June
2: Today
was a very pleasant cruise, trawler speed, from New Baltimore NY. Nothing exciting until we arrived at the Troy
Federal Lock and Dam located in the city of Troy on the Hudson
River. From
a boater’s perspective, this is the eastern gateway to the New York State Canal
System and the “Erie Canalway Trail.” Curiously, operations and
authority over this lock are under the US Army Corp of Engineers ... boaters commonly
refer to this as “Lock #1” or “Erie Canal Lock 1” yet it is really not part of the
Erie Canal System.
"Locking Thru" is not unusual for us because we
have done this previously, on many occasions, when cruising from the east
coast of FL to the west coast of FL via the St. Lucie Canal where there
are 5 locks (10 round-trip) and Lake Okeechobee. We
thought we were well prepared this trip ... added lines for the locks, purchased several large round (ball) fenders, and special rubber gloves for
handling the rough and slimy lock walls and cables. So, when were we cleared by the Lock Master to enter Lock #1 chamber we
were not surprised there were no lines or cables for boaters to grab -- we were forewarned
-- but the "grab wires" also called "poles" were recessed
in the canal walls and hidden from immediate view. After the initial panic we saw that the lock had poles recessed into the walls, and spaced about 50 feet apart, leaving only one pole
to grab and tie off. As we had entered into
the deep walled chamber, we were caught off-guard by a 25+ knot westerly wind that pushed our boat across the 45' chamber
into the opposite wall requiring an unconventional Port side tie. In addition, the river current in the chamber
was absolutely wicked, so after we were raised and cleared to depart the chamber
it was almost impossible for both of us to push SANTORINI off and away from the chamber wall. Eventually, Donna was able to use her core strength
to get us pushed away, just enough, from the chamber wall to give Karl adequate "bow thruster and forward throttle" control to pull the boat away from the wall and out of the lock chamber.
After that adrenaline rush, it it became apparent to us how other vessels actually get "turned" in the lock chamber. In fact, we later discovered from another cruiser, who had locked-thru about an hour after us, that a de-masted sailboat got so out of-control in the chamber's current that it turned perpendicular; this resulted in its sail mast getting caught in-between the lock rails that are about 55' apart, and caused the Lock Master to go into Emergency Mode, raising and lowering the water table inside the chamber at least 2 times before the
sail boat mast could get untangled from the chamber rails, and then get turned straight in the chamber and leave the
lock. Over the years, you read about these events in Seamanship courses, but you never really comprehend until its a first-hand event.
The Waterford waterfront / canal is
located at 1 Tugboat Alley, and is the entrance to Lock #2; the community
provides boat transients free docking for 48 hours. These docks are floating, and they are owned, managed
and controlled by the municipality. Most notably, for municipal docks, they are in excellent condition. The Visitor
Center is located on the waterfront and adjacent to the docks, and operated
exclusively by an all-volunteer network … they were absolutely wonderful,
welcoming and provided us with lots of information, local maps, canal maps,
historical data and provisioning details.
Waterford
NY, earlier called “Water Ford” to the Mahican Indians, is a fording or
crossing place where the Mohawk River slowed to narrow streams around small
islands. It was settled in 1622 by Dutch traders and was a base for trapper
trading with the Mahican Indians who lived on Peebles Island.
For
the curious, we found a couple of YouTube videos that you can click on … these
will provide you with aerial views of Waterford’s Lock #2 operations:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kbe8qLxY-E0&app=desktop and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z26hWVrtiYk&app=desktop
June 3: We plan to continuing our voyage and lock-thru Monday morning when our vessel will be raised over 173' by 5 locks. Before this, we wanted a sneak preview and we decided to walk the length of "The Waterford Flight" lock system, about 6 miles ... here are some pictures (from land) of what we can look forward to:
I never knew that going through locks could be so scary! We took a canal boat through several locks in England and it was no way as treacherous as those you described. In total how many locks will you have to go through?
ReplyDeleteHope you'll get through the locks with no problems! Looks very interesting!!
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