The four-day festival offers you the opportunity to get up close to fascinating old working boats as well as the latest leisure narrowboats and enjoy a fantastic range of waterway-themed activities and music.
What's new?
New this year will be the chance to board a historic bus to ride to the museum's off-site store of old boats, not normally open to the public, and waterway bookworms can dig for new treasure in a fabulous collection of canal, maritime and coastal volumes donated for sale by the family of prolific waterway researcher and writer Terry Kavanagh.
Located at the junction of the Manchester Ship Canal and the Shropshire Union Canal, the museum site will stage a wide range of special attractions from craft workshops, produce stalls and lock demonstrations to children's activities and steam engines working in the Power Hall. There will also be a chance to see fascinating rare canal treasures at the National Waterways Archive, allowing you to track down your long-lost family connections to the nation's historic canal network.
Foot-tapping music will be provided by costumed buskers and the Mersey Morris Men and visitors will also be able to enjoy short boat trips along the Shropshire Union Canal, run by volunteers from the Wirral Community Narrow Boat Trust.
The weekend celebration starts on Good Friday morning as the 40-strong boat convoy travels down the Shropshire Union Canal setting off from Chester city centre early morning and arriving at the Waterways Museum between 11am and 1pm.
Bigger and better than ever
Chris Done, our visitor services manager, said: “The 2023 Easter Boat Gathering promises to be bigger and better than ever. We hope visitors will enjoy the opportunity to explore behind-the-scenes of the museum to see historic boats and heritage artefacts not normally on public display.
“For families, there is a special children's trail, boat-themed playground and face painting. And we are very grateful to the family of Terry Kavanagh for the bequest of his incredible waterway library, which will go on sale to the public and proceeds donated to the Waterway Archive.
Hopefully, this spectacular waterway festival will launch a fabulous summer season for everyone.”
Visit the museum
The museum will be open 10am – 4pm over the Easter weekend and then seven days a week for the rest of the season. Special events hosted throughout the year include Steampunk Sunday (16 April), Medical Marvels (14 May), World War Two (11 June) and heritage-themed Canal Town Sundays featuring characters in traditional costumes (21 May, 18 June, 23 July and 13 August). We would be delighted to hear from anyone interested in volunteering at the museum.