Well again we were up by 6am and moving up the creek by 6:15am. Today though there was no coffee. Not a big deal to some. Others have a more intense reaction. Even so we did get up. And half of us stayed awake for the whole trip.
It was cool, and very foggy. But on the river up here fog is common and usually burns off before 9am so with the radar on we went out the creek and into the Hudson. A rather mundane story except for the fuel barge going by at the very instant we emerged from the creek. Didn't see it until it was right on top of us. So it was either slow down, wait, and end up following the barge for several hours until we could pass him. Or gun it and beat him around the entrance to the creek.
I gunned it. Well, gunned it maybe a bit of an overstatement. I went faster is probably more accurate. Remember we only move at a swift 7 mph.
The fog did burn off around 9am and we were treated to some great scenery. Reminds me of upper Michigan. The river here is still deep, 30-70 feet and right up to the bank. But it narrows quite a bit so we're navigating through cuts more than the a wide river. Or so it seemed.
Cute Lighthouses abound |
It was a nice day so there were many more boats out then we've seen before. Saw a few rafted up and a few others pulled up on the sandy portions of the shore.
We went through Albany and I was surprised to see an ocean going freighter that far up the river. Albany is a busy river port with many barges on the move. But after New York we're good at dodging big vessels.
We approached Troy and the first lock not knowing much about the New York locks and if they operated similarly to the locks we've been through on the Mississippi. Turns out they are pretty much the same. One small difference though. On the Mississippi we had a 30 foot boat which was fairly easy to handle. Its a bit different with the beast we have now. I'm sure as we go through the 200 some locks on this trip our locking procedures will be as smooth as silk. And I will admit we are currently debating the utility of headsets with 2-way voice communication so we can hear each other.
After locking through it was a short journey to this bridge with a published vertical clearance of only 20 feet. We can "barely" make that height if I take all the antennas down. So Mary drove and I took antennas down. We went through with 2 feet to spare. I found out later the pool was lowered today giving us 22 feet of air clearance. Yesterday the vertical clearance was only 18 feet!
Once through the bridge we came up to the Welcome Center free dock. There were a few spaces up on the floating piers but the fixed cement sidewall afforded much easier access on and off the boat so we went in there. A couple of older guys helped with the lines and spent 30 minutes with us telling stories about their loop adventure. Lucky they were there too since we're still collecting experience on docking by ourselves. I should point out our boat's deck sits about 4-5 feet above most floating docks and getting a line on a cleat that low requires aerobatic talents long since atrophied.
Jimmy the dock guy on Sunday is a quite a character. Great guy! Met a nice couple from Satisfaction, a Grand Banks 36 going along the same route we are. Also a couple of guys, on a sailboat we went through the lock with earlier.
We went to Mcgreiveys to eat and then I wrote this and went to bed.