Saturday, 24 January 2015

Self Unloader ROGER BLOUGH


"There's a big laker called the ROGER BLOUGH
With a last name that actually rhymes with COW
Though she was built strong and tough,
To haul iron ore and other stuff, 
Her wide curvy stern makes her look like SOW."
A limerick of the ROGER BLOUGH. YES!! c):-) Well maybe not a great limerick, like the one about a man from Nantucket, whose daughter ran off with his money-laden bucket to Pawtucket, or something like that, but at least all the rhymes kind of work, and according to one of the clerks at the Poe Lock information centre, the BLOUGH is known to move very slow like a lazy over-grown pig when transiting the 1200' lock (not his exact words, BTW) 
Though not a 1000 footer per se, the 858'x105' BLOUGH appeared fully loaded and since she had only two and half feet to spare on either side of the lock wall, you can appreciate the "all ahead slow" directive because having the BLOUGH -  "PLOUGH" into a fender or gate is not something any skipper wants on a resume, eh. c):-o


All kidding and innuendos aside, the ROGER BLOUGH has been a unique ship since construction on this classic straighdecker began in 1968 at the American Shipbuilding Company yards in Lorain, Ohio for the USS Great Lakes fleet of Duluth, Minnesota. Built as two sections, the ROGER BLOUGH was christened in June 1972 and named after the retired Chairman of the Board of the United States Steel Corporation.
Though she gives the appearance of a gearless bulk carrier, the BLOUGH is actually a self unloader. Instead of the typical long boom rising high above her decks, the BLOUGH is equipped with a specially designed shuttle type transverse self unloading boom that you can see located below decks behind the engine room at her "sow-looking" curvy stern. SOOEY!! c):-o Meanwhile, when discharging her load of talconite pellets from the iron ranges along Lake Superior, the boom is extended 54 feet on either side of the BLOUGH into compatible hoppers at the US Steel docks in Gary, Indiana, South Chicago, Illinois and Conneaut, Ohio. The ROGER BLOUGH is capable of carrying almost 44 thousand tons of iron ore pellets, and when fully operational, her transverse boom can unload at a rate of 10,000 tons an hour. What a racket that must make, eh? c)8-() Note to Self: Hold off "Power Nap" until this big baby gets underway or when she lays up for winter which she just did this week at Erie, Pennsylvania.
However, though not as much a hassle as when "Polar Vortex" created Lake Superior ice put a hole in her hull at the beginning of this year's delayed shipping season, her journey home was also extremely slow going until US and Canadian icebreakers came to the rescue and helped the BLOUGH plough through the ice-jammed St. Clair River and then underway to her well deserved end of season rest. Ahhh c);-b




Sunday, 18 January 2015

Trailing Suction Hopper Dredger VEGA

It's not my fault. I'm a boatnerd and I got spoiled during our first winter vacation in Cuba where a day didn't go by without at least one saltie poke herself over the horizon and then motor past our resort just east of Havana at Playa del Esta. There were tankers, bulk and container ships, an albacore fish factory trawler and this "hippo-looking" monstrosity of a ship, the 656' car carrier MORNINGSTAR CONDUCTOR http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2013/02/car-carrier-morning-conductor.html. YES!!c):-b

Though I didn't see anything motoring along the horizon last year when we vacationed at Varadero, this year I lucked out real good from another Varadero resort which was located near the end of the 20 kilometre sand-spit peninsula. Though I wasn't able to capture her hull in the snap below as she disappeared over the horizon, it's easy to make out her tall stack and rising aft superstructure. Also, if you look a little further to the right, you can see her white bow mast popping up. My guess is she was a tanker and fairly long based on the distance from the bridge and the forward mast. Exciting stuff eh!! c):-()

When we took the double-decker bus down to the Varadero marina at the end of the peninsula, I lucked out again. First because the new commercial mall there had free wifi whether you were a hotel guest or not, and most importantly parked beyond the catamaran sailboat docks was a boat, the 184' ferry and cargo ship PLUTON. c):-))  Built in Greece in 1966, the PLUTON loads vehicles, truck or whatever, by lowering her partially flattened bow much like a landing craft. COOL!! When we returned to the Marina later the week, the PLUTON had just left her dock and was motoring easterly out Bahia de Cardenas towards one of the nearby Cayos.
Meanwhile, as the landing craft/ferry sailed away, I couldn't help but notice a familiar looking vessel parked in about the same area where the PLUTON was parked earlier in the week. Though it appeared that a large hydraulic shovel was loading something into it, I was certain it was a trailing suction hopper dredger much like the OCEAN TRAVERSE NORD, which I saw near Prescott, Ontario in May 2013. Feel free to check out my post about her: http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2013/06/trailing-suction-hopper-dredger-ocean.html
The name of my mystery red hulled boat was VEGA and after researching for info about her background, I found out that she in fact was a dredger and like the OCEAN TRAVERSE NORD, after sucking silt and sediment from the shallow bottom, the VEGA's contents can be blasted ashore from a huge nozzle you can see at her bow, or dropped freely in deeper water when the hull is opened at her keel. Built in Holland in 1969, the VEGA flies the flag of Cuba and like the PLUTON, is owned by Sermar of Havana.

Though tied off when I saw her last week in Varadero, the VEGA is actively being used to remove sediment due to harsh seas in the many "pocket bays" where current ports like Havana, Santiago de Cuba and Cienfuegos are located. Since most of Cuba's current imports and exports pass through these ports, deepening the bays are essential especially to allow American deep-draft container ship that may soon be transferring cargo as the US embargo with Cuba continues to be lifted. According to those who we talked to last week in Varadero, the Cuban people will be welcoming American commerce with open arms. So what's wrong with a little proactive planning to ensure all obstacles are removed when the business returns. After all, for the first time we were able to buy American made Coca-Cola and Pringles in Cuba. Junk or not, more is on its way. No doubt about it.

Thursday, 1 January 2015

Bulk Carrier FEDERAL KUSHIRO

As 2014 came to an end at midnight yesterday, so did the shipping season for the St. Lawrence Seaway including the Welland Canal which meant all remaining salties had to scurry to get out of the system or face  a potentially gruesome Great White North winter at a Great Lakes port. Such was the case for the small British tanker, JACKSON PRINCESS which remained locked in the ice of Hamilton harbour during the winter of 1959-60. c):-o
It looked like a similar fate could happen this season as several salties remained anchored off Port Weller earlier this week waiting for a required pilot to become available to guide their way through the Seaway channels and locks to the lower river, and then eventually the Atlantic Ocean and home. The last ship through St. Lambert Lock at about midnight was the 473' Gibraltar flagged tanker STEN BERGEN. Unfortunately my day job prevented me this week from getting any snaps of the BERGEN or even the second to last downbound, that exited out of the waterway hours earlier, the 624' FEDERAL KUSHIRO. However I do have a few snaps here of the KUSHIRO that I took in May 2013.
On that day, I first snapped her passing the downbound self unloader CSL TADOUSSAC http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2013/07/self-unloader-csl-tadoussac.html below Iroquois Lock....
....and then she continued to slowly position herself near the entrance of the original Iroquois lock beyond the current lock's lift bridge...

...there the almost motionless FEDERAL KUSHIRO patiently waited for another downbound bulker to exit the lock...
...which appeared to be the once former Fednav fleetmate, and now CSL owned,  BIRCHGLEN http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2012/08/saltie-laker-birchglen.html.
So you thought FEDERAL KUSHIRO was sitting high out of the water. Check out these snaps taken in May 2009 by my fellow boatnerd, Ron Beaupre of another Fednav fleetmate and featured last week in Carlz Boats, the 607' FEDERAL MATTAWA http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2014/12/bulk-carrier-federal-mattawa.html BIG BOATS!! c);-b
BTW, to find out more about other salties that didn't quite make it out of the Great Lakes before the navigation season ended, be sure to check out a new series in the "News Channels" page of Boatnards.com (http://www.boatnerd.com) entitled "Frozen In" by veteran Great Lakes boat expert/writer, Skip Gilham. It'll give you something to read as we "Escape from old man Winter" for a week in the Hot Hot HOT climes of Varadero, Cuba. Hasta luego, BABY!! c):-))

Sunday, 28 December 2014

Bulk Carrier FEDERAL MATTAWA

The last time we ventured down to the St. Lawrence River on Boxing Day there was all kinds of snow on the ground, the temperature was -11 celsius and in the wind, it felt more like -18. BRRR c):-o Well rested and with our tummies full after a great Christmas dinner at our daughter's in Kanata, and with the daytime temperature hovering around +6 celsius, it was all systems go for our last trip down to the river for 2014.

For most Canadians though, whether the weather on Boxing Day is stinking cold or balmy like it was on Friday, it's not a big issue because for the most part they're just mulling around or standing in line at a big box or shopping mall store in climate controlled comfort while snapping up "deals of a lifetime" during the biggest Canadian sales event of the year.
Boxing Day falls on the day after Christmas and though when it started in mid 1800's as a day when British employers would give their workers or servants special gifts of food or money in a "BOX", today in Canada and many other commonwealth countries, "Boxing Day" is a sales holiday much like "Black Friday" is in the United States after their Thanksgiving where retailers will dramatically drop prices throughout the store.
However in recent years, retailers have expanded the sales event to "Boxing Week" which allows more time to burst your budget, or for boatnerds like ourselves the opportunity to snap the many down bound salties that are frantically attempting to make it out of of the St. Lawrence Seaway before it closes for the winter on December 31st, much like the bulk carrier BLACKY was doing when I snapped her passing the Morrisburg dock and my shivering spouse, Janie and TannerDog 2 years ago. See more about the BLACKY here: http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2012/12/boxing-day-is-extra-day-off-after.html, or NOT c);-b
Meanwhile, back at the blog, it certainly was uniquely mild when I snapped our first boat find of the day, the 607" FEDERAL MATTAWA below the Battle of Crysler's Farm Park near Morrisburg, but the wind was howling and I nearly lost my hat. c(:-() In fact earlier in the day, wind gusts were reported to be as high as 60 mph causing many boats to seek shelter in Prince Edward Bay west of Kingston until the winds dropped to a safer speed to navigate the narrow Thousand Island section of the upper St. Lawrence River. Wrong time of year to be blown aground, eh. c):-O

The bulk carrier FEDERAL MATTAWA was built at the Wenchong Shipyards in Guangzhou, China in 2005. Though she flies the flag of Malta, the MATTAWA is German owned but chartered to Fednav of Montreal, Quebec. Fednav is Canada's largest ocean-going dry bulk shipping company and manages over 100 owned or chartered ships throughout the world. They are also the international leader in shipping on the Great Lakes, as well as the Canadian Arctic. Feel free to check out my post about their icebreaking bulk carrier, the ARCTIC, a ship that would have been handy last winter when that "Polar Vortex" locked up the Great Lakes of ice real good. That link is: http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2013/12/ice-breaking-motor-vessel-arctic.html
Fednav ships that we see along the Seaway and Great Lakes are generally well maintained, and after their word mark prefix, "FEDERAL" each ship features the name of an international port like http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2014/11/bulk-carrier-federal-kumano.html) or a Canadian river like the "MATTAWA" which flows into the Ottawa River about 300 km northeast of here. On another breezy and balmy day last September, I snapped the MATTAWA as she motored past Windsor, Ontario on the Detroit River in the snaps below.
Meanwhile, the FEDERAL MATTAWA has since cleared the Seaway and is well on her way to Ghent, Belgium, with her load of "Boxing Day Bargains" or NOT! c);-b





Sunday, 14 December 2014

Multi Purpose Dry Cargo Ship EDENBORG

Though named after the beautiful and enchanted biblical garden that you may have heard or read about in Sunday School or Catechism, the only thing that the 452' EDENBORG looked fruitful of, was "RUST!!". c):-o I snapped the multi purpose dry cargo ship in September 2012 during our "Whirlwind Tour to the Soo & Back" and since she was parked at the Purvis Marine Salvage dock, is it safe to presume she's was picking up a load of recycled steel, hence her own scrappy appearance? c):-S
Hardly the case but rather her overwhelming display of rust has resulted from constantly battling the harsh ocean seas and salt being sprayed across her bow and all over during several trans-Atlantic crossings annually. Actually her looks clearly explains why we inland-seas boatnerds call them "Salties".
Built in 2010 at her homeport of Delfzijl, Netherlands, the EDENBORG is owned by Royal Wagenborg Shipping which is also based in Delfzijl. Anyone who has spent time snapping boats throughout the Great Lakes, will have seen many Wagenborg ships, all with their red banded grey hull, bold white superstructure and with their names ending with the suffix, "BORG", which is norse for "Fortified or Castle-like". Also, FYI: "WAGEN" is old Dutch for "Wagon" or when used as a verb, it means "To Venture". Therefore, according to the 2014 issue of "Know Your SHIPS", of Wagenborg's fleet of 180 'fortified castle-like' ships, 52 of them 'ventured' through the Great Lakes last year. I did not know that. c):-o
The first Wagenborg ship that we came across was the 469' ATLANTICBORG on Canada Day 2012. I snapped her (below) at Cardinal, Ontario laden with wind turbines bound for near Ogdensburg, New York. To read more about our ATLANTICBORG sighting, click on to this link: http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2012/07/canada-day-2012-and-what-better-way-to.html, or NOT.

Two end of day snaps of two 'sleek and serpent' looking Wagenborg multi purpose cargo ships, and my last batch of boat snaps taken on the Canadian side of the Soo. What we snapped on the other side of the bridge and St. Clair River during that trip, or during our other boat watching adventures to New Orleans, the Detroit River, Fremantle, Australia or while picnicking along the Seaway will be coming along soon to a Carlz Boats near you. I know you can hardly wait. c);-b

Sunday, 7 December 2014

Scrap Tow AMERICAN FORTITUDE

As the upbound CCGS GRIFFON motors beyond Bridge 21 in Port Colborne on Thursday, Nov. 27, the usually working tug JARRETT M rests a spell along the West Street wall waiting for her fleetmate, EVANS MCKEIL to arrive from Toledo, Ohio with her scrap tow, the classic American self unloader AMERICAN FORTITUDE. Just like any job, you take your break when you can because you don't know when the next one will come along. Such was case for the EVANS who had the sole responsibility to deliver the once mighty 690' FORTITUDE almost the full length of Lake Erie down to the Welland Canal entrance at Port Colborne, a slow pace 40 hour plus journey that would normal take less than 16 hours at full speed. Later that evening, JARRET M's siesta came to an end, as she took on a line and positioned herself beyond AMERICAN FORTITUDE's stern. There, the JARRETT took up the task of acting as the tow's rudder and reversed engine when needed while EVANS MCKEIL continued to lead the way into Port Colborne harbour. As Nathan Attard's snap below shows, the FORTITUDE looked no worse that most active lakers as she sits tied off to the east wall. While parked there, the old self unloader was inspected by Seaway officials before her passage through the system could commence. Nice couple of snaps there Nathan!! c):-))
When launched at American Shipbuilding of Lorain, Ohio in November 1952 for National Steel of Cleveland, she was a traditional "straightdecker" and her name was ERNEST T. WEIR. Though coal was a known cargo, she primarily hauled iron ore from north Superior to the steel mills in Cleveland. In one transit across Lake Superior, the WEIR was not far from where another famous ore carrier sank on November 10, 1975, the EDMUND FITZGERALD. In 1978 ERNEST T. WEIR was sold to the Oglebay Norton subsiary, Columbia Transportation and the ship ironically became the flagship for their fleet, replacing the ill-fated FITZGERALD. Soon after, her name was changed to COURTNEY BURTON and then the straightdecker was converted to a self unloader in 1981 at Bay Shipbuilding of Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin. In 2006, the BURTON and her six fleetmates were sold to the American Steamship Company of Williamsville, New York. To commemorated America's proud and brave heritage, each of the sisters were given a new name. They were AMERICAN VALOR, AMERICAN COURAGE, AMERICAN VICTORY, AMERICAN INTEGRITY, AMERICAN CENTURY, and the COURTNEY BURTON became known as AMERICAN FORTITUDE. With a new name and owner, the FORTITUDE kept herself busy throughout the Great Lakes hauling iron ore, coal, stone, sand, salt and bulk agriculture products like grain and oats until she went into longterm layup at Toledo, Ohio in 2008. No longer of use and with her proud name painted over, the FORTITUDE left her Great Lakes berth in the wee hours of November 26th bound for Brownsville, Texas to be cut up for scrap.
Inspection completed and a pilot aboard the EVANS MCKEIL, the slow going downbound scrap tow got underway early Saturday morning, on November 29th. Regardless of her name, the tow was no stranger to the Welland Canal. In 2005 COURTNEY BURTON transited the canal on her way to Hamilton where she took on a load of grain destined for Buffalo, New York via the Welland Canal.
After clearing Port Weller at about 8 PM Saturday evening, the lumbering threesome skirted along the north shore of New York state while transiting Lake Ontario to the Thousand Island and St Lawrence River. My friend Shaun Judge snapped these shots of the FORTITUDE and her escorts motoring along near Mallorytown on December 1st.
She probably would have been motoring along at a pretty good clip the last time she passed by this section of the seaway in 1959.
Then her name was ERNEST T. WEIR, carrying ore destined for Cleveland from Sept Isle, Quebec which became a new source of the raw mineral due to the then recent opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway.
In lead position, the 110' and 23 tonne bollard pull EVANS MCKEIL continues to provide the thrust needed to get her tow moving closer to a transfer point at Quebec City where an ocean-going tug was to takeover the line and complete the tow to Brownsville. By the way, EVANS MCKEIL was built in 1936 at the Panama Canal Shipyards in Balboa, Panama and has worked hard for the Hamilton based McKeil Marine since 1989.
Nice thru & thru shot of the bow thruster there Shaun. c):-o

Though she appears to be tagging along for the ride, the 82' JARRETT M must always be at the ready to crank on her twin screws and powerful 2000 horse power engine to keep her tow on line and away from the low-water shoals that has been an annoyance for many seaway transits this year.
When built for McQueen Marine in 1945 at Russell Brothers in Owen Sound, Ontario, her name was ATOMIC, a name she kept until 2006 when it was changed to JARRETT M.

Just mile away from completing the delicate passage through the Seaway and then on down to the deeper and open waters of the St. Lawrence River, the scrap tow came to a dead stop just below Cote Ste. Catherine lock last Wednesday. Initially it was said the unscheduled mooring was simply a precaution due to strong winds blowing through further down on the river beyond Montreal. Then yesterday the lead tug EVANS MCKEIL left the tow and got underway "upbound" and is currently positioned on Lake Ontario beyond Prince Edward County, and motoring at full speed westward for reasons unknown. Meanwhile, the EILEEN MCALLISTER, the tug that was supposed to takeover the tow and deliver her Brownsville, Texas, departed her berth in Quebec City yesterday too and appears to be heading at full speed to her homeport of New York City. As for the JARRETT M and her crew, it appears another extended break is in order and whether sitting idle in Toledo for eight years or doing the same along a seaway pier in Quebec, the inevitable of being cut up as scrap simply gets delayed another day, or week or several months if the AMERICAN FORTITUDE has been moved beyond St. Lambert Lock when the Seaway closes for the season on December 31st. This scrap tow ain't going to be over until it's over. c);-b To be continued...

Saturday, 29 November 2014

Bulk Carrier FEDERAL KUMANO

I can't tell you how many times we've driven over the Burlington Skyway and haven't seen a single boat approach or pass beneath the massive steel structure through the canal piers below.
Meanwhile, my sister Karin and bil (brother-in-law) Paul are down along the beach strip below birding and what comes motoring in off Lake Ontario but the 656' Fednav bulk carrier FEDERAL KUMANO. Unbelievable!! c):-o Built in 2003 in Oshima, Japan, the KUMANO flies the flag of Hong Kong and is one of about 1,000 cargo vessels to transit the Burlington Canal yearly while accessing Hamilton Harbour, the largest Canadian port on the Great Lakes. The original canal was opened in 1826 and is situated at about the midpoint of the natural sandbar beach strip. In 1830, the first of five movable bridges was constructed and the most recent lift bridge version, seen in Karin's snap below, was opened in 1962.
The beach strip is about 8 kilometres long by about a half kilometre wide and for many years, Beach Boulevard, the roadway that travels through it, was part the Queen Elizabeth Way (aka QEW) which was the primary link between Toronto and Hamilton, and then further along to the Niagara Peninsula. In April 1952, the north span of the bascule bridge failed to lift for the inbound American self unloader W.E. FITZGERALD. Despite dropping both anchors and reversing it's engine, the W.E. FITZGERALD was unable to stop in time and knocked the span into the canal thereby closing the QEW.  In October 1958 the Burlington Bay Skyway which crosses high over the canal channel and most of the beach strip for that matter, opened. In 1985 a second span was opened and with 4 lanes in both direction, it's estimated 149,000 vehicles crosses the bridge daily.
Back in it's day, it appears the beach strip was the place to be. Along with a beautiful long beach, there was an amusement park with all sorts of rides and at the Pier Ballroom, then famous stars like Ozzie Nelson, the Clooney Sisters and Duke Ellington played there. As a kid, I remember going on some of rides when visiting the park during a family day trip. It was a pretty quiet neighbourhood when we drove along the strip last September. Instead of a railway lines that would carry passengers to the beach, a long paved trail skirts along the shoreline ideal for walkers, joggers and cycling. Apparently it's also a great location for birding, a hobby my sister and bil have enjoyed for many year. Unfortunately, Karin and Paul didn't send me any pics of the Long-tail ducks, Mergansers, and Northern Mockingbird that they snapped that day, but I did get these snaps of the FEDERAL KUMANO. For that, I am grateful or as my grandson Hayden often says, a "Lucky Duck" c);-b
BTW: Before being scrapped at Ramey's Bend in Port Colborne in 1971, the old W.E. FITZGERALD seemed to have a knack for running into bridges. Check out this Boatnerd link for more of the FITZGERALD's close encounters with bridges and things that didn't move: http://www.boatnerd.com/pictures/historic/perspectives/WEFitzgerald/