boat, are the usual modes of fishing for pike in Norfolk.  Trolling
with a dead gorge, and spinning with a dead bait by casting, as in the
Thames, are comparatively rarely practised, although I believe that in
some portions of the rivers these methods would “pay.”  I have seen
fly-fishing for pike practised with success here, and I firmly believe
that on some of the shallower Broads it would be very deadly.

                  [Picture: Ormesby Broad—Landing stage]

Perch are only locally common wherever there is a suitable bottom for
them, as at Irstead Shoals and Hickling, and in some portions of the Bure
and Waveney, but they run to a large size, and are sometimes caught
between three and four pounds in weight.

Bream are most common of all, and may be caught by hundreds and the stone
weight.  They run up to five and six pounds in weight, and a take by two
rods in a day of 150, averaging half-a-pound apiece, is not a rare event.

Roach are very numerous and large, many running close to two pounds in
weight.

Rudd are beautiful game fish, common in some of the Broads, particularly
Ormesby, and give rare sport if you get among a shoal of them.

Eels are, of course, present in any number, and “babbing” for them, with
a bunch of worms threaded on to worsted, is not a bad way of passing a
warm night.

Tench are common, but are not often caught with a rod and line.  They are
taken in bow nets, and run very large.  In hot weather, in June, they may
be taken by the hand as they bask in the shallow water among the weeds.
Some fishermen are very skilful in this particular mode of catching them.

Carp are caught sometimes, but not often, although there are plenty of
them.

Dace and gudgeon are not so frequently caught in the navigable waters as
other fish.

Chub and barbel are unknown in the Broad District.

The bream are so excessively abundant that they spoil the fishing for
other fish, notably for perch, and I think it would be an excellent thing
if the different preservation societies would set apart a few days each
year for systematic netting to thin the bream, replacing the other fish,
and selling those retained.  What is the good to anglers of catching
thousands of small bream?  Are not a score over a pound weight each
better than ten-score fingerlings?  Judicious thinning out, under proper
supervision, would have a most beneficial effect on the size of the fish
generally.

There are several preservation societies, of which the Yare Preservation
Society is the chief.  Mr. C. J. Greene, of London Street, Norwich,
Fishing Tackle Maker, is the honorary secretary.  The objects of these
societies are to abolish netting and poaching, and protect the river for
fair angling.  The subscriptions are nominal (5s.), and yet they are
supported entirely by local efforts.  As a rule, none of the anglers from
London and other distant parts, who come down to Norfolk and have the
best of sport, contribute anything to the societies which are
instrumental in furnishing them with sport.  This is exceedingly shabby
of visitors here, and I trust that those who have been induced to visit
the Broads through my writings will at least make the small return to
Norfolk anglers of assisting them in their efforts to make these waters
the best public fishing places in the kingdom.

There are a few professional fishermen to be hired by the angler.
“Professor” Day, of Richmond Hill, Norwich, is one of the best, and knows
every inch of water, and there are some good men at Oulton.

Strangers frequently complain that they cannot meet with the excellent
sport which falls to the lot of the local anglers, and I remember Mr.
Cholmondeley Pennel being immensely dispirited at his non-success on our
waters.  I lately interviewed a local gentleman who is well known as a
successful fisherman, and I append my questions and his remarks thereon,
which will afford some valuable information.



ROACH.


_1.  Where found at different periods of the year_?

Throughout the summer the entire length of our local streams where the
water is fresh and not salt or brackish; the finest fish and greatest
number between Cantley and Coldham Hall, on the Yare; large numbers also
in the dyke leading from Oulton Broad.  In winter they appear generally
to retire to the deep waters, and are sometimes found in good quantity
about Thorpe Broad, and may be angled for with success in deep spots on
the Bure and other waters.

_2.  Best periods to fish for them_?

July to October, but good catches may often be had in November, and
during the winter and early spring months by any expert angler who
doesn’t mind the cold.

_3.  What time of day at different seasons_?

As a rule, but few fish are caught during the middle of the day; this is
especially the case in bright warm weather.  On dull, “close” days,
however, they will often bite freely throughout the day.  The morning up
to about 11.30, and from 3 to 6 or 7 p.m. are undoubtedly the best times
to fish during summer, and in winter almost any time up to sunset.

_4.  What depth of water_?

As a rule, the best fish are found during summer in the deepest water,
and should not be angled for on the Yare at a less depth than nine or ten
feet.  On the Bure the deepest spots that can be found.  In March or
April shallower waters should be tried.

_5.  How affected by the tide_?

Variously.  Sometimes an angler gets all his fish on the up tide, and at
other times on the ebb.  I, however, suspect that certain local
formations of the river bed, have much to do with this.

_6.  What ground-bait_?

The best I have ever used is composed of bran, bread, and boiled wheat,
in fair proportions, made up into firm balls about the size of an orange.
One of these thrown in occasionally, and now and then a few grains of
boiled wheat will generally suffice to keep a good quantity of fish about
your boat.

_7.  Are places ever baited beforehand_?

Not often for roach.  Believe this is done occasionally by some, but have
never practised it myself.

_8.  What baits are most successful_?

During summer the most successful baits are well-boiled wheat and paste,
red or white, in such clear waters as the Waveney and the upper reaches
of Bure, etc.  White paste is best on the Yare, the red always kills the
best fish.  In autumn, gentles, and later on brandlings and gentles, or
better still, small red worms, “blood.”  There are many other baits used
with good success occasionally, but these are by far the most reliable.

_9.  What kind of rod_?

For tight-line fishing in the deep waters of the Yare, the rod should be
light, stiff, and from 15 to 18 feet in length.  For running tackle a
shorter rod will do, and for this I prefer one of hickory.  Should
recommend cane for the longer kind.

_10.  Number of hook_?

When the fish are of fair size, I use No. 9, at other times Nos. 10 or
12.  Those known amongst anglers as “Crystal,” are excellent for roach
fishing.

_11.  Is running tackle advisable_?

Running tackle is decidedly preferable for such deep, strong waters as
those between Coldham Hall and Reedham.  For the slower waters of the
Bure and the upper reaches of the Yare, I do not consider that running
tackle has any advantages worth naming.

_12.  Do you use gut or hair, and what kind of line_?

For deep-water fishing I always attach nine feet of gut to my line; six
feet moderately stout and three feet fine drawn.  Line, a fine _braided_
silk.  A light, well-shotted line of this kind has many advantages,
especially on a windy day.

_13.  What kind of float_?

Quill at all times.  For deep swift waters, a large pelican or swan
quill, for slower and shallower waters a much smaller one.

_14.  Is line heavily shotted_?

For deep waters I use a float carrying upwards of 20 medium-sized shot.
These are placed on a space of about a foot, the bottom one not nearer
than about three feet from the hook, with just one shot on the gut
attached to hook.  This arrangement ensures the bait being carried
swiftly to the bottom and kept steady, very important items in roach
fishing.

_15.  Is float best attached by lower end only_?

Yes, this plan which has been in practice with the “Norwich School” for
many years past is decidedly the best, and admits of much more neatness
and accuracy in striking a fish than when the float is attached by upper
end as well as lower.

_16.  Do you strike at first dip_?

When good fish are on the feed, the float is first affected by a slight
tremulous movement, and almost immediately settles down, generally in a
slanting direction; the moment to strike is just as the settling down
commences.  This, however, requires a large amount of practice and some
keen observation before an angler becomes expert.  Sudden perky bites
indicate small fish, and these are often the most difficult to catch.

_17.  Are the fish much affected by change of wind, rain, thick water,
etc., and is there any rule on this head_?

Have always found a S.W. to N.W. wind the most favourable, especially
when the water is “grey” or thick, and have had capital sport with a
moderate east wind, but never when it has blown strongly from that
quarter, and the old maxim

    “When the wind blows from the east
       The fish bite the least,
    When the wind’s from the west
       The fish bite the best,”

contains a great truth in small compass.  Fish may undoubtedly be taken
in clear water and in good quantity, but running tackle and fine, and
extreme caution are necessary.

_18.  Do you find that movement in the boat, noise, or loud talking
frightens the fish_?

Loud talking or laughter in the boat does not appear to intimidate the
fish, but knocking or any disturbance which communicates a vibration to
the water is decidedly objectionable, especially in shallower streams,
and often causes a great interruption to the fishing.  Have found a pair
of lawn-tennis shoes or slippers very good to wear in a boat when
fishing, for this reason.

_19.  Name some of the best catches you have made or know of_.

I do not chronicle my catches, so can give no dates; but have had some
fine catches within the past five or six years, principally on the Yare.
On one occasion, at Buckenham, with a friend, six stone {160} between
2.30 and 7 p.m.; another time upwards of five stone in about the same
space of time, and numerous catches of from two to four stone in an
afternoon’s fishing; also more than a bushel by measure one afternoon
with a friend fishing in the dyke leading to Oulton Broad.  This was in
the first week of September, 1879.

_20.  What is the reason of the non-success of strange anglers which is
so noticeable_?

Ignorance of the general requirements of tackle suitable for fishing in
our waters, and also of the _modus operandi_, one of the chief reasons
being a want of knowledge of the right depth at which to fish, which
could easily be known by simply “plumbing” the depth.  By way of
instance, I have on several occasions found strangers fishing on the Yare
in 12 or 14 feet of water, with their baits only about four or five feet
below the surface, and at the same time wondering that anglers close by
should be catching plenty of fish when they could get none.  Baits, too,
are doubtless used which, although very good for some streams or waters,
are of very little use with us.

N.B.—“When the wind blows strong and the waves roll high,” it is often
very difficult to fish or even to detect a bite.  This is very
tantalising, and not infrequently happens through a shift in the wind
when you are in a capital “swim.”  The remedy for this is to put on a
nice light ledger, with about three hooks, and with which excellent sport
may sometimes be had when it would be impossible to fish in any other
way.

In float fishing for roach, the bait should be just touching the bottom.
A good plan adopted by some is to fish with two hooks, the bottom one
dragging on the bottom, and the upper one about three or four inches
clear of the bottom.  This is an advantage in fast streams, as it retards
the onward motion of the float, the bait is more easily taken, and the
swims are not passed so rapidly.



BREAM.


_1.  Where found at different periods of the year_?

During summer, on the Yare, principally between Langley Dyke and Reedham;
in winter often found in good quantity in the vicinity of Thorpe Broad
and about Carrow and Trowse Hythe.  On the Bure they appear to congregate
in the deep waters of the Broads in winter, and make their appearance
about the end of May and through the summer on the river.

_2.  Best periods to fish for them_?

July and August.

_3.  What time of day at different seasons_?

Good catches of bream are often had in early morning.  I have, on the
other hand, had capital sport by moonlight.

For further notes, see answer to same question on “Roach.”

_4.  What depth of water_?

The deepest waters and quietest eddies are, as a rule, the best; but I
have caught large quantities of fine bream at Wroxham, on the Bure, in
not more than four feet and a half of water.

_5.  How affected by the tide_?

Generally speaking, the most fish are taken from about half an hour
before high water to half an hour after.  For further notes, see “Roach.”

_6.  What ground-bait_?

Boiled maize, boiled barley grains, barley meal made up into balls,
chopped worms, boiled rice.  This latter and grains I have found very
killing on the Bure.

_7.  Are places ever baited beforehand_?

Mostly overnight, where there is a fair opportunity of doing so.  This
mode is very telling on Broads and other still waters.

_8.  What baits are most successful_?

For large fish at Cantley, Reedham, Somerleyton, and other deep swift
waters, ledger fishing, with the tail end of a lobworm on the hook, is a
capital bait.  Generally speaking, however, I have found “brandlings” the
most killing, and have found a brandling with a gentle placed on the
point of the hook will sometimes be taken readily when no other bait
would be touched.  Red paste is often very killing on the Bure.

_9.  What kind of rod_?

Strong and stiff cane or hickory, 15 to 18 feet long, with a good stout
top joint, on the Yare.  Shorter will do on the Bure.

_10.  Number of hook_?

The finest catch I ever had was with No. 12 hooks.  This was, however, in
comparatively shallow water.  Should say that No. 7 or 8 would be very
good sizes for bream fishing generally.

_11.  Is running tackle advisable_?

See “Roach.”

_12.  Do you use gut or hair, and what kind of line_?

See “Roach.”

_13.  What kind of float_?

See “Roach.”

_14.  Is line heavily shotted_?

In a similar way to that recommended for roach, but having the bulk of
shot placed nearer the hook, it being necessary that the bait should
“drag” the bottom.

_15.  Is float best attached by lower end only_?

As the bream bites more slowly and certain than the roach, this is quite
immaterial.  I prefer float attached top and bottom.

_16.  Do you strike at first dip_?

A bream bite affects the float with a slight bobbing motion for a few
seconds, he then runs off with it, and slides it down slantingly; strike
as he runs off with the bait or the float is about to disappear, and you
are sure of him.

_17_.  _Are the fish much affected by change of wind, rain, thick water,
etc., and is there any rule on this head_?

Bream are rarely taken in any quantity when the waters are very clear.
See “Roach.”

_18_.  _Is legering successfully practised for large bream, and what is
the best modus operandi_?

In such rapid waters as those at Reedham, Somerleyton, etc.—no other mode
of fishing for bream can be practised with any success worth
naming—ledgers for attaching to line may be purchased at any tackle shop
at 1s. each, and the _modus operandi_ is very simple, and by no means
scientific.  The rod requires to be very strong and of fair length, and
three or four rods may be used from one boat at the same time.

_19.  Do you find that movement in the boat, noise, or loud talking
frightens the fish?_

Bream are very sensitive to noise, especially knocking in the boat, which
invariably sends them off for an indefinite period, and should therefore
be most carefully avoided.

_20.  Name some of the best catches you have made or known of_.

About ten years ago, had, in company with a friend, a catch of 17 stone
in one day on Wroxham Broad, and with only one rod each.  Have heard of
many catches from time to time of from 4 to 10 or 12 stone, but am unable
now to give names or dates.

_21.  What is the reason of the non-success of strange anglers which is
so noticeable_?

See “Roach.”

N.B.  In fishing for bream, the bait should always drag on the bottom.




YACHTING.


It will have been gathered from the foregoing pages that the Rivers and
Broads of Norfolk and Suffolk present exceptional facilities for
small-boat sailing and smooth-water yachting, better, perhaps, than any
other part of England.  There are two yachting clubs, the Norfolk and
Suffolk Yacht Club and the Yare Sailing Club, the latter a very
flourishing institution, furnishing four or five regattas in the year for
small 4-ton yachts and open boats.

There are numbers of suitable yachts for hire, but, owing to the frequent
changes of ownership, it is not practicable to give a list of those who
have boats for hire, which would be of any use.  Enquiry at the inns at
Oulton, and advertisements in the Yarmouth and Norwich papers will
generally elicit suitable answers.  Bullen, of Oulton, is a likely man to
have a yacht to let.  Open sailing-boats with awnings to sleep under, and
small cabin yachts of four to ten tons, can be obtained of Loynes,
Wroxham; and comfortable craft they are.  The awnings of the small boats
are waterproof, and most ingeniously constructed, and the boats can be
rowed or sailed anywhere.  Loynes may be trusted to provide everything
that is necessary for comfort, and his yachts and boats are largely
patronized.  They are all rigged Una fashion, with one sail, and are very
easily managed.  Canoes and rowing boats are in plenty at the riverside,
at Norwich, Yarmouth, and Oulton.

As before stated, the goods traffic on the river is carried on by means
of sailing craft of from 20 to 70 tons burthen, called wherries.  These
are long, shallow, graceful vessels, with an enormous mast, supporting
one enormous sail.  The sail is spread by a long gaff, but there is no
boom.  There is only one halyard, and the sail is hoisted by means of a
winch at the foot of the mast.  There is no rigging to the mast except
the forestay, which is mainly of use for lowering the mast, the latter
being balanced on the tabernacle by a ton and a half of lead on its heel,
so that it is raised as easily as it is lowered.  These wherries sail
very fast, very close to the wind, and are often managed by one man.
Yachts built on the wherry plan are very comfortable craft, and easily
managed.

Wherries are frequently hired by private parties, the hatches are raised
a plank or two higher to give greater head-room, the clean-swept hold is
divided into several rooms, and a capital floating house is extemporized.

There is now quite a fleet of permanently-fitted pleasure wherries on the
rivers, which have ample accommodation for a party or family, and are to
be hired at from 8 to 15 guineas a week.

A good way of seeing the rivers, if you have no boat, is to give a
wherryman a small sum to take you with him when he makes a passage.
There are always numbers of wherries leaving Norwich and Yarmouth, and if
you hail the one you fancy, you will be readily taken on board.  Thus you
might sail from Norwich to Yarmouth one day, up to Wroxham the next, back
to Yarmouth and up to Beccles, at an expenditure of half-a-crown a day
and refreshments.  I am sure that visitors to either Yarmouth or
Lowestoft will do well to avail themselves of this suggestion.

The navigation is controlled by Acts of Parliament, but pleasure yachts
are exempt from tolls, except, of course, at locks and Haddiscoe lift
bridge.

The rule of the road is very strictly adhered to by the wherries and
local yachts, and necessarily so; but it is a point of honour not to
harass business wherries if it can be avoided, as these are sailed for a
livelihood, while yachtsmen sail for pleasure.  Therefore, if there is a
doubt, give the wherry the benefit of it.

It is also a point of prudence not to cross a wherry’s bows too closely,
as they would soon smash up a yacht.  If you are civil to a wherryman he
will be most civil to you, and don’t slang him if he doesn’t at once give
way for you to pass him.

The following racing regulations of the Yacht Clubs simply epitomise the
custom and practice on the rivers, and must be adhered to:

“That if two yachts be standing for the shore of any river or broad, and
the yacht to leeward be likely to run aground or foul any bottom or bank,
or not be able to stay without the windward yacht running foul of her,
the windward yacht must be put about upon being hailed by the member of
the Club who may be in charge of the leeward yacht; the yacht to leeward
must also go about at the same time as the yacht she hails.

“That in sailing to windward the yacht on the port tack must give way to
the yacht on the starboard tack, and in case of collision, the owner of
the vessel on the port tack shall be liable to pay all damages that may
occur, and forfeit all claim to the prize.

“That any yacht bearing away or altering her course to windward or
leeward, provided there is no obstruction to prevent her keeping her
course, thereby compelling another vessel to go out of her course, shall
forfeit all claim to the prize.  In running before the wind, the side the
leading vessel carries her main boom is to be considered the lee side.

“A yacht overhauling another may pass to windward or leeward; and when
near the shore or shallow water, or when rounding any mark, flag, or
buoy, _if the bowsprit of the yacht astern overlap any portion of the
hull of the yacht ahead_, the latter must immediately give way and allow
the former to pass between her and such shore, shallow water, mark, flag,
or buoy; and should any yacht not give way or compel another to touch the
ground, or to foul any mark, flag, or buoy, the yacht so compelling her
shall forfeit all claim to the prize, her owner shall pay all damage that
may occur, and the yacht so compelled to touch such mark, flag, or buoy
shall not in this case suffer any penalty for such contact.

“It is an established rule, and should be most strictly attended to by
all yachtsmen, that where two vessels have to cross each other on
opposite tacks, the one on the starboard tack must invariably keep her
wind, and the one on the port tack must keep away and pass to leeward, or
tack short when the smallest doubt exists of her not being able to
weather the other.  All expenses of damage incurred by vessels on
opposite tacks running on board each other, fall upon the one on the port
tack; but where the one on the starboard tack has kept away with the
intention of passing to leeward, and they have come in contact, the
expenses of damage fall upon her on the starboard tack, because by her
keeping away she may have prevented the other passing to leeward.  When a
vessel on the starboard tack sees another attempting to weather her, when
it does not seem possible, rather than keep away, she should put her helm
down, for the less way vessels have when they come in contact, the less
damage they will sustain.  Should both vessels put their helms up and run
on board each other, the most fatal consequences may arise, and therefore
nothing should induce the vessel on the starboard tack to keep away.  All
vessels going free must give way to those on a wind.”




SHOOTING AND SKATING.


This district is well worth a visit in the winter time, for the wild-fowl
shooting on the tidal portions of the rivers is free (of course you must
not trespass on the marshes for shooting purposes, as the shooting along
them is strictly preserved).  The usual plan is to row along the river
while your dogs work through the reeds on the bank inside the river wall,
or embankment, which generally runs parallel with the rivers on each
side.  Flight shooting is also successfully pursued, but of course you
must obtain information as to the best spots in the line of flight.
Oulton Broad is free, but is much shot over.  Breydon Water is a capital
fowling-ground in hard winters.  It is the “happy hunting ground” of
Yarmouth gunners.  An easily managed sailing-boat of light draught is
useful for this kind of work.

Winter time on the Broads is very enjoyable.  Being so shallow, the
Broads are soon frozen, and the skating is then simply superb.  Fancy
Hickling, a lake of 400 acres, safe all over, with the ice as clear and
hard as glass, _and plenty of “elbow-room_” for ice-boats as well as
skaters.

It would be worth while for skating parties to come down for a few days
at a time while the frosts last, instead of struggling amid the crowds
which beset London waters.




FAUNA OF THE BROADS.


I cannot do more than cursorily mention the abundant life which teems
amid the Broads.  I would refer the reader, for a full account of the
life of the Broads thirty years ago and now, to that charming book,
worthy to be ranked with “The Complete Angler,” and “The Natural History
of Selborne,” “Observations on the Fauna of Norfolk, and more
particularly on the District of the Broads,” by the Rev. Richard Lubbock,
M.A., a new edition of which, with suitable notes by Mr. Thomas
Southwell, has lately been issued by Messrs. Jarrold and Sons, London and
Norwich.  This book, together with Stevenson’s “Birds of Norfolk,” are
necessary companions to the ornithologist on the Broads.  For a fuller
general descriptive account of the district, I may also refer the reader
to my own larger book, “Norfolk Broads and Rivers,” published by
Blackwood.

Of course, water-fowl predominate.  The heron, the great-crested grebe,
the coot and water-hen are constantly to be seen.  Dabchicks abound in
places.  I have seen a score together in some open water, at Surlingham,
during a frost.  Kingfishers are seen occasionally; water-ouzels never in
the navigable waters.  Wild ducks, widgeon, teal, and other ducks, gulls,
terns, and waders of many species, hawks, kestrels, marsh harriers, and
hen harriers are occasionally met with, particularly about Hickling.
Owls, reed wrens, reed buntings, and bearded tits (I know a colony of the
latter), and other birds occur to me as I write, but detailed lists of
the Norfolk species will be found in the “Transactions of the Norfolk and
Norwich Naturalists’ Society” of past years.  It is sufficient to say
that not only in the department of ornithology, but of entomology and
botany, the specialist will find abundant work.  During the days and
nights I have spent in the more secluded parts of the waters, and
particularly in the very early hours after daybreak, I have watched the
habits of certain rare species, and discovered their haunts, which I
would not reveal for anything, for to do so would be to expose them to
the ravages of collectors.  I am not a collector myself, nor have I the
remotest pretension to science, but I am an enthusiastic student of what
I may call the “home-life” of birds and animals.  Therefore I cannot give
accurate scientific information, in the shape of lists of Broad species
without borrowing from the labours of others, and the clothing the dry
bones with flesh would require more space than a guide-book will allow.
But let a man lie in a boat, amid the reeds, for an hour of the silvery
dawn, and watch a pair of great-crested grebes, feeding their young ones
with small fish, and teaching them to dive and catch fish also, all so
close that you might at times touch the birds with a fishing-rod, and he
will partly understand what to me is the charm of Natural History.  And
for the romance of it there is no place like the reed-surrounded Broad
and its marshy borders.




Footnotes.


{29}  This bridge was the scene of a most disastrous railway collision,
in September, 1874, when two trains met, and an appalling loss of life
resulted, 25 persons being killed, and 60 or 70 injured.

{70}  [Note.  This is left as first written, but it is necessary now to
say that since the death of Mr. Chamberlin, the owners of the Broad have
obtained a decision in the Superior Courts that the public have no right
to fish on Wroxham Broad, and although the navigation question has not
been raised, the owners claim the Broad to be private property.  At the
same time they courteously disclaim any intention of closing the Broad to
the reasonable enjoyment of the public.  Sailing on the Broad is freely
permitted, but yachts are not allowed to moor there at night, on account,
it is said, of the unavoidable refuse floating against the private
pleasure grounds of the owners.  Persons also are not allowed to land.
It is to be hoped that the good behaviour of the public will remove all
idea of closing the Broad to the public, which would be nothing short of
a calamity.  The regattas on this Broad which used to be such sources of
amusement, have been quite discontinued, partly on account of the
difficulty in getting the present racing craft up the North River, and
partly through the reluctance of yacht owners to ask the favour of
sailing where they formerly supposed they had a right.]

{91}  Sometimes called Wannick, or Wandyke, said to be a corruption of
Swandyke.

{160}  Stone = 14 lbs.