Comments from the schoolchildren on their visits to our barge:-
What I liked
The inside because it looked bigger than the outside.
The model because it worked with water
The model of the lock
The friends of NHB were funny and kind
How to work the locks and using the model
Dressing up and doing a play
Seeing pictures of the olden days
Role play, acting out stories
Everything
The living area
Using coins to represent cargo
Being in the bedroom
The authenticity
The suitcase being used to hold the model
Filling in a visitor’s book
What I learned
How a pulley can be used to lift a heavy weight
What it is like to live on a barge
The layout of the living quarters
How much cargo the barge could hold
Salt water makes things float
How the barge sunk when full with cargo
Horses, Shetland ponies were used to pull barges
People lived on barges
Barges carried cargo
Two families lived on the barge with one family per room
Up to 12 people had a bedroom
A small family is better on a barge than a large family
Cargo could be coal or wheat
Overloading with cargo can sink a barge (53 1p coins sank the model)
Children worked on barges
Bolts in metal is part of the barge construction
The history of the barge
There were bed upboards
The barge did not have engines
How to tie a knot
People slept in the cupboards
Clothing of the time
What I would change
Would like to experience the boat moving
To have the toilet being able to flush (fix the toilet)
To be warmer
Less steep steps
Change small rooms into big ones, I would not like to share a room with my brother
The colour and make the barge bigger so more people can fit inside
More activities needed (there were only 2)
To make it more homely to show what would have been in the rooms
To go on the deck