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Today’s post takes us from Port Colborne to Cleveland.
I’ll do another post about the MRC yard later. You can click here to see what these two looked like last year.
Algorail is nearly gone and work has already begun on Algoway.
At the Buffalo breakwater, Kathy Lynn was standing by with barge to receive concrete rubble, I think.
NACC Argonaut departs the Buffalo River for Bath, ON.
Manitoulin heads west.
Paul L. Luedtke tows scow #70. Is that Ashtabula in the background?
GL Cleveland assists barge Delaware out of the Cuyahoga…
until Calusa Coast clears the RR bridge and Cleveland returns to the barn.
All photos Will Van Dorp
MRC is located on the east side of the entrance to the Welland Canal. This was a part of the trip I was eager to see. I recall seeing English River for as long as I’ve taken photos on the Lakes. Paul H. Townsend I first saw here.
Townsend dates from 1945, and
English River . . . from 1961. Here’s a post I did on her 10 years ago.
Marcoux Princess of Acadia arrived here on a towline from the Maritimes. Click here for photos of her on the Saint Lawrence a year and a half ago.
Doubled up at the south end of the scrap yard were Algorail and Algoway, launched in 1968 and 1972, respectively.
Algoway on a towline was featured here. This is the first post that includes Algorail.
All photos by Will Van Dorp.
Yesterday’s post requires a complement, so here it is. The flight out was less turbulent but equally rewarding for folks looking out the window. Behold the Tappan Zee. This stretch of the river–from Piermont “pier” (created by the Erie RR) on the west side of the Hudson to Croton Point on the east and a little margin on either side represents approximately 10 statute miles, by my estimate. Rockland Lake, directly across the river from Croton Point and usually obscured by Hook Mountain just south of Haverstraw, can clearly be seen here.
Here’s the next stretch of river from Croton Point north and almost to Poughkeepsie. That’s about 40 statute miles, as the crow flies. By slow boat, that’s the better part of a winter’s day. Note the long skinny reservoir, DeForest Lake, at the 4 o’clock point of the photo.
From my seat on the starboard side, I was hoping for a glimpse of Lake Ontario, but this is way beyond my hopes: despite the clouds, a clear view of the 27-mile Welland Canal from Port Colbourne on Lake Erie below to Port Weller on Lake Ontario above.
Last summer we exited here, near the MRC scrapyard at Port Colbourne just after 1600 after having entered the Welland Canal
here at Port Weller, just before 0900 that day . . . so the aerial above represents a day’s traverse through the Welland locks, with no delays.
By this time, I was starting to think the pilot of this aircraft must have wanted to be credited on this blog, for as we headed into Detroit airport, he gave me this final treat: a view of the 740′ Algoma Harvester upbound through the cutoff leaving marshy Walpole Island to starboard and the more substantial Seaway Island, ON to its port. The natural flow of the St Clair River–and the international border– is along the far side of Seaway and Miller, MI.
My week away involved another flight, a long drive, and then the flight with my camera–not my phone. Since I’m on an aerial fling, I’ll share some of those tomorrow. Below is a sample, for you to savor if you want to guess my destination.
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