We left Huntsville at 9:25
a.m. on Tuesday, July 30. There is
always something new and different on the waterways. That day Fred looked back and saw a
helicopter hovering over a power line we’d just gone under. A few minutes later
an Alabama Police boat whipped by and then the Coast Guard announced that one
mile of the river (which we’d just passed) was closed due to broken power
lines. Oops. So very glad they did not fall on us! It took longer than a day to repair---the
message repeated and repeated on the radio. no pix.
Our first stop was Florence,
AL, so (with a little help from mutual friends Mike and Linda) we phoned Fred
and Joan Myers. They’ve retired from the
Tennessee River and Tenn-Tom Waterway guidebook business, and now spend at
least a couple of months a year traveling the back roads of America. They actually came within 3 blocks of my
childhood home in Aberdeen SD by taking SD Highway 12 when returning from a
circuit of the Northwest corner of the US!
We really enjoyed our visit with them, and oops, forgot to take a photo.
We see a lot of fishermen on the waterways. Most don't even look up as we pass. They're fishin'.
These guys were out mushin' around near a defunct (mostly removed, in fact) railroad bridge. The others were just coming in as we docked at Cuba Landing Marina.
On Friday, Fred phoned Larry,
from whom we purchased the Duroboat (Chucky).
We were in his neighborhood. He
was not. However, we spent a delightful
evening with his daughter, Elizabeth, who works in the office. Aside:
Elizabeth and her sister Katie did the Great Loop in a 16’ Duroboat the
same year we were Loopers. We didn’t see
them, but they made a whirlwind, 2 month (teacher’s vacation) trip around the
east ½ of North America, and had a great time!
Speaking of unusual sporting
feats, Ben Friburg, whom you may recall we met in Chattanooga, DID ride his StandUpPaddleboard from Cuba to
Key West. Check it out at
www.CubaSUP.com.
Meanwhile, back at the boat, Chucky
was duly visited and photographed. In fact, Elizabeth made a 35 mile return
trip on Sat. morning to photograph YOUNG AMERICA from a bridge. And we photographed Eliz. photographing YA. Cool pix!
Saturday afternoon we pulled
into our old stompin’ grounds, Green Turtle Bay Marina in Kentucky. We’ve been returnees way more often than the
average Looper who stops there, and it felt good to be back.
This is our ‘staging’ place
for the Mississippi River trip. We
grocery shopped, received mail, watched a couple of movies, and did what we
could to learn about the conditions we would meet on the Big M. It has rained so so so very much, that inland
Rivers have spilled great amounts of water southward. We certainly experienced the Tennessee high
waters (remember Locked in at Ft. Louden?) and the current has given us a nice
push as we move toward the Ohio.
Captain Gordon Brume has MS River Info! |
The best information we have
says GO—it won’t get any better! So on
Tuesday night we enjoyed ‘a little bit
of something’ (Happy Hour) with
dockmates Bill, Pat,(they missed the photo) Dan and Denise, Melissa and Greg and we all said our farewells.
There are locks on the lakes
formed by the Kentucky Dam (on the Tennessee River) and the Barkley Dam (a few
miles further up the Ohio on the Cumberland River). Barkley Lock is going to be very, very busy
beginning Aug. 8, because the Kentucky Lock will be closed for a month for
repairs. Busy can mean 2-5 hour delays
for a power boater while tow boats are locked up and down. We had lock luck on Wed. morning, and were
able to take the shorter route, the Kentucky, to the Ohio with only a 10 minute
wait at the Dam! The Ohio was streaming! Without changing our engine speed we were
going 11 miles an hour instead of our usual 7.5!
Our lock luck did not hold on
the Ohio. At the only lock on our route,
cleverly named Lock #52, we were behind tow #3 in line---with both the large
chamber and the smaller auxiliary chamber operating. The drop is only 7 feet, but the only way
down is through the lock. We were there
from 1:30 pm until 5. Waiting. Sigh.
Barges are exiting on the left and another tow awaits.
Chatting with the lockmaster as we wait to drop 7'. |
When we were finally headed
downstream, the 30 mile run to the mouth of the Ohio at Cairo, IL went very
fast. Until the very end, when we had to
slow waaaay down to stay behind two towboats as they carefully made the turn
out of the Ohio into the Mississippi.
One went down, toward New Orleans.
The other, like us, took the “Upper” as we now know that the +/- 900
miles of River from Cairo, IL to St. Paul, MN has been dubbed.
End of Ohio River. Tow heading to Upper |
It was dark when we slipped
behind an island out of the way of tow traffic.
Knute (our anchor) grabbed the bottom, and held solidly, despite 2-3
knots of current trying to push us out into the channel.
As we sat on the deck and watched the steady
stream of tows go by in the dark, we were very very happy that they made the
corner slowly and carefully---thereby avoiding our little hidey-hole!
Our corner of the MS.See the current stream? |
Next blog will cover the 202
mile run to St. Louis (really to Alton, IL, across the river. St. Louis has zero facilities for pleasure
boaters. Strange but true.)
This part of the Upper is the
‘wild card’ of this adventure, as there are no locks for the first 200 miles
(same as the 900 miles of Lower Miss.). With
no dams to regulate the amount of water allowed downstream, the River just runs
freely. Large wing dams (piles of rock
sticking out into the water) have been built along the banks to force the water
into a deep channel for the commercial traffic---and there is a LOT of
commercial traffic—and this adds to the speed!
There is one marina 158 miles upriver, and anchorages are few and far
between. So it will be a challenge for
our 7.5 mile an hour boat to slog through the 2-6 mile an hour currents that
will be trying to push us to Louisiana, and reach the marina while we still
have fuel.
To bed. Beautiful starry night, but muggy! Please, no more rain!
Be well and be sure to
remember to breathe!
1 comment:
Glad to see that you are on the Upper M. Hugh and I took Blue Skies to the Dry Tortugas and Key West in May. Had a very relaxing vacation. If you get a chance, see Garrison Keillor in Minn. We have tickets to see him in New Orleans in October.
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