Kermit letting lose lines |
Entering the channel we can see fog |
It was a little foggy when we left but as we saw the fog lift we decided to leave. Our target was Hoppies Marina at M158.5, a journey of 44 miles from the marina at M202.9. See how easy it is to calculate your distance?
Eagle One getting ready to leave as Good Karma moves off the dock |
It sounds like a short day but we were on the Mississippi with its special adventures and we had to traverse 2 locks so no telling how long it would take.
That is fog, otherwise you could see the other side of the river |
At least we were safe but that is a lot of fog |
The Alton Bridge looks great shrouded in fog |
It was actually interesting to listen to the radio. A tow
would call in, “This is the Cindy Sue south bound with 24 waiting for
instructions.” “Cindy Sue, this is the Mel Price Lock. You are number 5
southbound. Step in behind the Johnny B and wait for further instructions.” “Roger
that, Mel Price. When do you think it will clear?” “A few more minutes, Cindy
Sue. We’ve got 2 pleasure craft in the chamber right now. No one moves until
the fog clears and we get these pleasure craft out of the chamber and on their
way. Probably five or six hours.” “Pleasure craft? What are they doing out in
this weather? Oh well, Roger that Mel Price. Cindy Sue standing by on 14 in
number 5 position southbound.”
This tow is a 24 - six barges long and four barges wide! |
To wait like that the tows move the entire barge
configuration to the side of the river and stick them into the dirt on the
bank. Then when it is their turn, they have to PULL the entire configuration
out of the bank and maneuver their way to the middle of the river. It is quite
the hassle. Nothing moves quickly although once they get under way they move
much faster than it appear and kick up quite the wake. The turbulence from a
big tow can extend for a mile or more behind the tow making pleasure craft
bounce like crossing the Mosley Channel out of Sandusky Bay on July 4th.
We busied ourselves with the small maintenance tasks that we
put off. We did a little laundry, cleaned the house, I did a little writing and
talked to a few clients. It remained foggy in the chamber. The lockmaster
scooted around in his golf cart, back and forth, on the radio. Finally after
two hours the chatter became more than the lockmaster could stand. “Mel Price,
the fog is pretty clear out here. I think those pleasure craft will be just
fine.” “Roger that Johnny B. Let’s give it five more minutes.”
Finally, “Pleasure craft in Mel Price, we are hearing the
fog is lifting enough to get this show on the road. I am going to start the
lock.” “Roger that Mel Price. We are ready when you are.”
Zappo whammo the
water went down, the doors opened and we were on our way. It wasn’t sunny but
the fog was whispy instead of a big gray curtain. We did not make eye contact
with those tows staggered along the banks.
The entrance to the canal is on the left - don't go right |
The skies cleared nicely the rest of the morning.
At M195.3 we passed the junction with the Missouri River. It
looks much bigger than the Mississippi at this point. The river is very wide at
this point but it is important to stay in the channel. We see lots of junk in
the water, mostly trees and wood. Between avoiding tows and junk in the water,
we did not travel in a straight line.
Lots of work being done on the side of the water |
Entering Chain of Rocks Lock - I've circled the tiny green light you have to notice to know the lock is open - can you see that because I have trouble sometimes |
The doors opened and the city of St. Louis appears at the
end of the canal looking shiny and vibrant! Lots of industry in here with a
gazillion tows loading and unloading barges. There was a lot to pay attention
to. Not as bad as NY harbor but pretty darned busy.
We have the obligatory pictures of the St. Louis Arch built
to commemorate the wagon trains that left St. Louis to open up the west to
white settlements.
The River Queen by the arch |
Who puts a sculpture like this in their yard? |
Approaching Hoppies - go past then turn up river to tie up |
There used to be 2 more barges |
Checking out the tie up |
The Hoppies live in the house above the "marina" |
Hoppies is on the Right Descending Bank. Pretty cool, huh? Now
you know another nautical term!!
Check out that swirling water - that is current |
Kris, Debbie, Rick and Katherine |
According to Debbie and Fern, there are only 2 places to anchor on
the Mississippi River right now and almost nowhere to anchor on the Ohio River.
For a short day, we could anchor by the Kaskaskia Lock M117.5, only about 40
miles down the river. For a longer day, we could anchor at Little Diversion
Canal M48.8.
Vickie is everywhere! |
Here is how we evaluated the options: We could break the
Mississippi into 2 parts and anchor at Kaskaskia Lock on Day One (40 miles)
then at Little Diversion Canal on Day Two (68 miles). Or we could just head to
Little Diversion (118 miles) in one day.
Other anchorages we stayed at on our first loop like Rockwood
Island, Boston Bar or Angelo’s Towhead are no longer available because of the
high water. We passed Rockwood Island (M102.4) but didn’t see any wing dams to
duck behind because all the wing dams that provide any sort of protection are
under water because the Mississippi is at flood stage.
Check out the swirling water! |
That shimmering comes from the current and water swirling around stuff in the water |
The Ohio River runs towards the Mississippi and it is at flood stage too. That means the water is high and the current is fast as the water runs down hill towards the Mississippi. When we turn the corner to start up the Ohio River we will face a 5 to 6 mph current against us. That means at 1000 rpm (normally about 9.5mph) we will be lucky to travel at 5 mph. Traveling will be slow going.
A huge tow |
Stuff happening at the riverside |
Check out that wake! |
The water was good and traffic was light on this Saturday so
we kept going past Kaskaskia Lock to Little Diversion. This is a beautiful anchorage. It is about
40 feet wide and at least 100 feet long with about 20 feet of water. It is
wonderful, safe and quiet. We get almost no wake from the tows passing in the
river. The only downside is if it rains hard, this canal provides the drainage
for Cape Girardeau which is somewhere near here. Otherwise it is quiet.
Eagle One trying to set anchor |
Little Diversion Canal |
Rafting off in Little Diversion Canal |
They were
frustrated, tired and exhausted so we said, “Come on over and raft off of us!” Our boats are different sizes but we found a way to tie up
that allowed Rick and Kris to walk on our boat. I made fajitas that night!
The next morning, Sunday November 4, 2018, we got up at the
crack of dawn determined to make Paducah KY that night. We started up our
engines. We heard Rick start up one engine then nothing. Eagle One’s starboard
engine will not start! Dead. The engine was not getting a charge. We were not
going anywhere that day!
Rick and Kermit spent most of the day trying different ways
to get the engine started. The changed the trickle charger. They found a Hot
Spot charger, charged it on our boat then applied it to the starboard engine.
Nothing worked. In the meantime they called Boat US but no tow boats were
within 100 miles of here. The Coast Guard checked in every three hours. They
called every police department within three counties but no one had a boat that
could come out.
Close to dinner time we thought about calling Hoppies to ask
their opinion. Rick got Fern herself on the phone. She had a good idea of
calling Green Turtle Marina directly. That was Rick’s next call. Brandon at
Green Turtle had a wonderful idea of calling this particular mechanical outfit
nearby that services tows. But since it was Sunday we would have to call at 8am
on Monday morning.
I made chicken pot pie for dinner. YUM!! We are eating well.
Rick checking the Hot Shot |
Assuming everything ends well today, here is the plan:
Tuesday, Nov 6, 2018: Paducah KY M935 on the Ohio (the
numbering system changes)
Wednesday, Nov 7, 2018: Green Turtle M31.7 on the Cumberland
River (the numbering system changes again) at Barkley Lake; we will try to
provision when we arrive so we can take off the next day
Thursday Nov 8: we either stay one day to provision or move
on to the Tennessee River and Paris Landing State Park Marina M66.1, a 70 mile
day
Friday Nov 9: Pebble Isle Marina M96.1. I know this is only
a 30 mile trip but this is the place where they make homemade cinnamon rolls in
the morning!
I hate to plan further than four or five days in advance.
You never know what might happen! This is an adventure!!
Glad to have met and was able to help you guys out. Wish you the best along the way and safe travels. I’ll be following from now on!!!
ReplyDeleteYou have to have homemade cinnamon rolls! Who wouldn't stop for that? Maybe an extra day there?
ReplyDelete