Saturday, June 22, 2013

SaSea Sally is on the hard (on land) and in a building for work.

 I got good news and bad news.

The bad news was they removed a couple pecks of zebra muscles mostly from my trim tabs (notice the dark coloration on the metal trim tab pictured to the left).  My stern thruster was also completely covered with pesky zebra muscles.  The muscles were removed with power washing and scraping but I have no idea where I picked up a heavy infestation like I had.
The good news is my bottom looked great and had no "blisters".  Blisters are caused by water seeping into the fiberglass which in turn bubbles.  Then more water can infiltrate the fiberglass which is not a good thing.


The Waters of the Mighty Mississippi are Finally Going Down (Again)



I have good news.  Work has begun on the SaSea Sally in earnest…….but there still is a lot to be done yet.

Our original Great Loop departure date was June 1 but two epic floods have delayed us quite a bit.  Last weekend (6/15/2013) the water receded so Port Charles Marina is now dry and the disruption to their operation “is water under the bridge”.  Our target for departure is now the end of July.

The lady sewing the new canvas top arrived and started cutting fabric Mon. June 17 and the radio installer showed up for an hour on that Monday also to “go over what needs to be done”.  Real progress.  The new electronics have to be installed and integrated with the 4-5 other older electronic navigation components.   

After Port Charles finishes their list of “To Dos” which they feel will be done the week of 6/24, the canvas top fabricator finishes her work which she estimates will take another two weeks, and the electronics installer finishes his work (a week whenever he shows up), we will bring the boat to Louisiana.  Once we are back here we’ll need approximately 3 weeks to clean, sort, re-arrange items, load/unload stuff from the house and Mary A II and provision the boat. 

Then we’ll leave Louisiana heading south, presumably around the end of July.  We'll spend several days in the St Louis area, then head down the Mississippi to Paducah, a 6-8 day trip from St Charles.  Due to losing nearly two months of cruising in 2013 due to major flooding, we are not planning on cruising  any part of the OH River except the 60 miles from the confluence with the Mississippi (at the southernmost tip of Illinois) to Paducah, KY.  The silver lining to our delay is Sally can swim daily at our marina pool!

Once in Paducah, we will head up the Tennessee or Cumberland River to Grand Rivers and Eddyville, KY.  Then on to Clarksville, TN, Nashville, TN and 50-100 miles beyond Nashville; then back to Grand Rivers, KY .   Bus and air service from STL is very good to most of the Cumberland stops. 

Once we are back at Grand Rivers, KY, we’ll head south on the Tennessee River, then east and northeast to Chattanooga and Knoxville, TN.  We then head “down” the Tennessee for the AGLCA Fall Rendezvous at Rogersville AL (Joe Wheeler State Park) for the week of Oct 13-18.  After the Rendezvous we’ll turn south on the Ten-Tom Waterway in NE Mississippi and follow the Mississippi/Alabama border to Mobile, AL .

Almost everyone who had scheduled a leg previously (before our delays) has had an opportunity to “re-up” for their original leg or an alternate leg.  If you were not signed up before and are interested in doing a leg with us this summer or fall, please let me know.  Let us know if you’d like to join us.

Saturday, June 1, 2013

When the River goes down, it just comes back up!

Woopie!!!  Sounds like a broken record but at least it didn't rain much today.



Federal officials fear lengthy flood for Louisiana, Clarksville

Posted on Saturday, June 1, 2013 at 12:41 pm
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the National Weather Service (NWS) expect current Mississippi River flooding in Pike County to last many days if not longer.
MoDOT officials on Saturday, June 1 did not know how that would affect the closure of the Champ Clark Bridge over the river at Louisiana.
“Once the Mississippi River crests next week, river levels are not expected to fall for many days as flood control reservoirs in Missouri and Iowa will continue to release water into the Mississippi for weeks to come,” the Corps said.
There is also a 30 to 40 percent for more rain Tuesday night, June 4 through Friday, June 7.
“This is a particularly worrisome pattern as any more rain on our rivers already in flood only makes things worse,” the Corps said.
NWS hydrologic predictions show the river between 24 feet and 24.5 feet through Saturday, June 8. The river crested on April 22 in Louisiana at 24.99 feet.
The Abel’s Quik Shop in south Louisiana was closed on Friday night and was surrounded by flood waters Saturday morning.