SaltyCajun.com lake Area Marine

Notices

Go Back   SaltyCajun.com > General Discussion Forums > General Discussion (Everything Else)

General Discussion (Everything Else) Discuss anything that doesn't belong in any other forums here.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #21  
Old 04-18-2010, 08:21 AM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

#6
Paducah & lock 52 are in our rearview mirror. To be fair, We didn't meet ALL of Paducah. I'll leave it there.

We "floated" over the next lock because the water level was high. They are building a new lock a few miles down. It IS something to see!!! Here is a good spot to tell about river traffic. The rules of the road don't apply to barges. They choose their course & stick to it. They have to, they are so big. It was up to us to get where they were not. If they overtake you going the same direction there is no "passing blast". There is no interchange with them on the radio either. Not that you can't talk to them, BUT...keep it simple and brief and respectful. A few times we were "the meat in the sandwich" In a narrow channel with 1 on the port, us, and another overtaking us on starboard. Stay cool, don't get froggy & start jumping around. We interacted with well over 300 tows. Not 1 time was there a danger. Use those binoculars, make your decisions early & get where they won't be. Its easy. One point you MUST know about bends in the river. Pay attention to your charts & know if there is a bend ahead of you. IF meeting a tow on a bend, you go to the inside (your starboard to his starboard) and pass. As a tow enters a bend, the rear will swing out as the turn is made, sweeping the whole channel width. On some channel bends there is no room for you to move over. Other than that, everything is like driving a car.

We swept into Cairo, mid afternoon in a rainstorm. How exciting! All hands on deck! My bud NOT at the helm. It was like rush hour traffic. Ferries crossing in front of us, big tows, little tow, crew boats, tugs & even a paddle wheel. Helter- skelter, everything alive & moving. Lightning and thunder to boot. I'll never forget it & for 30 minutes we were part of it!

Well, we weren’t in Kansas anymore, that was for sure. We were on the Big Muddy. We bade goodbye to the sweet gentle blue-green waters of the Ohio. With a collective "gulp", we headed down the Mississippi.
Reply With Quote
  #22  
Old 04-18-2010, 08:30 AM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

#7

I've crossed (by bridge) the Miss often. Until I was on it, I never got the full effect. We felt very small that afternoon. We were all 4 in awe of what we were seeing.


Our speed increased by 4+mph. For the first time we had debris & huge eddies added to our watch duties. Zone man decided getting the boat home ASAP was the cure to his predicament. He quit following the channel markers and adopted the straight line approach. All this accomplished was a big eddy grabbing the boat & pushing the boat OVER the top of a red buoy. KAPLUNK, rattle, rattle, squeak!! The full length of the houseboat, out & onto the skiff. It caught the skiff on only one side of its hull & because its weight was not enough to fully submerge the buoy, the skiff lifted & came very close to capsizing. Saint ted655 came unglued. The Golden Rule was suspended & the fur flew! I turned into Popeye, I stoods all I could stoods. Looked like airplane tickets would be bought in Memphis!



The Ohio (for us anyway) had offered no really neat places to moor @ night. We seemed to be out of sync. When we passed a good spot, it was too early. We just pulled over, away from the channel & spent the nights. Now it became imperative that we find better mooring @ night! The size of some of the debris & the amount made it dangerous to moor anywhere but on the "inside" of something. A jetty, sandbar, island, even an abandoned barge.

Our first night on Big Muddy was behind a nice neat stone jetty. Genset running smoothly, ice machine cranking out the next days ice supply & XM satellite radio playing. "Some" had their feelings hurt but Life was Gooood for the remaining 3 of us, the hotdogs & pork-n-beans tasted great. We were "lit up" many times that night. Laying in my bunk I came to understand the affection a sailor has for his/her ship. It is your home, without it you have nothing, you are nothing. Other boats (on lakes) were temporary diversions that you drove home from. The difference was "just" sinking in.
Reply With Quote
  #23  
Old 04-18-2010, 11:06 AM
swamp snorkler's Avatar
swamp snorkler swamp snorkler is offline
Swordfish
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Raceland
Posts: 6,731
Cash: 3,427
Default

This is some good material
Reply With Quote
  #24  
Old 04-18-2010, 05:55 PM
Woodduck Commander's Avatar
Woodduck Commander Woodduck Commander is offline
Trophy Trout
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Kinder, LA
Posts: 450
Cash: 629
Default

This could be a book
Reply With Quote
  #25  
Old 04-18-2010, 07:29 PM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

#8 Second day on the Miss.

Somehow the channel marker missed the out drive & the fact that we awoke to a dry bilge/floors meant there wasn't a hole in the hull. A good start.

Our "pattern" was to first get underway (start engine, raise anchors, & power up the nav goodies. Then as the girls "gussied up we gradually increased speed as it became brighter & we could see debris (and marker buoys) better.

As soon as someone was available to "aid" the zone man, I set about double checking all systems. Then the genset was started & breakfast was started. We ran the genset in the mornings to refreeze the fridge & ice container. This also recharged the house batteries. The navigational equipment was on a separate, dedicated 2 battery system. It did have a "maintainer" charger but was really charged by the engine alternator AFTER the start batteries were topped off.

This was done very simply by a VSR (voltage sensitive relay). The generator had yet another battery. In all there were 4 separate systems. I had big plans of using gel cell batteries but in the end I bought off the shelf Wal-Mart marine lead acid.

Actually this proved to be a better choice. I asked my bud to help me run some wires one evening. He managed to run the drill bit through the wall (as planned) & INTO one of the new batteries!

Spreading acid into the equipment space behind the cuddy. (I don't make this stuff up I promise). Well, at least Memphis would have a Wal-Mart for another one.

We usually ran the generator again in early afternoon & then in the evening for awhile. I have no idea how much diesel this used. It was worth whatever it was. Along about 3 PM, Just as I lowered the engine hatch after my usual look-see, a loud screaming sound began coming from the generator. I hollered to shut it off. Now what? With the engine roaring in my ears, I lowered myself into the engine space so as to get to the genset. I soon found that the water pump had frozen tight. No electricity tonight.


The remainder of the day went OK and we picked the lee of a BIG sandbar to spend the night. While our stove was electric, our grill was gas. Burgers it was to be & the freezer was still holding, so we had ice. My buddy’s milk for his morning Cheerios was going to take a hit though. He might have to have a cold bagel for breakfast.


As it was hot, we all decided to swim until bedtime. We had picked this sandbar thinking there would be few mosquitoes. After all, it was solid sand as far as you could see.

WRONG! right @ dark we were swarmed by "clouds" of hungry mosquitoes. We fled to the stuffy cabin. All was not lost, we spent the time talking of past escapades & telling stories on one another.

A cool breeze finally showed up & we all had a reasonable nights sleep. BUT... we all realized what the generator meant to us.

Tomorrow....Memphis! 1/2 way home, Yippee!!!
Reply With Quote
  #26  
Old 04-18-2010, 08:45 PM
Dink's Avatar
Dink Dink is offline
Blue Marlin
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Lafayette
Posts: 7,768
Cash: 2,192
Default

Tom, how bout one more tonight?
Reply With Quote
  #27  
Old 04-18-2010, 09:09 PM
Jordan's Avatar
Jordan Jordan is offline
Great White
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: DeRidder,LA
Posts: 10,399
Cash: 2,534
Default

I was thinking the same! This should be a book
Reply With Quote
  #28  
Old 04-19-2010, 06:36 AM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

#9

This morning was uneventful, in fact, not even much barge traffic as I remember. I spent my time down in the engine space, amongst the roar of the diesel & whirring fan belts, removing the Westerbeke's water pump.

A word here about optical illusion. The Mississippi is a master @ them. It didn't go unnoticed by us that ALL tows were white. The big muddy told us why. White is the only color that is not "absorbed" by the river. I was glad the Gibson Houseboat was white. Coves, inlets, even islands will not appear as they are. You need picture navigation to really see the river. The width & color of the water will definitely play tricks on you.

Yep! We missed the "slit" that led into the marina. We were almost 4 miles downstream before we decided it must be behind us. This meant beating back upstream against the current. NOW, we felt the power of the river, WOW! A glance @ the gauges told us we were overheating. We had to cut back to 5 MPH. Putt, putt, back we went.

The Memphis Yacht Club lies behind Mud Island, @ the foot of the big pyramid (ex sports arena), behind Mud Island. Just as you go under the 3 bridges, look for the BIG flags. Don't miss it, duh!


The marina is great, for many reasons. It lies close to the river, they are reasonable in prices, they are very friendly & helpful, but the best part is there is no major climb out of the facility. You are allowed to park & drive down the huge ramp.

To get to an auto in Evansville (and most other marinas) you had to climb the "stairway to heaven". After fueling we were told there was a space available one dock over. Yes you guessed it, my bud had a few teeny weeny problems getting the boat into the hole. I sat aft & used my legs to fend off the sides of other boats, His wife selectively inserted a big fender as needed here & there and a couple of small boats fired up & got the hell out of Dodge!

Hey everybody, look at us!!! "these damn houseboats don't handle worth a darn in close spaces" my friend mumbled as he left the wheel & headed for dry land. I just shook my head as I smiled @ the marina operator. He shook his head as he coiled the bow dock line for me. I realized my friend was going to learn the art of piloting about as much as I was going to learn how to play a bagpipe


All tied up & electric hooked up, ACs running we started about the business of relaxing, repairing & enjoying Memphis. After a few inquiries & cleaning up, we rented a car & set out. I had taken the time to show the water pump to the local marine supply pirate.

He "thought" he might have one in his "warehouse" It would run around $350.00. "Did I want it?" More like... did I have a chouse! I gave him a cell number and focused on more pleasant activities for the moment. He was clean shaven, wore slacks & a polo shirt, $100.00 dock shoes and a Rolex watch BUT... he was still a damn pirate.
Reply With Quote
  #29  
Old 04-19-2010, 06:42 AM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

# 9 Continued

We loaded the battery with the hole, went to Wal-Mart, Bought new fan belts, a radiator cap. & many more "stores" for the boat & crew. I fully expected a trip to the airport to purchase a ticket but there was no mention of jumping ship. Milk for his Cheerios was bought instead.

Of course the little pirate would have to "order" the water pump. To overnight it was another $170.00! How predictable that was!! My bud had to buy a new pair of shoes. Not everything he did was bad. He did good deeds also. In this instance he had saturated his shoes with diesel as he sat one evening in the engine compartment holding his finger over the drain fitting on the water separator.

We had decided to drain the water off 1 night as part of our nightly PM chores. It broke, no ones fault, it just broke. Diesel started dripping into the bilge. He saw it & jumped in & sat there in the dark and mosquitoes while the 3 of us tried to make something that would stand up to the solvent effect of diesel fuel.

After more than a hour we finally concocted a mix of toilet paper, silicon & Permatex gasket goo. Then he sat there while it "set". Our HERO!! We had to throw his shoes & socks away though.

After 2 hot showers & the marina (the one on the boat was a cold one), there was still a faint reek of diesel in close quarters. From then on we did our PMs in the mornings. New shoes, a restaurant meal or two & dry land made him a new man. We all enjoyed the layover. While standing in line for our Big Macks, my wife noticed we were all 4 swaying back & forth, our legs were still on the boat. How funny. 1 more incident that night & then back to the boat.

Our friends decided they wanted a taste of "Memphis @ night" We found a steakhouse downtown a few blocks from the marina. It was so-so food @ exorbitant price, but real atmosphere. The building had been a warehouse for river trade in the steamboat days. As our friends lingered, learning of the history, we stepped out onto the sidewalk.

A scruffy, dirty young man made a move to grab the wife’s purse. I picked up on the intent & shot in between him & the wife. As I did so I thrust my hand into my pocket for my knife. He saw the move & broke off the advance. He left the curb & barely made it across the 4 lanes of traffic to the far side. He was gone into the night. A small taste of" riverfront life." "The joke would have been on him" the wife quipped. "The parts pirate stole all our money this afternoon"

We watched the beautiful horse carriages for awhile & called it a night. We had arrived around noon & wanted to leave early (if possible) the next day. I did want to install the golden water pump while stopped & stationary, I was losing my hearing.
Reply With Quote
  #30  
Old 04-19-2010, 07:07 AM
Jordan's Avatar
Jordan Jordan is offline
Great White
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: DeRidder,LA
Posts: 10,399
Cash: 2,534
Default

Tom, this is an awesome story
Reply With Quote
  #31  
Old 04-19-2010, 10:02 AM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jordan View Post
Tom, this is an awesome story
I am glad you agree, and are so enjoying it!!

Stay tuned, more to come!!!
Reply With Quote
  #32  
Old 04-19-2010, 11:02 AM
Fishmaster's Avatar
Fishmaster Fishmaster is offline
Red Snapper
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: jefferson
Posts: 1,045
Cash: 650
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by BananaTom View Post
I am glad you agree, and are so enjoying it!!

Stay tuned, more to come!!!
Where are you getting this from?
Reply With Quote
  #33  
Old 04-19-2010, 11:11 AM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Fishmaster View Post
Where are you getting this from?
From my Word Document program on my computer.
Reply With Quote
  #34  
Old 04-19-2010, 11:15 AM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

#10

Leaving the marina about noon with no problems AND a full crew, we waited for a tow to pass the inlet & away we went. We ponied up the remainder of the $500 + to the parts pirate and I had the generator back up. Restored & repaired. The debris was not as thick as it had been up river. All we had to do was steer a course.

Things alternated between boring & interesting. We passed a turtle out in the channel, we couldn't tell if he was heading to, or leaving Arkansas. 1 fellow in an orange kayak was picking his way along the Arkansas bank & a few times we saw fishermen in bass boats blasting to a favorite spot. For the 1st. time we encountered dredges keeping the channel open.

In searching for anchorage in the evenings we found the mighty Miss. to be very misleading. A mile + wide, you will be tempted to treat it like a lake. Don't! You can be in 50' of water o1 minute & 2' of water the next Sand & silt form willy-nilly & what looks deep isn't. As you approach the banks you need to watch that sonar! Sometimes you can thread a channel & follow it to get where you want. Sometimes you won't find a way over to the spot that looks perfect.



The Arkansas bank was (for us) the most interesting stretch. Even zone man said he wished we had time to explore & fish for a couple days. I tell you, after Memphis, he was a changed man. We still found plenty of safe spots along the Ark banks. For the most part it was high & rocky with less mosquitoes.

A day and a half below Memphis we started seeing the "jumping" grass carp. What a hoot! Not so funny if you were in a boat with lesser freeboard I suspect. Some were HUGE, I can see how they hurt people. One night we moored in a protected cove of a beautiful "Gilligans" island Very soothing & spiritual stay. Things were going good.


I, (yes ME) had done a stupid thing that would scare the heck out of us all, but it would not reveal its self for a few days more & at present was unknown to us.
Reply With Quote
  #35  
Old 04-19-2010, 11:19 AM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

#11

While we were coming down the Miss. & staying in Memphis, it was raining cats & dogs in the upper Arkansas River drainage system. By the time we arrived @ the mouth of the Arkansas, it was a mess of debris. Man made & natural, it seemed there was everything imaginable to dodge.

Giant trees. Green leaved limbs acting as flags & 1/2 submerged wooden "things" gave us the most concern. The fact that I was down to 1 prop was the main worry. We "thump-bump, bumped for several miles before the "stuff" began to find its way over to the banks. It was impossible to miss it all. Going to neutral became quite common.

It bears repeating that a GPS system is necessary to find specific areas on the Mississippi. We never actually saw the mouth of the Arkansas (except on the monitor). We were given a hint of where the inlet @ Greenville, Miss. was because we watched a tow disappear against the far bank. There one minute, gone the next.

Sure enough, the chart showed Greenville. We turned to port.

The entrance was busy. Before you can get up to the marina/casino complex, you have to rub elbows with the many industrial sites on both sides of the channel. Unlike Paducah, we received many waves & hellos (none of them the 3 finger kind). We picked our way ( not really that difficult) up stream to the fuel docks. The girls walked up to the casino. The prices were the best we encountered. It was well worth the 3hrs off our day.


We bade Greenville good by, the 2+ mile long floating dredge discharge pipe was spewing out sand @ the mouth of the inlet. It was carrying mud & water from a site being dredged way up in the canal. Long lengths of 8" pipe on floats in a crazy zig zag route out to the Mississippi. Impressive! As the sound dimmed, we started planning our last night on Big Muddy.

Tomorrow we would go through the last true lock of the trip. Old River Lock was just below Natchez.
Reply With Quote
  #36  
Old 04-19-2010, 08:25 PM
swamp snorkler's Avatar
swamp snorkler swamp snorkler is offline
Swordfish
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Raceland
Posts: 6,731
Cash: 3,427
Default

cant wait till the next installment
Reply With Quote
  #37  
Old 04-19-2010, 08:33 PM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

Mrs. Shelton Chimes In.

Hi everybody, this is Marybob-Teds better-half. I am not the story teller that Ted is-he always keeps in fun with his great stories-but they are about his days on the ranch as a cowboy, trapper, and all that goes with it...These boat stries are true----I can attest to that!!! His buddy was....well he just was.

From the female point of view--It actually was I who wanted to live on the water..... I lived on the Colorado River as a child and have never gotten it out of my system I guess. I was excited about getting the boat and having an "adventure" as Ted kept telling me it was going to be, but.... I also was quite apprehensive-----to say the least!!!

I was concerned with all that could go wrong-if we had to do this alone-but once we had friends to go along, that would help-a little (little did I know)- I had read as much as I could to be prepared for the trip-WRONG...


1. I just knew the barges would run us over-as it turned out-we couldn't have been treated nicer (except for when Ted’s bud tried to play chicken with one!!!

2. I was prepared to have problems with pirates-hey that is what I read!!!!-other than the people not being very friendly in Paducah, again no problem


3.Then also I had read somewhere-the eddys (whirlpools) could be a big problem-WELL I did not have a problem-now Teds bud did say that one of the times he ran over a BIG marker buoy-was because of the eddy around it....

I had a GREAT time-cannot imagine a better summer.

Well Ted and I would have preferred to have taken longer in getting down here. We never stopped, or even slowed down to have a look or a good time. The one night that all went well was when we stopped about 1700 and had time to get dinner grilled and relax before the skitos found us.


I would do this over again in a minute!!!!


It was nice at the marinas. People were nice to interact with--but it was just as nice being on the water.


I would have preferred to have planned at least one hot meal a day- but they were happy with cheerios and hot dogs!!! Did learn one important thing-our friends bought granola bars for lunch and snacks-not good on a boat with one small latrine!!!!!!!


If we had the money and time (well we do have the time-will have to wait till we win the lottery) I would turn around and go back to Evansville for the summers and down here for the winter!!!


Nice to talk to all of you- bye for now-Mb

Reply With Quote
  #38  
Old 04-19-2010, 08:37 PM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

#12

5 AM came & went this final morning on the Mississippi. We all slept in for the first time since Evansville.. This was to be a mixed day of emotions. If you truly love cruising, you will feel a since of regret at leaving the Big River. In spite of all the challenges, I was sad to make the starboard turn when the GPS said it was time to leave the main channel & start looking for the gates of "Old River Lock".

Vicksburg & Natchez, with their beautiful homes on the hills they both had in common, were safe from the sometimes angry, high waters. While passing both towns I imagined old retired river pilots spying on the barge traffic as it made their way up & down the channel. Maybe they felt even sadder than I that they weren't a part of it anymore. Who knows?


We soon saw the lock, a call on channel 13 raised the lock master. We switched (as usual) to channel 14 & received our instructions. The lock was set the wrong direction so we were told to wait at the "bull nose" while he filled the chamber. Wreak #, ??, hell I've lost count by now, but you guessed it.

Zone man did not know what a bull nose was. By the time we had a quick group meeting & decided it must be the big oval pillar that anchored the end of the crash fence into the chamber, ol speedy was well on it @ a fast speed. The boy just NEVER developed a "feel" for a boat! If any of you EVER have as many wreaks as my buddy while learning to pilot a HB, then sell your boat cuz you ain't "getting" it either.


Trying to salvage the approach, I asked him to slow up & we would tie off on the crash fence, Now I don't know WHY, but he turned to port to do this BUT didn't cut speed! We were darn sure going to test out the resilience of the fence! Here we come!

Spreading my feet & bracing for impact, I truly closed my eyes. Ahhh, at the last second possible, he spun the wheel hard to starboard AND (believe this) increased the throttle!! We hit a glancing blow & turned hard. This served to whip my poor skiff, full length, VERY hard into the fence. Whack!!!


I scrambled towards aft to see if I has anything left floating. As I passed the door I was screaming %%$&&!!!**%%$%%.

My wife later told me that Zone man looked @ her and said "He could lose a good friend, using language like that", to which Marybob replied to him "Sink his skiff & YOU could lose your life".

By now we had made a circle in front of the gates. There was a blast & the gates opened. Somehow, I felt as if our reputation had preceded us, but the kind LM said nothing & we descended down to the level of the Atchafalaya River.

It was Noon, the 3rd of July. Already I had experienced anticipation, sadness & regret, anger bordering on temporary insanity, anxioety, and disbelief. It was JUST noon. Sheer panic wouldn't hit until just at sunset.

What a day!
Reply With Quote
  #39  
Old 04-20-2010, 11:47 AM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

Final stretch!

We all came to realize our biggest complaint of the whole trip was "chairs". If you take nothing else away from my story, let it be this. Buy the very best chairs you can afford. The most expensive helm chairs ARE worth the money. Ours was a bar stool with (what we considered @ the start) a very soft cushion.

Just 2 days out from Evansville & I wish I had skimped more somewhere else and bought a good helm chair. The navigational chair was really a nice, adjustable office chair with arm rests. It was not tall enough to steer from, nor did it have a foot rest (very important part of sitting high for long stretches). We also skimped on cabin chairs, opting for chairs that folded up, in case we needed the room. We never did need the room & paid for our choice the whole trip! On a hike it is your feet but on a long houseboat trip it is your butt. Air movement @ the helm was a issue also. A 12V. fan would have been nice.

After my lunch, I reminded everyone we were on a smaller river (after the Miss., the Atchafalaya seemed tiny) and we needed to slow & reduce wake when we encountered fishermen. This was for the obvious benefit of Zone man. He was on the home stretch & acting like a barn soured horse, chomping at the bit & prancing, with saliva oozing out at the corners of his month.


I knew we "could" make it home today BUT... it would mean trying to find mooring late in the night getting friends out of bed & transferring gear in clouds of mosquitoes. Sorry bud but we will spend 1 more night on water. I had a craving for boudin (boo-dan) for a couple of days. I wanted to stop @ the only real town downstream & buy a few links, then find a spot for the night close by. Shoot tomorrow was the 4th, (we were 2 days ahead of schedule), maybe they would have a Cajun band & Fe Do Do, who knew? I took a nap.


Well, you snooze, you lose! I woke up to find a "executive decision had been made whilst I slept. We were well past the town & headed home. Mutiny! Just plain ol mutiny. I wanted to set him & his wife in the skiff and set them adrift. It was late afternoon by now, the first cove I came too I pulled in & dropped anchor.


The atmosphere was "chilly", not much more than nods & mumbles. It had been 1,000 miles & many days in close quarters. We needed to be done with this trip.

" Were SINKING!" came the cry." The basement is all wet!" While not a nautical term, I knew what our friends meant. The cuddy floor was under water. A quick check of the forward bilge pump revealed it had given its life in its attempt to save the boat.

You could smell that it was toast, a dark spot was evident on top of its housing. Man, I tell you, a thousand things rushed through my head! OK Ted, you're the Cap'n , now what?

I saw the "deer in the headlights" look on the faces of my 3 crew. I started barking orders." Pull the skiff along side, Get a bucket, Call the Parish sheriff, call Bob (a friend) Get the papers, Make sure there is lots of repellent in the skiff, get flashlights!" Oh my gosh, were these words coming from ME? They sounded far off somehow. Could this really be happening? The rest snapped out of it, they started thinking of things to do also.


We were a GREAT team; all was done (and more). We had never talked about or drilled for a real emergency. We all did great, I must say. I settled on a little ledge just forward of the bilge well. and started bailing like hell.

Zone was the stair man, he lifted the heavy 5 gal. bucket up out of the cuddy & twisted to set it in front of the sliding door. His wife pushed it over & the water ran over the deck, into the river. Marybob made the calls and gathered the "stuff". Bless her heart, she also called our son and bade him "goodbye" In a moment of calm I overheard this. "This isn't the $&^%*^ Titanic, were NOT going down in 40 fathoms" I hollered "were going down and I don't know HOW deep it is" she replied. We were only 20' from shore. Lol.


As we settled into a regime of bailing, it seemed at first the water was not going down! I kept at it, we all did. I'm not sure when, I remember I was dog gone tired, maybe after 1 hour of intense work, I got a whiff of bleach.

Whoa there, my brain said, this isn't river water. It's potable water. We were not sinking. " Are you sure?" "yep, fix some sandwiches, were OK".

I'll wind up tomorrow with pretty dull ending & some thoughts.
Reply With Quote
  #40  
Old 04-20-2010, 11:54 AM
BananaTom's Avatar
BananaTom BananaTom is offline
Tripletail
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pensacola
Posts: 550
Cash: 1,074
Default

Home!

Nope! I can't tell you what happened with the water system. I will tell you when I find the cause. I've not pulled the floor yet as it's been too hot & sticky. Sitting on the mud @ a 30 degree slant makes it hard to walk in.

It was a mess but we worked into the night & cleaned up what we could. I would bail & sponge the well dry but in 30 minutes water would fill the well again. This was alarming to my friend’s wife. She wasn't convinced we were safe from sinking. She was up most of the night checking the well. What was going on was simple run off from ALL the bilge structure it takes time.

We had other water in collapsible plastic containers. We had a good, last breakfast, weighed anchor & headed home. Being from Arizona, the friends were amazed at how green the country was. For the first time they were @ 1/2 throttle and enjoying the sights. A cell phone call had Bob waiting on the riverbank as we choose a spot on the far bank. I untied the skiff & motored across to Bob. By the time I got back to the HB, they were all packed and ready to go. They were not up to the final 6 miles & the last lock.

Bob drove us all into Lafayette where they chose a Holiday Inn. Their Amtrak train wasn't due until the next day. They both vowed to sleep until then. We hugged, I shook Zones hand & it was over (for them).

It was the 4th of July, our sons wedding wasn't until the 7th. We returned to our swamp & the boat.

It takes a 24 hr. notice to pass through the antiquated contrivance the Corps calls a "Lock". We would have to arrange another day to pass through, this day was shot. It was already raining hard. No matter, we were home. Truthfully, my butt was longing for my recliner & a link of boudin. Marybob jumped into what was left of the wedding preparations. My able first mate turned back into a "girl".

While in Evansville, I hooked directly to the water supply there. The pressure was too high. It expanded the tanks & made the floor bulge a little. We soon discovered it & unhooked. For the next week we watched for any harm that might have been done. We found none. I checked the bilge every day, it remained dry. I checked it a few times during the trip also. We were dry in Memphis. The last refill was Greenville, Miss. I must admit that I did not check the well after Memphis. Tons of suitcases & other things were stacked over the access. All the faucets worked with good supply.

While the Gibson took wakes well, there were a few that were gigantic. Marybob or I would angle into them IF we were the pilot. Falling under the heading of "not" getting it, the Buds would simply wallow in them. Twice under their watch, they both wallowed in BIG, hard wakes that resulted in tossing everything off & out of the counters. Once I was rolled out of my bunk. Could this be a clue? Was it the markers we mowed down? Was a tank "ripped" or a sitting pulled? I reckon I'll know after I pull the floors. There are 2 tanks hooked into a common supply. Whatever happened, the WHOLE total of water ended up in the Bilge (and floor) Many, many, many 5 gal. buckets worth!

Tomorrow, some final thoughts
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:18 AM.



Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - [ARG:3 UNDEFINED], Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
vB.Sponsors
vBCredits v1.4 Copyright ©2007 - 2008, PixelFX Studios
SaltyCajun.com logo provided by Bryce Risher

All content, images, designs, and logos are Copyright © 2009-2012,
Salty Cajun, LLC
No unathorized use is permitted
Geo Visitors Map