A 0630 departure from Paducah would
allow us to travel in cooler air for a while and arrive at Green Turtle Bay
before it gets so hot in the afternoon. But first, we had to deal with
the massive mayfly hatch that covered the outside of
Viridian and
the inside of the flybridge, (flybridge, get it?). Some cultures
enjoy making a paste from these flies mixed with mosquitos and formed into
a cake for eating. The firstmate and chief cook was not interested in
taking on a new "culinary experience" so she washed them off with the
hose while underway and picked them one by one out of the fly bridge.
This took a good portion of the morning to accomplish, but soon we were fly-free.
By the time the flies were
vanquished, we were turning off the Ohio River and onto the Cumberland River.
Why not just go down the Tennessee River? That looks like the logical
route to take by virtue of distance alone, but Kentucky Dam has a reputation of
being one of the busiest commercial dams in the country; add to that the heavy
construction underway, and a little pleasure craft takes a back seat when it
comes to passing upriver. The Cumberland River eventually takes you to
the same place, but the Barkley L&D is usually not busy, as was the case
for us, so we took the longer way.
The Cumberland River section that we traveled on is mostly
remote. There is this huge rock crusher plant, Lafarge
Aggregate, that keeps tugs working 24-7 bringing large boulders for
crushing and taking barge loads of aggregate away for construction
use. Up the river a piece is Cumberland River Quarry and Pine Bluff
Sand and Gravel. Before getting there, the river
makes a 90-degree turn to starboard. Naturally, the AIS showed a vessel
that appeared to be a tug arriving at the turn at the same time we were getting
there. The velocity of the tug was only 2 mph, which could just be one of
the little service boats that help move barges around for filling. As we
approached the curve we could see a barge loaded with boulders creeping around
the bend. Usually, we just pass on the One without yacking on the radio
with the tug captains, but there seemed to be no end to the stack of barges
coming around the bend. There soon looked to be more barge than bend, so
I picked up the mic and called the tug captain. We found out quickly that
there was no room for a pass and were told to stop, turn around and get away
because he was fixing to go to full power to make the turn.
The narrowness of the river made simply turning left or right a non-option,
so shifting into reverse and backing around then turning was the way we had to
go. Normally this is a no-brainer; you just do it. This time the
engine dies when shifted into reverse. Like popping the clutch.
This happened once before in Little Diversion Creek when we backed down on the
anchor to get it set. Long story short, we got back underway and out of
the barge’s way and were soon safely past and on our way to GTB. After
discussing the engine stopping situation with the boatyard repair shop, we
decided it had to be the cutlass bearing rolling up and binding the shaft when
shifting into reverse. It never happens when shifting onto forward, and
if a little throttle is added before shifting into reverse it transitions
smoothly. Now that we know what it is, we can manage this until we get to
a boatyard on the Pickwick and get it fixed.
Barkley L&D was putting a tug up
so, we had to wait a few minutes before we could be put through.
But soon enough we were in and out and on our way to Green Turtle Bay
Marina, where several other Loopers had stopped as well. We got a ride in
a 6-seat golf cart with two other couples to a pizza house and had a good time
telling stories and eating pizza.
We will stay here a few days and do
some scheduled maintenance before heading south to Pickwick.
That's the news and here's some views:
We are
here
Today's route from Paducah, KY to Green Turtle Bay Marina, KY
Going to work
Sunrise on the Ohio River
Dredging Operation
Looking tired
The Cumberland River Inlet
Wonder how that got skewed
Rock Crusher on the Cumberland River
Heavy load coming around the bend
There she goes
Peaceful cruise on the Cumberland River
Locking through Barkley L&D, KY
Serious Ddiscussions