Sunday, October 30, 2011

I’M EMBARRESSED

October 30, 2011  Dateline, Booneville, MS USA
Yesterday was uneventful for me, well almost.  Once the fog lifted from the marina, six boats were on our way to Joe Wheeler Lock.  The lock doors were open when we arrived and in we all went. We were on our way. With 62 miles to go and one more lock, I was anxious to get going.  I got to the next lock, the Wilson Lock, with the other boats and discovered there was a tow in the lock.  Ok, the wait ended up to be 4 long hours of idling before I got into the lock.  The lock had a valve that wasn’t working so I had to wait for a maintenance man to make the necessary repairs.  Once I got through the lock there were some 40+ miles to go and it was already after 2 PM.  Come on Rich, I said, move those throttle levers forward.  He listened to me and up on plane I went.  Yes I was running at 19.5 miles an hours---this was great and my Caterpillars loved it.  When I got to Grand Harbor Marina in 2 hours I saw SLANTY SHANTY, but more about her later.   Rich and Carol bought me a dinner of 364 gallons of diesel and then they went off to have dinner with some Looper friends that they met at the Rendezvous 2 years ago.

This morning I got up to fog again.  It’s that time of year.  The same 6 boats left the marina when the fog lifted.  Before long I came upon SLANTY SHANTY.  There are two young people onboard who are trying to sail her from Pittsburgh PA to Mobile AL.  The raft is powered by a 9.9 horsepower engine and there are two chickens onboard which provide them with an egg or two every day.  The raft has grown over time as they find things along the rivers. When they started it was an open raft. The 3 sided covering came from material they found along the way. It must be very cold at night. They have a solar panel but it doesn’t work. Their cell phones aren’t working either as they can’t charge the batteries. We all wish them good luck.

I sailed down part of the Tombigbee Waterway today and I still have 412 miles to go before Mobile.  The waterway, completed in 1986, was created to connect the Gulf of Mexico and the Tennessee River.  The connection enabled the low cost shipment of bulk materials without traveling through the Mississippi River.  The waterway was made by connecting rivers and lakes together by building 12 dams that control the flow of water from 414 feet above sea level to actual sea level.  More dirt was moved to construct it than had been moved to build the Panama Canal.  The man-made canal portion of the waterway is relatively straight with stone walls along each side.  I heard Rich call Wayne on MY WAY on the radio and say one word “Boring”
So, how was I embarrassed?  Both MY WAY and I were passed by a trawler (ONCE AROUND)---a trawler, how could that be?  A trawler!--- what was Rich thinking?  I guess I will have to hang my anchor in shame for a few days.
Tomorrow will be a short day with only 18 miles and 3 locks to go through---it could be a very long day if we are delayed at any of the locks. Wish us well !!!

Friday, October 28, 2011

CHATTANOOGA

October 28, 2011  Dateline: Joe Wheeler State Park, AL USA
Yesterday, Rich and Carol went with Wayne, Francine and Skipper to Chattanooga.  They first went to visit Ruby Falls.  The falls is located approximately a quarter mile underground in a cave and falls 145 feet.  The falls have been created over millions of years as the moving water dissolved the soft limestone.  The falls has lights on it that change color making it even more beautiful. The entrance to the area where the falls is located is full of stalactites and stalagmites as well as some columns where the stalactites and stalagmites touch each other. 

Next at Rock City, they saw this plug for electric cars.  By the way it works very well when you insert a credit card.  There were two such machines and they gave the users better parking places than the handicapped.



Chattanooga Choo Choo
Today, they went to the Chattanooga Terminal Railroad Station which was abandoned in 1970 and was scheduled for demolition.  In 1971, a group of citizens saved it.  Today the CHATTANOOGA CHOO CHOO serves as a hotel, conference center, model railroad museum and shopping mall.  The model railroad is 174 by 33 feet.  It has 3,000 feet of track, 129 locomotives, 320 structures and 1,000 freight cars.  The hotel offers some unique rooms; they are in remodeled and refurbished old railroad cars that still sit on the terminal tracks. The rooms are very fancy. You can also have lunch or dinner, informal and formal, in a railroad car.

They all went to the International Towing Museum.  Ernst Holmes built the first recovery vehicle in 1916 in Chattanooga, thus it is a fitting place for the museum.  There are more than 15 old wreckers in the museum’s collection as well as hundreds of wrecker models.


Carol bought Rich a big box of Moon Pies (12).  Moon Pies were first made in Chattanooga.
Looking down from Raccoon Mtn.
On their way back to MY WAY and me, the happy wanders went to Raccoon Mountain.  The top of the mountain has been removed and a 528 acre water storage facility created.  During periods of low power demand water is pumped up 990 feet from the Nickajack Lake of the Tennessee River to the storage facility.  During a period of high demand the water is released back down the  penstock and electricity is generated.  It takes as much power to pump the water up to the storage facility as is created during the period of generation.  The electricity used to pump the water up is generated by hydro power that would otherwise go to waste. Even though the facility is net neutral it stores power somewhat like a rechargeable battery that can release its stored power in periods of high demand.
Tomorrow I am off to Grand Harbor marina at the northern terminus of the Tom-Bigbee Canal. Sunday I will be starting my trip to Mobile, AL.

WHAT A WEEK!!!

October 26, 2011  Dateline: Joe Wheeler State Park, AL USA
What a week this has been!!  From Sunday through Wednesday Rich and Carol were kept very busy attending the America’s Great Loop Cruisers Association semiannual rendezvous.  They were kept so busy that Rich did not have time to help me write this blog.  They met many new and old friends and they look forward to seeing them all again.  I met some new friends as well including Molly J.  Molly J is very small; she is only 26 feet long and is powered by a 135 horsepower outboard motor.  Andy and his wife, Molly, live in South Dakota and are able to trailer this little boat to wherever there is water. Rich and Carol also spent time with Brian and Jean on the 29 foot Spirit of Whitby.  They make their home in the United Kingdom but spend all available time boating in the U.S.

John, Mary, Mary, John

John and Mary of Mackinaw City, MI as well as John and Mary of Mackinaw City, MI were also in attendance.  This is not a typo, there were two boats Passport and Mary Frances whose owners were named John and Mary and both are from the same home port of Mackinaw City.


Marc and Shelly from Rock Chalk are really big Kansas University fans.  They even have the Jay Hawk painted on each side of Rock Chalk. The name is derived from the “rock chalk” chant used at Kansas University sporting events.


As part of the event there are two afternoons where various boats have an “open boat” for attendees to see the inside of different boats on the Loop.  Carol decorated me for Halloween and to add something different, Carol dressed as a witch and Francine as a WIT (Witch in Training). 



Skipper keeps getting bigger here is a latest picture.



Saturday, October 22, 2011

WHO IN THE WORLD IS JOE WHEELER?

October 22, 2011  Dateline: Joe Wheeler State Park, AL USA
Everyone knows about Nashville, TN being a Music City with all of its recording studios and Detroit with its Motown sound.  In Alabama there is Muscle Shoals with its Fame Music Recording and Cypress Moon Studios.  Many famous recording artists worked at these studios including Wilson Picket, Aretha Franklin, Otis Redding, Little Richard, the Osmonds, Joan Baez, Jimmy Buffet as well as many others.  The Muscle Shoals Sound Studio Museum was established in 1969 by a group of session musicians known as the “Swampers”.  The museum is located in a building where the Roling Stones, Cher, Bob Seger, Rod Stewart, Paul Simon Art Garfunkel and many others created some of the most popular music of the 1970s.
The town of Muscle Shoals got its name from the rapids and shoals that were in the Tennessee River before the TVA dammed the river.  There were river mussels that grew in the area and the Indians would farm them, but it took strong arm muscles to paddle through the rapids.
Who could be a general in two armies that once opposed each other?  That would be Joe Wheeler.  Lt. General Joe Wheeler served in the Confederate Army and fought at the battle of Shiloh.  Following the War Between the States he was a Brigadier General in the Unites States Army.  He also served in the House of Representatives.  In honor of his service to our nation, a lock on the Tennessee River and a Tennessee State Park were named after him.
The Joe Wheeler State Park has a large lodge with meeting rooms and banquet facilities.  Today there was an outside wedding at the facility.  Tomorrow the AGLCA semi-annual rendezvous starts at the facility. There will be approximately 75 boats at the facility with Loopers from Ontario and Quebec, Canada, Florida, South Carolina, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, South Dakota and many other states, including me from New Jersey  The Park’s setting is beautiful and the mornings are crystal clear.








The Loopers who were at the park today were all invited to meet at an outside gazebo for a typical 5 o’clock cocktail party. Everybody brings their own drinks and a food item to be shared by all. About 40 Loopers showed up. The party ended when the lights came on and the bugs arrived. A good time is always had by all.

Friday, October 21, 2011

ALABAMA STATE BASS CHAMPIONSHIP

October 21, 2011           Dateline: Rogersville, AL USA

Yesterday Rich and Carol walked over to the tepees that I had seen the day before.  It appears that the tepees are rented to campers as the floors were covered with pine straw.  Rich got Carol's picture peeking out of the tepee.


Last night Rich and Carol went with Wayne and Francine of MY WAY and Brian and Jean of SPIRIT OF WHITBY for dinner at the Florence Marriot which has a rotating dining room on a tower.  The food was outstanding and the dining room made one rotation around through the course of the dinner.  The beautiful view included an aerial view of the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Wilson lock.
This morning I woke up to a lot of noise as 97 bass boats were being off loaded from their trailers into the marina waters.  The temperature was in the high 30’s and the fishermen were bundled up in heavy clothes.  The marina was just full of bass boats with their navigation lights on.  Rich spoke with one of the fisherman who told that the tournament was for the Alabama State Bass Championship.  The boats were allowed to leave the marina one by one and each was told when it had to return.
Today, I left Florence Marina about 8:30 along with 7 other Looper boats.  We had called the Wilson lock and were told that we could “sail” right into the lock and asked that we include as many boats as possible.  I got to the lock and in I went.  The lock is deep, 97 feet, and I entered it I lost access to the GPS satellites and my chart plotters started to beep.
By the time I got to the second lock of the day, Joe Wheeler Lock, our group picked up three additional boats and lost one.  The floating bollards in the lock were all taken and there were two additional boats coming in.  When in a lock with a floating bollard I am held in place with a single line.  Rich offered a large Bluewater boat the opportunity to raft to me and we would ride up together, held in place by a single line.  It worked well.  GRIANAN and PASSPORT did the same thing, they are of equal size.
Ten boats arrived at Joe Wheeler State Park together and the dock hands did a great job of getting everyone in place.  The America Great Loop Cruisers Association (AGLCA)  will hold its fall rendezvous here beginning on Sunday, October 23.  I will stay in place for the meeting.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

OF A BATTLEFIELD AND INDIANS ARE COMING

October 17, 2911
Rich, Carol, Wayne and Francine took Grand Harbor’s courtesy car and went to visit the Shiloh Battlefield.  The Battlefield is a huge expanse of land encompassing some 4,000 acres.  The Union forces wanted to control the western rivers as that would give them a way into the heart of Confederate States.  This would also give the Union forces the heart of the railroad system.  Closing the rivers and the railroads would prevent the South from moving men and supplies quickly to battle fronts.
October 17, 2911
Rich, Carol, Wayne and Francine took Grand Harbor’s courtesy car and went to visit the Shiloh Battlefield.  (1016) The Battlefield is a huge expanse of land encompassing some 4,000 acres.  The Union forces wanted to control the western rivers as that would give them a way into the heart of Confederate States.  This would also give the Union forces the heart of the railroad system.  Closing the rivers and the railroads would prevent the South from moving men and supplies quickly to battle fronts.
Part of the battle took place in a peach orchard.  It was said that there were so many bullets flying that petals from the peach blossoms fell like snow as they were hit by the bullets.
There was a pond where wounded or exhausted soldiers from both sides went to get water or bathe their wounds.  It was said that the water was red from all of the blood that was in it.  Perhaps all the blood is why the water is green today and certainly looks undrinkable.


October 18, 2011
Today was an easy run of some 42 miles from Grand Harbor Marina in Counce, Tennessee to Florence, Alabama.  The weather for October 19 was predicted to be very windy so Rich and Wayne decided it was a good time to get out of town.  There were several other boats that decided to do the same thing.
The trip down the river was uneventful and smooth.  I did notice the very high limestone walls usually on one side of the river and not on the other.  When I asked Rich about them, he said that there was likely an uplifting of the earth at some time way in the past and that the river was forced to follow the course created by the high walls.  The limestone walls also showed how high the river had been in history.  Wow, it was likely 100 feet higher at one point. (1026)
As I pulled into Florence, I saw this collection of colorful Indian tepees on the river bank.  They were located at a trailer park resort ----I kept an eye out for flaming arrows!!

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

ROOFS OVER ROOFS

October 17, 2011 Dateline: Counce, TN USA
Got up early this morning and left Clifton Marina at 7:45 AM to travel 58 miles to Grand Harbor Marina in Counce, TN.  The trip down the river was again uneventful, but today it was really pretty.  The limestone cliffs along the river bank were outstanding with the prominent out crops of limestone.  Lady Finger Cliff was one of those out crops.


Houses along the river range from mobile homes to mansions on high bluffs. Many mobile homes were parked inside of portable garages. (804) I suspect that the reason for this is that the portable garage keeps the hot sun off of the metal roof of the mobile home.  This one was parked under a bridge so I am not sure how effective it was.

Along the way down the river, I passed the Shiloh Battlefield.  Nearly 150 years ago Federal Gun Boats were on the river, where I passed, and pounded the Confederate troops during the night of April 6, 1862.  Rich, Carol, Wayne and Francine are planning to go to the battlefield tomorrow.  There were more than 23,000 soldiers killed, wounded or missing in action when the two day battle was over, that was about 1 of every three involved in the battle
I traveled through one lock at Pickwick Landing.  The lock has a lift of 57 feet.  The lock is massive, this picture shows MY WAY as it is about to enter the lock, MY WAY is the white dot in front of the lock.



The houses on Pickwick Lake are very impressive.  As I exited the lock these houses were located on a high bluff on the left bank of the lake.



The houses matched the size of the Pickwick Lake.