Think I read that you can be smashed out of your face, still drive a canal boat legally. No drink drive rules with them

Little bro likes the Norfolk Broads for his summer hols.
If you want to moor within a sensible walking distance of a pub, you have to be moored up by midday
. But I guess holidays are for relaxing, sitting round, and doing nothing.
He'd never buy a boat. The few £hundred it costs him for the week, it's still cheaper than purchase/depreciation/maintenance/shit emptying etc.
Had my boat for ten years, spent about £15k on it in that time including a new engine, some woodwork and refitting the galley and saloon. Sold it for what I paid for it... could have gotten a third more, but didn't have the time to wait, and as anyone selling a caravan in January can testify, not a great time to sell...
Moorings in Norfolk are about a third of the South Coast, pump out charges are minimal... £10 a time, gas bottles are £20 a go and last indefinitely, fuel is low duty around £1 per litre, drinking water is free.
All in all, mine cost me £2,500 a day. For the two days I used it the year I sold it...
For less than two weeks it's cheaper to rent, over four weeks and it's cheaper to buy
I will get another one in due course, but what and where are both decisions for later...
As for the Broads, do it

go for a fortnight, allow two days to adjust to the pace of 4mph. Hire a sailing dinghy too. Teach youself/kids to sail in a day, also it frees up mooring options at the busier places. Gets cold in the winter and rainy days can be tedious, but always things to see regardless of the time of year
