Top 10 Canal Trips
Photograph by Michael Gurrey, My Shot
- The Panama Canal, Panama
Joining the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, this 50-mile
(80-kilometer) engineering marvel is used by thousands of ships large and small
each year. On partial or complete transits of the canal (a complete transit
takes a day), you can sail beside giant cargo ships and the little tugs who
guide them from one sea to another through three sets of double locks.
- New York State Canals, New York
These canals—built in the mid-19th century—comprise
524 miles (843 kilometers) of waterways and towpaths between Albany and
Buffalo, New York. The Erie Canal travels through Rochester, where you can tour
Susan B. Anthony’s home. You can rent a boat and sail it yourself, or hire a
crew.
- Baltic Sea Canal, Russia
The White Sea—an extension of the Arctic off
northwestern Russia—is connected to St. Petersburg, on the Baltic, by a
140-mile (225-kilometer) canal system. It was constructed in the 1930s by
prisoners, working mainly with spades and picks. You’ll pass traditional
villages and old wooden chapels.
- Copenhagen, Denmark
Travel around Denmark’s capital city on the hop-on,
hop-off water buses that ply its many canals. Some of the routes give great
views of the Little Mermaid statue. The boats are open in summer, glass-roofed
in winter, and run year-round.
- Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Low bridges, arching trees, and historic narrow houses
line Amsterdam’s many canals. Take a sightseeing or dinner cruise; or, better
yet, stay in a houseboat hotel and make the canals your base. Alternatively,
you can pedal along the canals yourself; Canal Bike rents pedal boats, which
you can hire at one mooring and drop off at another.
www.blueboat.nl, www.canal.nl
www.blueboat.nl, www.canal.nl
6. The Black Sea Canal, Romania
The 40-mile (64-kilometer) Black Sea canal, completed
in 1984, goes from Ruse, on the Bulgarian section of the Danube River, to
Constant, a popular Romanian resort on the Black Sea. The canal is part of the
wildlife-rich Danube Delta area, home to pelicans, herons, egrets, and up to
300 other species of birds.
- Gota Canal, Sweden
The canal connects a series of lakes, allowing boats
to travel almost all the way across Sweden from Lake Vänern, near Gothenberg,
to the Baltic. Along the way are 58 locks; be sure to come on deck to watch the
crew open them and maneuver the ship through. Dozens of different boats ply the
canals and you can cruise for a few hours or a whole week. For a more active
canal experience, rent a canoe or kayak and paddle along the canal.
- Waterways of Brandenburg, Germany
Between Berlin and the Baltic, explore a network of
lakes and canals that takes you past castles and quaint towns. Along the way
you’ll see heron standing silently in the shallows and catch glimpses of
irridescent turquoise kingfishers darting along the surface of the water. On
lazy summer afternoons fishermen line the banks; that evening, sample their
catch in the local restaurants where carp and other freshwater fish are a
specialty.
- English Channel to Mediterranean, France
France’s 5,000-mile (8,050-kilometer) network of
canals can take you from north to south, or anywhere in between, exploring
towns and villages on the way. To the south, the Canal du Midi passes through a
land of vineyards and walled cities, many in easy reach of the canal. Tie up
outside a small town, and go ashore to sample local food and wine. Many
restaurants feature regional specialties. Most towns have weekly markets where
you can stock up on provisions.
- Shropshire Union Canal, England
The northern half of the Shropshire Union Canal in
England’s West Midlands meanders through gently rolling landscape. South of
Nantwich it travels in a nearly straight line through hills and across valleys
via deep cuttings and magnificent bridges. The canal is a monument to the early
days of the industrial revolution; the brightly painted narrow boats also seem
to come from another era. Boats go at walking speed so that their wakes don’t
erode the banks.
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