Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Photos of the Tennessee River

Tennessee River

Bridge construction. They will lift that arch into place.

My view, inside and outside.

He watched the eclipse with us.

September 27 - the red moon eclipse.
At anchor in Cypress Bay, no lights, no clouds.

This building flooded when the dams were built. 

Our traveling companion for four days

I-40 from Nashville to Albuquerque.

Tennessee River in gray

It's hard to capture the beauty of the river

We squeezed in at Clifton Marina

Captains in conference

The gates are closing in preparation
for filling the lock and raising our boat.

Some of the lock gates are so beautiful!

Our line is looped around a bollard in the lock.
It floats up, taking us with it. I added the eyes. 

Saturday, September 26, 2015

Green Turtle Bay

Western Kentucky, Saturday, September 26

We’re in western Kentucky at about the same latitude as Norfolk, Virginia, at a very large marina on the Cumberland River - Green Turtle Bay. It’s a great place for a marina because it’s at the top of Lake Barkley, with miles and miles of boating. By car it’s 3 hours south of St. Louis and 2 hours north of Nashville, but it took us three days to get here by boat. 

The Cumberland River was the most beautiful river we have seen on this trip. Not too wide, pretty green trees, blue water, hardly any traffic, no houses. It may have helped that the weather was ideal, too, with just a hint of Fall in the air.

There are lots of Loopers are here since it’s almost the only stopping place unless you drop an anchor in the river. We did that a few nights ago on the Ohio River. We traveled all day until we got to the point where we had to wait for another lock. The sun was almost down so we just dropped the anchor and stopped for the night! You can’t do that on just any river, but on the Ohio the edges were shallow enough and the current was slow enough to make it possible.

Last night we saw a variety show at a Branson-style theater here in Grand Rivers, the Badgett Playhouse. Surprisingly, it was excellent and we laughed and enjoyed it very much. They sang songs from the 60s and 70s, lots of MoTown, some gospel, some things from my high school days, and some patriotic songs. Just three women, one guy, a female fiddler, and a four piece combo. All excellent musicians. The same nine people put on different shows every night and some afternoons, but they repeat the same shows from time to time.

Thursday night we went to Patti’s 1880 Restaurant where we had a 2” thick pork chop. Brian and I split the dinner, thank goodness, because with a baked potato, a loaf of bread baked in a flower pot, and a salad, it was an enormous meal. We brought home some of the pork chop; I think it will make excellent chimichangas if I get around to making them.

The boat is clean and shiny, inside and out. Brian polished the chrome and learned how to blacken the rubber rub rail - with WD-40! I oiled the floors with Homer Formbey’s lemon oil, cleaned the bathroom, did the laundry and changed the sheets. Tomorrow we’ll fill up with water and get a pump out before we depart. Brian wants to find a place to anchor so we can get a good look at the red moon tomorrow night.

A turtle is looking at me! He is about the size of a dinner plate, but that part is under water. His head is about half the size of a ping pong ball. At least 30 of them live in the area near the shore next to us. There are lots of mothers and each one has a small baby tagging along beside her. I hope this indicates that the marina is clean enough to sustain turtle life.

On the river, the monarch butterflies are migrating south. We see at least a dozen every day. They never stop.


It’s chilly and cloudy out here on our back porch. I probably should go in. Today we’re buying groceries and tonight we’re going to a seafood cookout here at the marina.

Photos of sights along the Mississippi and the Ohio to Green Turtle Bay

Hoppie's Marina is an old barge on the Mississippi.
As rough as it was, it was a welcome sight.

The color of the water

Departing Little Diversion anchorage

The river is NOT straight!


Lots of towboats on our radar screen

End of a very, very, very long day

This used to be a place where barges could  tie on and wait out a storm.

Previous floods are marked by mud

Locking through

WELCOME sight!

Pearl, Tuscobia, Melinda B at Green Turtle Marina

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Tired!

Tuesday evening, 6:45 p.m. September 22

Two long days of traveling. Monday on the Mississippi from Hoppie's to Little Diversion Creek 110 miles, Tuesday from the creek to just below Lock 52, Metropolis, about 90 miles. That’s about 10 hours Monday and about 12 hours Tuesday because we had to lock-through at Lock 53 on the Ohio River. We’re on the Ohio now, having made it here around noon today. We’ve got about an hour till dark, but we should make it to the anchorage right below I-52 on the Kentucky side by then. I don’t really like anchoring after dark. Illinois is on our port/left and Kentucky is on starboard.

I have a nice dinner of pork chops, stuffing, acorn squash and beets planned, but it’s going to be late and we’re going to be tired by the time it’s ready. 


Footnote: We were very, very tired.  

Monday, September 21, 2015

A long run south on the Mississippi

September 21

We got an early start so we could cover about 110 miles today, heading south. Dancing ghosts of foggy mist covered the water when we first woke up, but once the sun warmed things up, they disappeared. With a good 3 knot current behind us, we are easily traveling at 10 or 11 knots. The current is swift due to the heavy rainfall last week upriver. The ride has been uneventful, thank goodness, with about 40 miles still to go before we anchor for the night around 4:30. (Doesn’t that sound exciting - to ANCHOR in the Mississippi River!!)

Last night, at Hoppie’s marina at Kimmswick, Missouri, the woman who operates the place gave us advice about barges, eddies, anchorages, and the river in general. She topped all that off with terrible stories about the dangers on the river, and by the time she was done, I was filled with dread and terror about today’s trip. I suppose that comes from a life-time of living beside the river and coping with the floods, sandbars, barges, drunks and empty gas tanks. Our trip today, however, could not be better. Maybe it’s because Brian is an excellent captain, but we not had any troubles. 

We’ve passed about 18 tows with any number of barges. A couple of them pushed two barges (1x2) filled with heavy fuel, while another had about 20 (4x5) that were probably empty. Others included a 3x7 combination, 2x2, 1x4, 4x5+2, 5x5, 2x3, 3x5, 1x2 and 3x4.


It’s sunny and cool, with not a cloud in the sky. The tips of some of the trees are just beginning to lose their glossy green color, heading toward yellow. The riverbanks are covered with medium-height trees, and there are many sandy banks along the edges where the river bottom was dredged up and sprayed out. The river is brown and not as huge or mighty as I had imagined. Perhaps it is wider farther south, but we are turning off at the Ohio River. Because we are going down the river, the “right descending bank” is on our right - and it’s Missouri. The left descending bank is Illinois. 

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Mississippi River

Sunday, September 20 

It’s hard to believe, but we are actually traveling on the Mississippi River! We are really doing it! 


So far, actually, it’s not much different from the Illinois, but we’ve only gone a few miles. Soon we’ll go through the first lock, and we’ll go through the second right before we reach St. Louis. Yesterday we saw the Arch from the ground and from the inside; today we’ll see it from the river.

Photos of Mississippi River Downbound

In another part of the world, Lauren and Ellen went to the fair.


This is where the Illinois meets the Mississippi 

Mansion on top, cars and trucks below, caves in between.

Riverboat casino at Alton

Flood levels

Another barge

Even kayakers can lock through

Tow boats waiting for a job


The lock door opening

Approaching St. Louis

So long St. Louis

Gorgeous rock cliffs

Grafton, Illinois, and St. Louis, Missouri

Sunday, September 20 

We are in Grafton, Illinois, where the Illinois River meets the Mississippi. Yesterday we rented a car to drive into St. Louis with our friends from Melinda B. We visited the Arch, the Budweiser Brewery, the Missouri Botanic Gardens, saw a dozen hot air balloons sailing through the sky, and had dinner at an Italian restaurant. On the way back we stopped at a 24 hour grocery store to stock up for another week. 

Today we’re continuing our trip, entering the mighty Mississippi River and passing by the same Arch but with a river-view this time.

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Photos of the Gateway Arch in St. Louis

This way on foot
Peeking through the trees

A beautiful sight from below

Brian at 630' inside the Arch

Two days later we got to see it again from the Mississippi River


Photos of our visit to St. Louis

View of the city (showing construction site for new arch park)

View of the river from the arch

Busch Stadium

A Clydesdale horse at the Budweiser factory.

An old Budweiser wagon

Sunlight through the glass windows of the horse barn.

Old Budweiser factory rooftops

The Missouri Botanic Garden's
Chihuly glass gate

My favorite

Chihuly glass in the gardens

I was here too!