After a seiche sped us from Buffalo to Cleveland through the night, morning found us under the Cleveland Memorial Shoreline Bridge, down where the Cuyahoga flows. Cuyahoga, to most non-Clevelanders of my generation, connotes a many times burning river of the past.
Here’s a reference to that time on a sign inside the Greater Cleveland Aquarium. I never visited Cleveland in the 1960s or ’70s, and without these opportunities to visit now, I’d have imagined it a possible setting for a Philip K. Dickesque dystopia. As a caveat, let me say upfront that I’ve not lived in Cleveland, so this post is based on impressions gleaned from reading and quick visits like this one. But
this has to be the most unexpected postscript to any predictions made in 1972.
Believe it or not, this working Iowa is 102 years young.
All these photos–except the one directly above which I took on July 4, 2016–were taken in a few-hour period of time in late July 2017.
Restoration indeed, and with the collaboration of Cuyahoga River Restoration, cuyahoga arts & culture, and ArcelorMittal.
Yet commerce goes on. It does not have to be “either-or-or.” A 634′ Buffalo weaves through what must be a captain’s nightmare to get to the steel plant under the corkscrew path of the Cuyahoga.
Simultaneously, a 630′ Manitowoc exits the Old River after having taken on a full load of road salt for Milwaukee from the Cargill Salt mines extending far under Lake Erie.
For both watch standers, this has to be an ordeal of concentration.
And a waterway already juggling commercial vessels and recreationalists, trains are another factor; all small vessels lined up as one train after another cross this bridge move expeditiously once the lift rises.
My early 1970s self would never have imagined 2017 Cuyahoga’s mouth, although
Still, I believe the effort is worth it.
All photos and sentiments by a gallivanting Will Van Dorp.
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August 16, 2017 at 12:44 pm
Mike
Here’s a vid of the Buffalo’s sistership Sam Laud heading up the Cuyahoga on the Cleveland shuttle run: https://youtu.be/G5m_YLBnVHA
Pretty impressive stuff but it can get hairy in the summertime with all the kayaks, paddle boarders and scullers who seem to think that the freighter will go around them.
I was aboard the Buffalo earlier this year for one of her shuttle runs, and while the trip up the river loaded is pretty awesome, the trip back down the river in ballast was even better – she runs the whole length backwards!
August 17, 2017 at 8:25 am
Daniel Meeter
Brilliant post, Will.
August 17, 2017 at 11:17 am
Lee Rust
Sistership Grande Caribe entering port. Do these meetings happen often?
August 17, 2017 at 12:22 pm
tugster
Lee–These encounters happy several times a season both on this run and the one to Montreal. Also, SS Columbia is still in Buffalo, and I’ll devote a whole post to it at some point in the near future. In the Buffalo post, the shot of the two old GL tugs was taken from SS Columbia’s deck. The next shots show the other side of a group of silos.
August 17, 2017 at 1:37 pm
Lee Rust
Thanks. The once and future story of Columbia is really something.