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Canal Cruise and Meal in Sheffield

canal boat trip sheffield

If you’re looking for a dinner with a difference, A and G Passenger Boats provides a great experience with good food to leave you and your party completely satisfied! They can serve large or small groups and offer a full boat charter also. You can expect to be toured around the Sheffield and Tinsley Canal for 3 hours, learn a little about the area, and also have great food along with a fully licensed bar!

Where can I get a meal with a unique experience?

The boat was built in 2008 and can accommodate 70 guests and has a full kitchen and bar. Its large windows give a great view of the outside, even if it’s cold and wet outside it will be warm and cosy inside the boat. The boat was also built with inclusivity in mind so there is a wheelchair-accessible toilet and a platform lift to enable easy access for those who are less able. We are sure you won’t be left disappointed by the service and experience on this canal cruise so what are you waiting for?

  • A and G offer many types of cruises that vary in price and type
  • 3 course Price £37.95/person (child £32.95).
  • 2 course Price £34.95/person (child £29.95)
  • 3-hour cruise
  • Booking in advance is necessary
  • Can cater for large and small groups
  • Also, offer a heritage tour in summer to learn about the local area without food

A and G Passenger Boats Ltd

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Sheffield Narrowboats

Making life a float, welcome aboard.

Many companies build boats, we build Boaters!

It has been a wonderful 12 years for us, offering unique long term hire and seeing our guests moving on from the RYA Helmsman's Course to becoming, after six months on the cut, probably amongst the most experienced boaters on the UK waterways.

During these 12 years we have never had a single complaint about our hirers, indeed the contrary is the case, as we ourselves travel the waterways many recognise our boats and ask where "Pere and Jan", or Sandra and Geoff" are.

We have been proud to offer the highest quality boats, maintained far in excess of requirements with a full service every 200 hours, and never a penny pinched - preferring happy customers over skimping for a couple of extra pounds profit.

We have enjoyed every single minute of working with customers to ensure they have a truly life affirming experience, and we have been proud to act as ambassadors for our beautiful and unique waterways.

Proud to have been "Carbon Neutral" before it became fashionable, (and now utterly essential), and even prouder to have only generated two black binbags of waste that cannot otherwise be reused, recycled, reimagined or repurposed in the last year and a half.

Proud to represent Sheffield, buying from our neighbouring boatbuilder and friend Jonathan Wilson, only using Sheffield cutlery on our boats and making our part of the Sheffield Canal more interesting - our historic wharf resplendent with our Pirate skeletons being the most photographed feature of the Sheffield Canal.

But all the joys and celebrations have been undermined and eroded by constantly having to do battle with "CRT", the Canal and River Trust (previously known as British Waterways).

CRT are not only anti waterways business, they are deliberately antagonistic, unhelpful, obstructive, officious, inept and institutionally incompetent.  Their 'on the ground' staff, especially lock keepers are absolutely superb however, but anyone in an office will have had special training in being unhelpful and officious.  We have lost count of the number of times we've had to threaten legal action against them.

Our frustration and disappointment with CRT came to a head last year though.  The bicentennial celebration of the Sheffield Canal. After 10 years of drawing attention to the abysmal state of the towpath between Victoria Quays (Sheffield Canal Basin) and the start of the locks at Tinsley, being in many places impassable due to many a deeply rutted, muddy quagmire, the 200th Birthday celebrations were focussed at the Quays, with no regard to making the atrotious towpath even slightly accessible for wheelchair users or even families with a pram.  The celebrations (such as they were) consisted mainly of mutual backslapping of CRT officials and a floatila of boats from Don Valley to the Quays.

CRT have failed in their statutory obligation to ensure the towpath is accessible, counter to the Equality Act of 2010.

Having spent 12 years promoting the Sheffield Canal, making our canalside presence interesting and picturesque, we felt ashamed and embarrassed having to witness the state of many who'd braved the walk along the towpath.

Together with neglecting the disabled, CRT have consistently demonstrated a reluctance to support waterway businesses.  We are fortunate to have always self funded and have had no borrowing requirements, however due to lack of maintenance of their network with numerous breaches and stoppages, we have seen many colleague business fail with no support whatsoever from CRT.

In short, closing Sheffield Narrowboat, although sad to no longer being a part of the wonderful experience our customers share, will prove to be a welcome break from having to deal with CRT - who with experience, we now adopt an automatic default position of expecting difficulty.

To our many wonderful customers, colleages and waterway friends over the past 12 years, we thank you for making 'being a waterway business' a true joy, we love you all and will miss you.

To CRT, we'll be glad to never have to deal with you again.

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Sheffield Narrowboats Limited Registered in England: 5943780 - VAT Registration Number: 890 7737 78 Registered Office: The Boathouse, Canal Street, Sheffield, S4 7ZE

Skippered trips & boat charters

Skippered trip boats, charter boats

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Canal trip boats & party charter boats

Skippered canal trip boats are great on a day out. Trip boats run short scheduled canal pleasure cruises, usually lasting an hour or two, that you can often just turn up and join.

  • You get a cruise along a canal usually with a guide onboard pointing out interesting things to see.
  • Trip boats have a skipper and crew and will often provide onboard food & refreshments.
  • Some are based at popular visitor centres, others in town and city centres.
  • Many canal trip boats also offer  chartered cruises  for just your party, which must be booked in advance. Some offer trips for school groups, business hire, party cruises & wedding receptions.
  • Some charities run specially adapted accessible trip boats for people with disabilities.

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Chesterfield Canal

Chesterfield Canal Trust

Chesterfield Canal Trust,  Charter boat trips, children's pirate trips and Santa trips. Hot and cold drinks, toilet, central heating. 4 trip boats based at Retford, Worksop, Hollingwood and Chesterfield.

Montgomery Canal

Huelwen Trust

Huelwen Trust  Day canal boat trips in Welshpool along the Monty with the Heulwen Trust (disabled people travel free). Visit our website for details.

Lancaster Canal

Kingfisher Cruises

Kingfisher Cruises A two centre operation covering the Lancaster canal. Including the popular Lune aqueduct cruises from Lancaster and horse-drawn boats, evening entertainment and private hire from Barton Grange Marina.

Llangollen Canal

Lyneal Trust

Lyneal Trust  provides day canal boat trips for people with disabilities, vulnerabilities, or illness, and their families and friends, on board the specially designed Shropshire Lady on the Llangollen Canal.

Shropshire Union Canal

Norbury Wharf

Norbury Wharf . Enjoy the heart of the beautiful Shropshire Union Canal aboard our 42 seater trip boat, all year public & charter trips. Just 15 minutes from junction 14 M6, or junction 3 M54, a cruise to remember!

Leeds and Liverpool Canal

Pennine Cruisers

Enjoy a relaxing holiday with  Pennine Cruisers  of Skipton. Daily 30-minute trips on 'Leo' up Springs Branch to Skipton Castle. A unique experience in the heart of the Yorkshire Dales. Runs all year round.

Lee Navigation

River Lee Cruises

River Lee Cruises  operate charter cruises on a beautiful stretch of the River Lee in Hertfordshire, offering catered party trips, discos, business lunches, wedding receptions, jazz cruises and outings.

Grand Union Canal

Stoke Bruerne Boat Co.

Stoke Bruerne Boat Co.  Skippered regular 'booking not needed' public trips from outside the famous Stoke Bruerne Museum, plus skippered charters and school trips. Also skippered evening cruises & day boat hire.

Regents Canal

The Pirate Castle

The Pirate Castle  for Canal Boat Adventure on London's Canals. Fun for all ages. Work the locks - steer the boat - watch the world go by. Skippered trips for up to 12 passengers.

Waterways Experiences

Waterways Experiences . Day or residential crewed boat trips from Hemel Hempstead, charter only. All 3 wide-beam boats designed for wheelchair access. New volunteers welcome to help with crewing, marketing, IT etc.

Canal Boat Steering - How to Move Your Boat

Canal Boat Steering - How to Move Your Boat

Tales from the Tillerman

Tales from the Tillerman

Nicholson Boating Handbook

Nicholson Boating Handbook

The Inland Waterways Manual

The Inland Waterways Manual

Our listings.

We provide contact telephone and email details free of charge for canal based companies, click for details. Please note: We provide all contact details as an information service. We rely on traders to keep us informed about these listings so we can't guarantee that details are accurate or up to date. Please see our Terms of Use .

Birmingham Canal Navigations

Birmingham and warwick junction canal, bridgewater canal, cromford canal, dudley canal, east anglia, forth & clyde canal, grantham canal, huddersfield narrow canal, kennet and avon canal, macclesfield canal, ripon canal, river nene & cambridgeshire waterways, river severn, river stour, river trent, river witham & fossdyke and witham navigation, sheffield and tinsley canal, staffs and worcs canal, trent and mersey canal, wey navigation & basingstoke canal, wyrley & essington canal.

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Sunday lunch on a barge on the canal - A & G Passenger Boats Ltd

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  • A & G Passenger Boats Ltd

A magical boat tour with lovely hosts and delicious treats! The booking process, price, food... read more

canal boat trip sheffield

A lovely afternoon trip on the Sheffield to Tinsley canal from Victoria Quay. Lovely boat friendly... read more

canal boat trip sheffield

Sunday lunch on a barge on the canal

We went for Sunday lunch on the canal to celebrate the silver wedding anniversary of our daughter and son-in-law. Having never been on a barge on the canal before we were slightly apprehensive but we need’nt have worried. Georgina and Dorrie took care of everything and made us feel at home. We were fortunate that no one else had booked the Sunday lunch , so we had the whole barge to ourselves. The meal was excellent and everyone enjoyed it. The cruise down the canal was certainly a very different way to enjoy lunch. Having moored at the half way point there was time for the younger contingency of our party to disembark and have a wander round before deserts were served on the way back down the canal. Although the weather was not at its best the barge was warm and cosy and by the time we got back to the start the rain had stopped. We would definitely recommend this company, and anyone looking for an unusual day out should definitely give them a call.

A magical boat tour with lovely hosts and delicious treats! The booking process, price, food, impeccably clean boat - all was excellent! Georgina, who looked after the guests on the boat is friendly, positive with a nice sense of humour. There’s unlimited tea and coffee on board, freshly made sandwiches in generous quantities and lovely scones and cakes. There are alcoholic drinks too but that’s not included in the package price. The boat gently sails on Sheffield/Tinsley canal with abundant greenery on both banks with remnants of brick buildings from the past century adding a touch of mystery! Overall an amazing experience, would definitely recommend to everyone and will do it myself again.

canal boat trip sheffield

Went with my daughter and a 5 year old boy. Staff were friendly and very informative However, it was a hot day, and the boat was very stuffy, not well ventilated Also the top windows were either dirty or scratched so it was often difficult to see out An interesting trip but at almost £20 a head and almost that for the child. It’s an expensive 90 minutes The boat goes over the Tinsley viaduct, but you wouldn’t really know, there’s so little to see

A lovely afternoon trip on the Sheffield to Tinsley canal from Victoria Quay. Lovely boat friendly staff and nice coffee on board

We did a family trip with Sunday lunch included. The staff kept the food and drinks coming as we gently cruised the canal through the industrial area to the countryside. All the staff very friendly and helpful answering all our questions on the history of the canal and water sources.

The service from the office, in advance, and on board, during the away day, was nothing short of exemplary! The staff were patient, polite and extremely accommodating throughout the whole process. The weather outside was wet and miserable, yet the temperature aboard HB Hardfleet, was warm, cosy and very comfortable The boat offered wheelchair access and there was a disabled toilet on board. There was also very cost effective car parking nearby. . The staff on board were extremely helpful, yet not intrusive. Hot drinks were constantly available throughout the day and the buffet lunch we were served, exceeded the standard offered by many 5* hotels! I would like to personally thank Georgina, Dori and Paul for their part in making the inaugural, "River of Resilience" Workshop the success that it was, and look forward to holding further events on board, in the future. Georgina gave the workshop that extra special finishing touch, by giving us a commentary of the canal's history, as we cruised back to Victoria Quays, where we were under no pressure wharsoever, to disembark, when we moored.

canal boat trip sheffield

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  • Adventure holidays

Yorkshire canal adventure holidays

Below we show some examples of routes which our customers enjoy. Distances and times shown are for the return trip. You can vary the distance to suit you, because there are plenty of turning points ('winding holes') marked in the guides on your boat. Information we provide about specific waterways or suggested routes is for general reference only. Please see more about route availability .

For experienced boaters

Canal adventure holidays on the northern waterways - Sprotborough

10/11 night adventure trips

Yorkshire boating holiday, Lock 46, Rochdale Canal

42 miles 98 locks 45 hours

This enables you to cross the summit, the second highest (just) in England at 600’. Leaving our historic canal basin, your journey begins with the excitement of a new tunnel and the deepest lock in the country. The canal gradually climbs through woods, fields and small stone towns to Hebden Bridge. This old mill town nestles in a fork in the hills, houses piled tier upon tier. Hebden has excellent shops and is full of surprises - everything from horsey clothing to hand-made pottery. Untie, and go on up the valley, its sides closing in with crags and trees and views of the moors high above. A stream runs alongside, and the locks are set among woods or stone cottages. The Pennine Way crosses at Callis. So to Todmorden, completely untouristy yet with much to enjoy - fine Victorian buildings, especially the Town Hall, a lively market and many places to eat and drink, all dominated by a curving railway viaduct. From here the going gets serious – more Alpine than Pennine. Pass the Great Wall of Todmorden, go under a splendidly overdone Gothic railway bridge, then stop at the Cross Keys (much recommended). Go on to the summit, a spectacular gap in the hills. Pause at the Summit Inn, your first in Lancashire, before making the steep drop into Littleborough, 12 locks in 2 miles. Turn near the railway station, or possibly go on past Clegg Hall (a Grade 1 listed restored ruin) and through the edge of Rochdale - already surprisingly sylvan - and to its centre. Turn just below Lock 50.

Navigation notes

This journey is recommended for experienced crews only. The western half of the Rochdale Canal is not yet in as good condition as other canals and you may experience difficulty or delays. Some of the locks can be hard work. We will give further details in the Route Companion posted to you in good time before your holiday. Lock 50 is the practical limit for an out and back trip of a week.

Yorkshire canal holiday, Bingley 5 Rise

110 miles 118 locks 55 hours

Sail down the leafy Calder & Hebble Navigation past Brighouse, and through wide river sections and narrow cuttings to Wakefield, where there are good moorings not too far from the bright lights. Then on to Stanley Ferry to see the famous aqueducts and two very convenient and contrasting pubs. You are now on the Aire & Calder, which is still a thriving commercial waterway, though there are now many more pleasure boats than barges. Electric locks and a wide channel help you speed (relatively) round to Leeds, where you sail past the regenerated waterfront. Then join the Leeds & Liverpool Canal which quickly escapes along its own way through fields and woods, with spectacular views of old West Riding industry - particularly Sir Titus Salt's Italianate mills and model town at Saltaire, with its Hockney museum. There are several staircase locks along the way, which culminate in the Five Rise Locks at Bingley, one of the Seven Wonders of the Waterways.

14 night adventure trips

Liverpool Docks

From Barnoldswick base: 164 miles 104 locks 80 hours, plus 14 miles 14 locks 8 hours for Rufford Branch

See the western side of the Leeds & Liverpool, culminating in the magnificence of Albert Dock. Quiet moorings here are a short walk from the city centre with shops, culture and more shops. Tate North and the Maritime Museum are actually in the dock where you moor. On the way back, take time to see the Rufford Branch.

Your passage into Liverpool is supervised, and must be booked well in advance (Canal & River Trust, Wigan 03030 404040). You will need additional information from us about your boat. Only certain days of the week are available in each direction.

This holiday is only available on boats based at Barnoldswick.

Sprotbrough Lock

158 miles 114 locks 70 hours

Not an obvious holiday destination, but a fascinating canal journey through a rapidly rejuvenating area to the newly restored basin near the city centre. Enthusiasts enthuse; try it. Not so many locks, and many of them are electric, but still quite a long return journey.

Yorkshire boating holiday, Lock 46, Rochdale Canal

105 miles 70 locks 50 hours

This takes you to Goole Docks, where you can take a guided boat tour to see the ships. Travel down the Calder & Hebble Navigation to Wakefield, and take time to visit the Hepworth. Then on to Stanley Ferry and down the Wakefield DYke (properly 'Branch') of the Aire & Calder Navigation to join its main line at Castleford. Stop to see the curving Millennium Bridge across the river, and visit the flour mill museum. Keep on through Ferrybridge, where so much coal used to come by boats to feed the mighty power stations. Through Knottingley, and the canal becomes astonishingly remote, with enormous skies stretching over the flat, rural landscape. Eventually you arrive in Goole, and moor near the Sobriety Project, a waterways museum run by and for people being helped to overcome challenges in their lives. Goole is a canal town, built from nothing by the Aire & Calder to make a port at the furthest inland point where ships could come up the tidal Aire, one of the three great rivers which combine to form the Humber Estuary. You can see many buildings from that period, and examples of the fixed and (astonishingly) floating cranes which lifted the Tom Puddings (square barges or 'pans') which brought coal in long snaking trains to be lifted into ships, for coastwise transport to the power stations of London. You are not allowed to take your boat into the docks, but hitch a lift on one of the museum's excellent guided boat trips. You may see ships unloading, and if you're lucky see one coming through Ocean Lock, or catch Exol Pride bringing oil from the refineries at Immingham to Rotherham.

You need to be sure not to cross the invisible line into ABP's dock. Stop by the Sobriety Project or Goole Boathouse.

York and Ripon

Ripon Basin

189 miles 82 locks 70 hours

Sail down the leafy Calder & Hebble Navigation past Brighouse, and through wide river sections and narrow cuttings to Wakefield, where there are good moorings not too far from the bright lights. Then on to Stanley Ferry to see the famous aqueducts and two very convenient and contrasting pubs. You are now on the Aire & Calder, which is still a thriving commercial waterway, though there are now many more pleasure boats than barges. Electric locks and a wide channel help you speed to Castleford; keep on the main line of the Aire & Calder Navigation towards Knottingley. This section briefly passes through an industrial hinterland, but is full of interest because much water-borne freight comes through - in barges, push-tows and tankers. At Bank Dole you leave the main line and its electric locks, to drop into the Aire as it winds through farmland, stopping occasionally at pretty brick-built villages. And so to Selby, where you can explore the ancient Abbey and market. Then enter the tidal Ouse, and go up to Naburn, where you leave the tidal section. Go on up the river to moor in the very centre of York. Having seen all you can of the city, go on to Ripon, newly restored and the northernmost point on the waterways.

Necessitating a passage on the tidal Ouse, this trip is available only to very experienced crews subject to our stringent conditions and consent. Crews should allow a minimum of two weeks for this trip, to cover possible waiting time. Only available May to September and in stable, dry weather. Customers must be prepared to take a different route if in our judgement wet weather makes the Ouse likely to flood. You will require our York Pack for details.

How to Book

Use this form to check availability. When you find the boat you want, click 'Book this holiday now' and you can pay your deposit or hold for 48 hours - or ring 01422 832712 .

The counties are the names of the boats, not where they start from! Click the map for routes, and the boat for details

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The search for one way trips on Hereford is not working correctly - please go here for availability of Hereford. Delivery trips on Cambridge, Norfolk and Somerset are working fine.

Liverpool - customer reviews.

"Our chosen route surpassed our expectations, and we recommend it to other boaters. The scenery was very varied and much more rural than we expected since we went through several former industrial towns. An amazing entrance to Liverpool. Dressers Arms (Wheelton) highly recommended. Take bus in Liverpool!" - Mr Glover, Somerset

Buxworth - Customer Reviews

"Scenery delightul, especially top of Huddersfield Narrow. Surprisingly secluded considering proximity to towns & cities." - Mrs Kemp, Worcester

Sheffield - Customer Reviews

"All very green even through Doncaster to Sheffield." - Mr Mach, Hereford

More Reviews

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10th July 2023

Cruise Guide to… Sheffield & South Yorkshire Navigation

Cruise Guide to… Sheffield & South Yorkshire Navigation

Part river and part canal, this waterway combines large locks built for modern freight transport with 200-year-old waterways heritage, and industrial surroundings with splendid wooded valley scenery

Words and Pictures by Martin Ludgate

To describe the Sheffield & South Yorkshire Navigation as a ‘river-based waterway which makes use of the River Don’ would be true – but it would also be an oversimplification of a rather more complicated situation. To illustrate my point: at its west end, the Navigation takes the form of a three-mile artificial canal which terminates at a basin in Sheffield city centre. And at its east end, it follows another artificial canal for a rather longer distance before meeting the tidal River Trent at Keadby – while the actual River Don has diverged quite some miles northwards to meet the Yorkshire Ouse near Goole.

And in fact many (perhaps most) visiting boaters to this interesting Yorkshire waterway arrive via a third arm, the (also completely artificial) New Junction Canal, coming southwards from the Aire & Calder Canal via Sykehouse to meet the S&SYN Main Line at Bramwith. And yet in between these three extremities, it does function as a river navigation, and boaters will find themselves cruising along lengths of the River Don, from the wooded and rural to the urban and industrial.

To help make sense of this complex route, let’s first look at its history. The lower reaches of the River Don below Doncaster were naturally navigable in Mediaeval times given favourable tides. Near Thorne, the river split into two channels: one headed due north to join the River Aire, while the other meandered north eastwards to meet the River Trent. Neither of these was a reliable navigation, but in the 17th Century, the Dutch engineer Cornelius Vermuyden created a new straighter single channel (still known as the Dutch River) which carried the River Don’s water from Thorne to the River Ouse just east of Goole.

Thorne Lock, whose short chamber prevents full-length narrowboats from getting through the Stainforth & Keadby Canal

By the end of the 17th Century, plans were being made to extend navigation upstream from Doncaster by building locks – but it was 1751 before the first boats continued through Rotherham to Tinsley, a few miles short of Sheffield. Half a century later, the independent Stainforth & Keadby Canal provided an outlet to the River Trent, bypassing the tricky and dangerous tidal Dutch River section. And in 1819, another independent concern built the Sheffield Canal, three miles long with 12 locks, taking boats from Tinsley to the heart of the city.

Come the 19th Century, and one might have expected the Don Navigation to develop like its prosperous neighbour the Aire & Calder Navigation – with lock enlargements, straightening and deeper dredging, and steam tugs pulling long trains of ‘compartment boats’ carrying hundreds of tons of coal. But it didn’t quite work out for the Don. Yes, there were improvements, with new sections of canal bypassing lengths of river, but unlike the A&C, the Don came under the control of a railway company which didn’t encourage trade.

Beginning the climb up the Tinsley flight of eleven locks

By the 1880s, it was still reliant on horse haulage for its 62ft by 15ft barges carrying around 100 tons. An 1890s scheme to take the Don and connecting canals out of railway ownership saw them regain their independence as the combined Sheffield & South Yorkshire Navigation, and a new high-capacity link, the New Junction Canal, was built to connect their waterway to the Aire & Calder. But there was little money left for enlargement of the existing locks, while appeals for Government support fell on deaf ears – so there was only piecemeal rebuilding of a few locks from Stainforth to Doncaster.

Belatedly – many would (with hindsight) say it was ‘too little too late’ – a programme that began in the late 1970s, saw the lengths from Doncaster up to Rotherham rebuilt with new powered locks capable of taking 700-ton craft by 1983. But sadly, much trade had already left, and it proved difficult to persuade it to return. In 2014, concerned that large-scale freight on its waterways nationally had dwindled to just three regular traffics including lubricating oil carried on the S&SYN to Rotherham, the Canal & River Trust identified the waterway (along with the Aire & Calder and River Ouse) as ‘priority freight routes’ worthy of further work to encourage trade. But it has yet to bear fruit. But while these waterways’ cargo-carrying future may be in doubt (albeit the oil trade has re-started after a gap), leisure boaters are still welcome. The large waterways provide a completely different landscape to the narrow canals of the Midlands, very worthy of exploration. And we’ll begin exploring them not at the junction with the Trent, nor at the Sheffield terminus, but via the third arm, the New Junction Canal, which we’ll enter from the Aire & Calder Navigation.

Why are we starting there? Because it’s the route by which many visiting boaters will arrive, as it’s the point of entry for those who’ve come via any one of the three trans-Pennine waterways (Leeds & Liverpool, Rochdale or Huddersfield) rather than the perhaps more adventurous route via the tidal Trent.

To use its full name, the Aire & Calder and Sheffield & South Yorkshire New Junction Canal must be a contender for the title of ‘shortest canal with the longest name’. It was also one of our last to be built, opened as late as 1905. It’s certainly the straightest, running near enough dead straight for five miles from Southfield Junction to Bramwith Junction, and it was built from the start for large barges and strings of compartment boats. It begins in a rather empty landscape – there’s no actual village of Southfield, just a small reservoir of that name – which doesn’t hold out much for the prospects of an interesting cruise. But in fact it has several notable features.

The first is an aqueduct over the River Went, followed by a series of six liftbridges and swingbridges interrupted by Sykehouse Lock (powered and boater-operated using Canal & River Trust ‘Watermate’ key, as are the bridges), before another larger aqueduct crosses the River Don. It’s protected by large guillotine gates at each end which are used to close off the navigation and keep flood water out of it if the river level rises high enough to overflow into the aqueduct.

The canal meets the main line of the Sheffield & South Yorkshire Navigation at an oblique junction, where we’ll first turn sharp left to head eastwards towards the Trent.

We’re now on a length whose origins were in the River Don Navigation, but later improvements and extensions of the length of artificial canal mean that we don’t actually join the river at all. Its tidal channel is visible to our left as we pass Bramwith Lock (extended in the 1930s from its original 62ft to a much larger size) to reach Stainforth. At this handy town, the first since we began our cruise, we join what was built as the independent Stainforth & Keadby Canal, although it continues to parallel the River Don with no obvious changes. But around Thorne, the river diverges to the north while the canal continues east.

Thorne was once a great boatbuilding town (and still has a selection of boatyards and marinas as well as pubs and shops), as well as being the site of an unusual feature of the local waterborne trade. Sailing craft coming up the tidal Don would leave their masts here for safekeeping and carry on horse-drawn towards Doncaster.

There’s a lock here, and it’s a highly significant one for boaters in longer craft, because unfortunately (and unlike all the other locks between the Trent and Rotherham) it retains its original dimensions of around 62ft by 17ft. The exact maximum length will depend on hull shape, but a full length narrowboat won’t fit – see Boaters Notes for the implication of this restriction.

Leaving Thorne, the canal takes a quiet course across flat countryside with just a railway for company, passing a series of swingbridges and a solitary settlement of Ealand.

Approaching Keadby, the railway crosses on a remarkable and possibly unique (at least in this country) opening bridge. Instead of lifting or swinging, this oblique bridge slides diagonally out of the way (it’s much easier to understand if you see it than to try to explain it!) under the control of the adjacent signal box to allow boats to pass.

The final length leads into Keadby, now sadly without pubs, where the tidal lock leads out onto the tidal Trent. As mentioned in the Boaters Notes, many inland boaters venture safely onto the tideway with appropriate precautions; but we’ll turn around, return to Bramwith, and this time we’ll continue southwest at the junction, towards Doncaster.

Approaching the liftbridge at Barnby Dun

This section, like the length between Bramwith and Stainforth, has its origins in the Don Navigation, but it too has since been straightened, enlarged and improved, and now makes no use of the river channel. The route passes Barnby Dun (‘Dun’ was an old spelling of Don) village and Long Sandall, where a lock begins the climb towards the hills. Like all the locks from here to Rotherham it’s a large, modern, power operated lock, created for heavy freight traffic which might one day return. And as with all the locks, it’s no longer staffed but operated by CRT key.

The navigation meanders its way along the Don’s floodplain, accompanied by the river and an assortment of railway lines as it approaches Doncaster. There are visitor moorings on the left before town centre that are convenient for the town, a former mining, industrial and railway centre with good shops, a market, pubs, and historic buildings worth a visit.

A flurry of rail and road bridges cross the waterway at and around Doncaster Town Lock, then the town is soon left behind as the development on either side keeps clear of the river’s floodplain. And after half a mile, we join the River Don for the first time, as the waterway finally remembers its roots as a river navigation.

Forget anything you may have heard about the S&SYN being gritty or industrial: the next few miles feature a series of splendid wooded reaches as the river threads its way through a deep, steep sided valley. Yes, there are reminders of its industrial past in the form of a series of railway viaducts, some quite spectacular, but it’s a far cry from the ‘grim up north’ cliché.

Sprotbrough village provides handy facilities including a waterside pub, while Conisbrough is a pleasant town with a castle to visit (see below), and the locks continue the gentle climb.

More industrial surroundings return at Mexborough and the locks become more frequent as the climb steepens. Waddington Lock takes its name from the once busy barge operating base of EV Waddingtons at Swinton Junction. The junction was where the Dearne & Dove Canal once branched off.

Trip-boat on an attractive length of the River Don above Doncaster

Passing what was an intensely industrial area between Kilnhurst and Aldwarke but is seeing some land reclamation alongside the remaining industries, the waterway reaches Kilnhurst and the approach to Rotherham. Eastwood Lock is the last of the large locks completed in the early 1980s, and you may notice a widening of the channel half a mile further on: this was to allow the 200ft barges that the new locks were built for to turn.

The lengthy Rotherham Cut runs through the town centre, and part of it is currently a focus for a town regeneration masterplan, with new developments planned for the land between the Cut and the river. And above Rotherham Lock, a rather striking and to my mind, quite stylish new flood barrier gate (and those aren’t words you often hear together!) has since 2022 protected this area from flooding when the river is high.

Entering Mexborough Top Lock, one of the series of new 200ft long mechanised locks built in the 1970s-80s enlargement for larger freight barges

This lock is the first of the old-style locks, manually operated and built for barges 62ft by 15ft – although a somewhat longer single narrowboat may pass through. Three more such locks follow in the next mile and a half as the climb steepens again. A final short river length leads to Tinsley, where navigation and River Don part company for the last time as we enter the Sheffield Canal.

The eleven closely-spaced Tinsley locks climb to the canal’s summit level; there were once 12, but two were combined in connection with a railway scheme in 1959 – you’ll notice that one lock is now a lot deeper than all the rest. You may also spot a plaque recording the destruction of one of the locks in by a bomb in the Second World War. And you might see signs of more recent upheavals: the canal has always relied on backpumping of water to supply the locks, as fierce opposition from Sheffield’s industries reliant on the river to drive their waterwheels meant that none could be spared to feed the canal. And in recent years, the pumping system has had to be rebuilt, involving temporary pumps and lengthy towpath closures while the buried pipes were replaced. The three-mile summit level leading into Sheffield was once surrounded by the steelmaking and other industries that made the city famous. But although there’s still plenty of industry left, nature has been gradually taking over the watersides and shielding the canal, leaving it with an unkempt but not unattractive appearance. Look out for Darnall Road Aqueduct, surely one of the least well-known aqueducts on the waterways.

On the summit of the Sheffield Canal section, heading through the city’s industrial outskirts

A sharp turn near the very end leads into Sheffield’s Victoria Quays, a fine city centre terminus basin with new uses found for old buildings, including an impressive five-storey warehouse spanning the basin, cafés and other businesses set in the adjacent former railway arches, and moorings to tie up and explore the city’s attractions with much within easy walking distance. It’s a good way to end a journey up an interesting and varied waterway.

BOATERS’ NOTES:

Longer craft: The two usual ways that visiting craft from outside the north eastern waterways reach the Sheffield & South Yorkshire Navigation are either via one of the three trans-Pennine canals or via the tidal Trent to Keadby (a tidal passage to be treated with caution, but perfectly safe in suitable inland craft in experienced hands, with the appropriate charts and tide tables). However, neither of these is possible in boats longer than a little over 60ft (the exact limit depends on hull shape), owing to short locks on the Leeds & Liverpool Canal, Calder & Hebble Navigation, and at Thorne on the Stainforth & Keadby Canal. The only way to get there in a full-length 70ft narrowboat is to continue down the tidal Trent beyond Keadby, right down to Trent Falls where it meets the Yorkshire Ouse at the head of the Humber estuary, then up the Ouse to enter the Aire & Calder Navigation at either Goole or Selby, then the New Junction Canal to reach the S&SYN at Bramwith. This is an adventurous journey involving anchoring at Trent Falls (where the river is around half a mile wide) to wait for the tide, and tackling it requires experience, good knowledge of local waters, and suitably reliable, powerful and well-equipped craft (including marine band radio and a qualified operator). Once you get there, you will be limited to the Thorne to Rotherham length by lock sizes. Tinsley Locks are limited by CRT to craft no longer than 60ft.

Locks and opening bridges: Mechanised locks from Long Sandall to Rotherham and on the New Junction Canal are operated by a Canal & River Trust ‘Watermate’ key, as are lift and swing bridges.

Bookings: Boaters planning to use the tidal Trent via Keadby to get to or from the S&SYN will need to book in advance with the lock keeper. Tinsley Locks on the Sheffield Canal will also need to be booked in advance.

River conditions: The waterway between Doncaster and Tinsley makes use of the River Don. Boaters should make the usual allowance for currents, and if river levels rise after heavy rain they should be prepared to tie up somewhere safe and wait for levels to fall again.

by Jane Hyde

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canal boat trip sheffield

The JUDITH MARY II

Restaurant canal boat.

canal boat trip sheffield

Book By Phone, Call Suzy on: 07540 895615

The Judith Mary is a family run 72 foot long canal boat which is starting its

40th year of trips.. We can seat up to 40 passengers, are fully central heated and run all year round. We have a well stocked licensed bar, also offering tea and coffee and toilets on board. All meals are inclusive of a two hour cruise along the beautiful Upper Peak Forest Canal, situated in Whaley Bridge, High Peak, only 16 miles from Manchester, 6 miles from Buxton and 29 miles from Sheffield.

For available dates please call 07540 895615 or Email

[email protected]

19 Miles from Bakewell.

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Rotherham and Sheffield Canal Association Logo

  • Our Community
  • Work Parties
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  • AWCC Members

A unique boating community in the heart of South Yorkshire

Find out what makes us special...

Our Moorings are Currently Full

What makes us different.

We work together. We have only been able to create and maintain a truly unique mooring location, with all essentials on-site, because every member helps out.

We achieve together. We started with a handful of moorings on some disused land. We now believe we have the best community moorings in South Yorkshire.

We decide together. All members have an equal say in what we do and how we do it. We don’t exclude any views and take all perspectives into account.

SUSTAINABILITY

We grow together. We are lucky to have the moorings that we do. As an ‘off-grid’ community we work hard to develop these in a sustainable way.

How can you get involved?

As well as providing inexpensive moorings in Rotherham, the association exists to support the development of the Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation. We provide information for visiting boaters and links to organisations who are dedicated to developing our local waterways and communities.

canal boat trip sheffield

If you need affordable moorings in a beautiful and relaxing setting, and want to play a role in developing our moorings and community, follow the link below to find out more.

Picture of the Straddle Warehouse in Victoria Quays Sheffield

Are you planning to boat on the Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation? Take a look at our range of information, which we add to on a regular basis.

canal boat trip sheffield

Just want to help protect and develop our local waterways and communities? We have collected a comprehensive list of organisations that do just that.

What do others say?

Beautiful stretch of the canal.  

Brian Rouse

RASCA is a private association that rents moorings from CRT. Moorings are cheap, and it’s a friendly place where members help each other out.

Gail Seymour

I took my boat on a nice steady trip down the canal and it was very relaxing, the veiw and the wildlife were lovely.

Mark Jeffries

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Explore Sheffield's rich steel heritage and contemporary art trails on this 4.4km walk along the Sheffield & Tinsley Canal.

Over 60,000 people came to see this canal open in 1819. Happily there are less people here today as the canal leads you quietly from city to country. Each step you take brings calm as you steep yourself in stories from the artwork along the water, while birds call you onward beyond the faint noise of traffic. Wildlife and greenery line the towpath and evidence of this area’s rich steel heritage is everywhere along the canal side.

Download route map and instructions

Take a look at our helpful guide to enjoying this 4.4km canal walk in Sheffield

Canal: Sheffield & Tinsley Canal

Start: Victoria Quays OS Grid ref: SK360876 Postcode: S2 5SY

Finish: Tinsley Marina OS Grid ref: SK393898 Postcode: S9 2FN

Distance: 4.4km / 2¾ miles

Route instructions

Start: Victoria Quays marks the start of the Sheffield & Tinsley Canal. Restored terraces of coal merchant offices, and 19th-century warehouses which once received cargo such as grain and coal, are a reminder of the canal’s busy heyday. As you amble round the water and boats, look out for historic clues such as railway coal arches, the weighbridge, and loading bays beneath the grain warehouse where grain could be unloaded from boats under cover before being sent onward to breweries and mills. The ‘Dorothy Pax’ pub is named after the last surviving Sheffield Keel Boat, barges unique to the Sheffield to navigate its smaller lock gates.

1. Built around 1900, the magnificent Grade II-listed Straddle Warehouse with its five docking bays spans the canal basin on stilts. It is potentially one of the last purpose-built warehouses for a narrow canal.

2. Cross the bridge near the 200-year-old dry dock and turn left to follow the towpath. The route is part of a street art trail begun during the Sheffield & Tinsley 200th anniversary celebrations in 2019. Across the water is Sheaf Quay, built in the 1820s, former toolmaking Sheaf Works of Greaves and Sons. They were the first large scale integrated tool and cutlery makers to operate using steam power and used the canal to transport raw materials in and finished goods out. Look out for nature-inspired artworks along the towpath.

3. Just beyond the busy A61 bridge and Victoria Railway Viaduct, there’s a boatyard and marina opposite. Sipelia Works to your right was another part of Sheaf Works and now houses the charity Emmaus.

4. Grade II-listed Cadman Street Bridge dates from 1819 and is one of only two original bridges on the Sheffield & Tinsley. Deep grooves were worn in the stone by the ropes of working horses towing canal boats. More artwork is displayed beneath the nearby railway bridges.

5. Across the water is a derelict former bone mill which once created cutlery handles from bone. Nearby Firth’s 19th-century Grade II-listed iron warehouse with its bricked-up loading bays used to store bar iron and is the last surviving example of its type in Sheffield. Your surroundings become leafier now as the canal continues through Sheffield’s industrial outskirts.

6. Bacon Lane Bridge is the other original 1819 bridge and also Grade II-listed. It was known as ‘Needle’s eye’ due to the difficulty of boating through its narrow arch – some boats even had to use a crowbar to get through! It may also be recognisable by fans of ‘The Full Monty’ which was filmed here. Just beyond the bridge is the largest instalment of Sheffield’s Street Art Trail on your right, painted by 13 street artists during the 2019 Sheffield Waterfront Festival.

7. The dynamic high-arched Supertram Footbridge 7B is quickly followed by Shirland Lane Bridge and footbridge before the canal widens at Chippingham Basin.

8. Grade II-listed Attercliffe Aqueduct carries the canal over Darnall Road. It was considered quite a feat of engineering in 1819, and you can head down to the road to see it from a different perspective. You feel like you’re in the countryside here, with trees overhanging the towpath and birds singing as you pass the wide open space of Attercliffe Moorings opposite, part of the Sheffield Olympic Legacy Park.

9. At Greenland Bridge, cross the canal to follow the towpath along the canal’s tree-lined north edge under the A6102.

End: Your walk ends just beyond the Top Lock of the 11 Tinsley Locks at the open space of Tinsley Marina. Take time to relax by the water, explore more of the locks and the Pump House ahead, hop on a tram, or walk back to Victoria Quays to see the water from a different viewpoint.

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In this section

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A & G Passenger Boats Ltd

Price £17.50

C hildren & adults dates and times december 2023.

All our bookings are made subject to our Terms and Conditions .

UPDATE 19DEC 23 - we still have some availbility on the following cruise s

                                      Sat 9th Dec                       

                                      Sun 10th Dec                              

                                      Sat 16th Dec                      

                                      Sun 17th Dec         

                                      Sat 23rd Dec                      1pm full, 2.30pm full, 4pm

                                      Sun 24th Dec      11.30am, 1pm, 2.30pm . 4pm

emails us at  [email protected], use our contact us page, or telephone us on 0114 2786314.

Below is a couple of our most ask questions re Santa Cruises, you may also find our Frequently Asked Question section helpful.

My child is under 2yrs, is it worth me purchasing a Santa package for them? We leave the choice to you. For some families particularly with older siblings, a gift from Santa is part of the whole experience, for others it is not an important component of the memories they are making. From our experience over the years we know many very young infants often sleep through the experience and whilst toddlers of around 18ths plus don’t have a concept of Santa they do understand when their siblings have a gift and they do not.

What happens if Santa trips cannot cruise? If the boat is unable to depart for whatever reason. The Number 1# Chief Elf will contact Santa and arrange for his meet and greet to occur at our boat moorings at Victoria Quays. All the usual fun and games will ensue, and he will distribute the gifts to each child. (Please bear in mind whilst you are all enjoying yourself the number 1# Chief Elf will be having a miserable time trying to keep the reindeer from their favourite place in Sheffield Granelli’s sweet and ice cream shop) To compensate for the lack of a cruise the boat elf will issue either a 15% off voucher to be used on one of our scheduled seasonal heritage cruises valid for 1 year or a voucher giving 15% off next years Santa Cruise for the same number of guests.

Santa  Cruise 2023

1hr. Cruise on‘LB Hardfeet’.

Present for the children suitable for their age.

The boat is decorated for the season, with festive music playing.

Mince pie and

a glass of warm mulled wine

or tea/coffee for adults. Squash and biscuit for children.

Other drinks are available from the bar and are payable on the day.

Price £17.50 Children & Adults

To reserve your place or need more information contact us .

A & G Passenger Boats Ltd

GET IN TOUCH

0114 2786314

[email protected]

A & G Passenger Boats Ltd

Arch 16, Victoria Quays,

Wharf Street

South Yorkshire

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Sheffield and Tinsley Canal Trail

canal boat trip sheffield

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canal boat trip sheffield

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A & G Passenger Boats Ltd - All You Need to Know BEFORE You Go (2024)

Virtual Cruise - Stainforth and Keadby Canal (3) - Thorne

IMAGES

  1. BARGE ON CANAL

    canal boat trip sheffield

  2. Sheffield: narrowboat at Victoria Quays © Chris Downer cc-by-sa/2.0

    canal boat trip sheffield

  3. "Boats on Sheffield and South Yorkshire Canal, Sprotbrough" by Tom

    canal boat trip sheffield

  4. The Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation

    canal boat trip sheffield

  5. Sheffield Canal Walk

    canal boat trip sheffield

  6. 35136

    canal boat trip sheffield

VIDEO

  1. Skipton Canal Boat Trip ~ Yorkshire Dales #shorts #skipton #boat #canal #yorkshire #yorkshiredales

  2. DUDLEY CANAL BOAT TRIP 2023

  3. A Relaxing Canal Boat Trip Netherton West Midlands

  4. Canal Boat trip with Eliska, Annie & Suki

  5. 2023 Canal Boat

  6. Amsterdam Yi4K

COMMENTS

  1. A & G Passenger Boats Ltd

    COVID 19 Information. We currently follow the Government Covid Guidance at the time of your cruise. Due to the nature of our venue, we can offer full boat charters of groups over 20, this means that your guests do not have to mix with any 3 rd party guests which is fantastic if you are trying to run an event and limit your contacts.. Our staff have been fully trained in the health and hygiene ...

  2. Canal Cruise and Meal in Sheffield

    The boat was also built with inclusivity in mind so there is a wheelchair-accessible toilet and a platform lift to enable easy access for those who are less able. We are sure you won't be left disappointed by the service and experience on this canal cruise so what are you waiting for? A and G offer many types of cruises that vary in price and ...

  3. THE BEST Sheffield Boat Rides & Cruises

    2. A & G Passenger Boats Ltd. 27. Boat Tours. By X1439IPtanjas. A magical boat tour with lovely hosts and delicious treats! Set sail on your destination's top-rated boat tours and cruises. Whether it's an entertaining and informative boat tour or a relaxing sunset dinner cruise, these are the best Sheffield cruises around.

  4. A & G PASSENGER BOATS LTD (Sheffield)

    Cruising on the Sheffield and Tinsley canal, we run a variety of trips.We moor in the heart of the city and walking distance to most of the city centre hotels. We run trips for all occasions, heritage, clubs, birthdays, anniversaries, weddings, business, coach and educational to name a few.The boat 'LB Hardfeet' offers excellent facilities with ...

  5. Welcome aboard

    Sheffield Narrowboats Limited Registered in England: 5943780 - VAT Registration Number: 890 7737 78 Registered Office: The Boathouse, Canal Street, Sheffield, S4 7ZE

  6. A & G Passenger Boats Ltd

    About. Cruising on the Sheffield and Tinsley canal, we run a variety of trips.We moor in the heart of the city and walking distance to most of the city centre hotels. We run trips for all occasions, heritage, clubs, birthdays, anniversaries, weddings, business, coach and educational to name a few.The boat 'LB Hardfeet' offers excellent ...

  7. Skippered trips & boat charters

    Skippered canal trip boats are great on a day out. Trip boats run short scheduled canal pleasure cruises, usually lasting an hour or two, that you can often just turn up and join. ... Sheffield S2 5SY. Passenger boat trips, Heritage trips, Dining cruises, party charter . 0114 2786314. [email protected]. Shropshire Union Canal. Norbury ...

  8. Sunday lunch on a barge on the canal

    The boat gently sails on Sheffield/Tinsley canal with abundant greenery on both banks with remnants of brick buildings from the past century adding a touch of mystery! Overall an amazing experience, would definitely recommend to everyone and will do it myself again. ... A lovely afternoon trip on the Sheffield to Tinsley canal from Victoria ...

  9. Canal Narrowboat holidays in Yorkshire

    Goole. 105 miles 70 locks 50 hours. This takes you to Goole Docks, where you can take a guided boat tour to see the ships. Travel down the Calder & Hebble Navigation to Wakefield, and take time to visit the Hepworth. Then on to Stanley Ferry and down the Wakefield DYke (properly 'Branch') of the Aire & Calder Navigation to join its main line at ...

  10. Cruise Guide to… Sheffield & South Yorkshire Navigation

    10th July 2023. Cruise Guide to…. Sheffield & South Yorkshire Navigation. Part river and part canal, this waterway combines large locks built for modern freight transport with 200-year-old waterways heritage, and industrial surroundings with splendid wooded valley scenery. Words and Pictures by Martin Ludgate.

  11. Sheffield & Tinsley Canal

    The Sheffield & South Yorkshire Canal Company Ltd took over the River Don in 1895, and around 1900 there were plans to enlarge the canal, and even to replace it with a ship canal. They remained as plans, and the canal was never enlarged and still has locks just large enough for Yorkshire keels, 61 feet long by 15 feet 6 inches wide. Architecture.

  12. TheJudithMaryII Restaurant Boat

    Book By Phone, Call Suzy on: 07540 895615. The Judith Mary is a family run 72 foot long canal boat which is starting its. 40th year of trips.. We can seat up to 40 passengers, are fully central heated and run all year round. We have a well stocked licensed bar, also offering tea and coffee and toilets on board. and 29 miles from Sheffield.

  13. Rotherham and Sheffield Canal Association

    Welcome to Sheffield and Rotherham Canal Association - learn more about our beautiful moorings and unique community, based in the heart of South Yorkshire. Skip to content. ... I took my boat on a nice steady trip down the canal and it was very relaxing, the veiw and the wildlife were lovely. Mark Jeffries.

  14. Free school trips to Victoria Quays in Sheffield

    Victoria Quays is a large canal basin in Sheffield City Centre, close to the train station. It was built between 1816-1819 to bring the new Sheffield Canal into the city and was used as a cargo port right up until 1970. ... Don't forget a boat trip! Boat trips may also be possible in conjunction with a local company that offers a special ...

  15. Sheffield Canal Basin

    Sheffield Canal Basin, now known as Victoria Quays, is at the head of the Sheffield and Tinsley Canal, close to Sheffield City Centre. The basin dates from 1814, when the canal opened to connect with the River Don Navigation, allowing canal boats to reach the heart of Sheffield for the first time. The basin was a busy, thriving transhipment ...

  16. Sheffield canal walk

    Sheffield canal walk. Explore Sheffield's rich steel heritage and contemporary art trails on this 4.4km walk along the Sheffield & Tinsley Canal. Walking along the canal in Sheffield. Over 60,000 people came to see this canal open in 1819. Happily there are less people here today as the canal leads you quietly from city to country.

  17. Santa Cruises

    Sun 24th Dec 11.30am, 1pm, 2.30pm . 4pm. To Book. emails us at [email protected], use our contact us page, or telephone us on 0114 2786314. Below is a couple of our most ask questions re Santa Cruises, you may also find our Frequently Asked Question section helpful.

  18. Sheffield and Tinsley Canal Trail

    The canal boat was all decorated and everyone was given a drink and a mincepie. We picked up Santa a little further along the canal where he had a personalised gift for every child and to our surprise, a small gift for all the adults as well. The trip along the canal was historic with all the old warehouses and various other buildings.

  19. Stylish Houseboat accommodation in central Sheffield's Victoria Quays

    Award winning Houseboat accommodation in central Sheffield's Victoria Quays tranquil restored canal waterfront. Walking distance to Central Sheffield attractions: Ponds Forge, City Hall, the universities or for your business contacts. ... situated in Sheffield's Victoria Quays. All fully heated boats are just a 5-minute walk from Sheffield ...

  20. A & G Passenger Boats Ltd

    About. Cruising on the Sheffield and Tinsley canal, we run a variety of trips.We moor in the heart of the city and walking distance to most of the city centre hotels. We run trips for all occasions, heritage, clubs, birthdays, anniversaries, weddings, business, coach and educational to name a few.The boat 'LB Hardfeet' offers excellent ...

  21. Thorne

    Virtual Cruise - Stainforth and Keadby Canal (3) - Thorne. After passing below the M18 motorway and the Doncaster to Goole railway, the canal passes Stanilands Marina. After the workshops at Stanilands Marina, Thorne Lock comes into sight. Approaching Thorne Lock, with a swing bridge across its head, which must be opened in order to use the lock.