Sabula, IA was our first stop
after the Quad Cities. What a hoot!
We found the Bombfire Pizza (GF no problem!)---a tres' eclectic establishment,
to say the least!
Jim, the owner,
wouldn’t let us leave without tomatoes and onions from his garden! From there, we went (of course) to Whitey’s
for ice cream, where Sabula-ites Mike and Linda immediately recognized us as
the “people on the boat”. (Once again we
were alone at a dock…)
Linda delivered
fresh home grown garlic and also rhubarb bars 'ere we left Sabula! A fine stop, it was!
Mike and Linda and their Marinette |
The marina complex includes
not only beautiful slips, but a Mississippi River Museum which boasted a wonderful
history of the river, complete with 3 and 4D movies (I got splashed when the
bear grabbed a salmon!), a library, a working boatbuilding ‘village’, the ways
to launch the newly built boat, an aquarium with outdoor otters playing, and the William Blake paddlewheel dredge
(available for touring).
Inside Wm Black's engine room---the ice cream machine! |
Next door is a Grand Hotel
with a huge Water Park. We wandered in
just to see it, and 45 min. later were still shaking out heads at the things
they thought of. Family fun---we understand
that it is mobbed all winter!
A word about the
Mississippi. For the first time in our 5
years of cruising, I’ve felt that the stories about flooding should be taken
personally. We were deluged by rain and
rising water in the ‘goofy 200’, looked at the repairs as yet incomplete after
floods at Pt. St Charles and Two Rivers, and found that the rising River had
kept boats out of Dubuque. Need I say
more? In the past years, as we cruised
on the Ohio, Cumberland and Tennessee, somehow the flood stories were ancient
history, as in “Yep, the water was THIS
high back in ‘39”. Suddenly, the water
was twice the height of our boat LAST WEEK.
“Don’t need to worry about the docks, they just ride up on the
poles. It’s the water in the [second
story] office that is a problem.”
Happily, the River now is
beautiful, calm and extremely manageable.
The locks here, (there area 27 of them, conveniently named #27, #26,
etc.etc.) as on the Ohio, create lakes that provide pleasant cruising with
minimal push from the current. They say
Minnesota is the land of 10,000 lakes.
The Mississippi could be called the River of 10,000 islands.
And sandy beaches abound. Some of them are the creation of
dredging---sand removed from the channel and placed ashore. Others flow from inland, where we’re told
sand is mined and sold to other states to be used in the fracking process. We
saw dozens of Minnesotans, Wisconsin-ites and Iowans pull their boats ashore
and picnic---enjoying the sunshin-ey last days of summer.
We have seen very little
barge traffic here on the ‘Upper’ .
Trains? Many. There are tracks
along both sides of the river, and lots and lots of long---100+cars---freight
trains hauling petroleum cars, double decked cargo containers and who knows
what else.
Amtrak shares the tracks---we
met folks in the Red Wing, MN station waiting for the nightly train to
Chicago---it was already 30 minutes late.
The train spans the frame of the photo...Beautiful country. |
Wabasha, MN was a great
stop. The Eagle Center introduces you up
close to 5 Eagles that are unable to live in the wild.
Just up the waterway is Slippery’s, the pub
that provided the inspiration for the Grumpy Old Men movies. North of Wabasha the River flows through Lake
Pepin, where the ice fishing in the movie took place. My brother chuckles at the memory of ice
fishermen’s pick up trucks parked all over the lake when he’d visit relatives
in the area.
At long last, (ok, it was a
week…) we made our way to a slip at Twin City Marina in South St. Paul. Looper friends Liz and Steve
(SHINGABISS)
were there to meet us, along with a couple who winter in Aberdeen, MS, and are
friends with my Aberdeen, SD high school classmate, Jan. That small world thing, again!
My sister Betty and her husband,
Gene drove to the Cities from SD so Betty could ‘bob’ on the boat for a
day. Had a great time introducing her to
River life, and to the Mississippi Pub. She brought some quilting that she works on in the car.
The USPS Governing Board
meeting was in San Antonio, TX, and we flew down to spend Tues.-Friday
there. Then headed to NY to be present
at and enjoy immensely the wedding of daughter Kris and John McAndrews.
The weather was perfect; sunny and warm but
not humid. The Dutchess Manor is a fine
catering spot—plenty of beautiful and delicious food, and the amazing Hudson
River provided a stellar backdrop. That dot on the river is the paddle wheeler RIVER ROSE. It ‘paddled’ by just as the ceremony was about to
begin. Took us back 9 years to our
wedding celebration on that very boat!
We’ll be here in NY until Sept 21st, with a trip to Sharon, PA in the mix to dedicate the memorial
bench for Fred’s Cutlass submarine friend.
At long last. More about that
next time.
Be well, and do remember to
breathe!
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