Écluse 13 Vinneuf - River Yonne (Lower section) - Vinneuf - France
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member ntpayne
N 48° 20.582 E 003° 07.287
31U E 508998 N 5354434
This is lock number 13 on the lower section of the River Yonne and is called Vinneuf.
Waymark Code: WM10X2R
Location: France
Date Posted: 07/04/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member dtrebilc
Views: 1

This is lock number 13 on the lower section of the River Yonne and is called Vinneuf. It is situated a kilometre south of the village of Vinneuf.

This lock is one of several between locks 11 and 17 that have sloping sides on both sides of the lock.

As with other locks on the River Yonne it is 92 metres long by 10 metres wide.

The upper (navigable) section of the river runs from Auxerre down to Migennes and has nine locks numbered from 1 to 9. The lower section runs from Migennes down to Moneterau-faux-Yonne where it meets the River Seine. There are 17 locks on the lower section numbered 1 to 17.

The paddles and gates are operated automatically via a control panel that can only be used by a VNF éclusier (lock keeper). VNF stands for Voies Navigable Francais.

To use the lock you have to call the éclusier on VHF channel 69.

Over the first 22km, down to the junction with the Canal de Bourgogne, it forms part of the Nivernais route, a cross link between the Bourgogne and Bourbonnais routes from Paris to Lyon. The rest of the waterway forms part of the Bourgogne route, the shortest but most heavily locked of the three main routes across central France. The Yonne is an attractive cruising river, with huge locks but little commercial traffic (except in the lower reaches). The river is avoided by lock-cuts at three places: Gurgy, Joigny and Courlon.

History – The river was a free-flow navigation through the ages, until Poirée successfully tested in 1834 (near Clamecy) his design for a needle weir. The design was improved by Thenard five years later, and the Government then approved works to canalise many rivers on this basis. One weir and lock were built on the Yonne after 1840, but most of the works were conducted from 1861. The locks were enlarged to Freycinet standards in the late 19th century, then again to their current dimensions after World War II.
Waterway Name: River Yonne

Connected Points:
The canalised river Yonne extends from Auxerre, where it joins the Canal du Nivernais, to its confluence with the Seine at Montereau, a distance of 108km.


Type: Lock

Date Opened: 01/01/1872

Elevation Difference (meters): 3.00

Site Status: Operational

Web Site: [Web Link]

Date Closed (if applicable): Not listed

Visit Instructions:
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