Showing posts with label Barge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barge. Show all posts

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Madison trip

When we go to Madison, IN I always enjoy going down to the Ohio River and seeing if there are any barges going up or down the river. We were on the river one afternoon when I saw this barge going up the river. We sat and watched it until it went out of site. We messed around doing some other stuff for a couple hours and then I told my wife that I think we could see the barge again if we headed up the river to Carrollton, KY (ten miles up the river where we were spending the night).  A little over two hours had passed from the time we saw the barge in Madison until we got to Carrollton. We got there just in time to see him coming up the river(pictures 3 and 4). From that I concluded that the barge was traveling at between 4 and 5 mph. As a side note I got to looking and found that Ingram Barge Company list their barges positions on the web. They only update the positions once a day but it's interesting nevertheless. I used to think the name on the barge was the captain's name but discovered later that it is the name of the barge.






 

 On the way home we ran into people cutting tobacco. I did this many a time when I was a kid so naturally it I had to stop and take a picture or two.  The had a machine with two people on it to put the sticks between the rows.  When I did it we had to put a bundle of sticks on our shoulder and put then in the rows.



Monday, September 3, 2012

Barge

I have always been kind of fascinated with barges.  Luckily, while we were down at Clifty Falls we got to see one go through the locks near Markland, IN.  There are two locks there, one about 1000  feet long and the other about 500 feet long. The long lock had a bad gate a couple years ago so it was closed for some time.  This made if very difficult for a lot of the barges since they were much longer than the smaller lock.  When they go to this particular lock they had to take their barge apart and take it through the smaller lock in two pieces and then put it back together.  I never got to see that but I would imagine that took a long time.  From what I've researched barges travel from 4-6 miles per hour so it would take a long time to get places yet I have read that barges are the most efficient way of moving freight.