Tony M

Tony M

Sunday, October 31, 2010

TennTom , Here We Come!

Tenn-Tom Divide Cut



October 28, 2010
The Yellow Creek, off of the Tennessee River begins the TennTom Waterway- a popular shortcut that links the Tennessee River with the Gulf of Mexico.  Surprisingly, this waterway was only just completed in 1985 to make the trips to transport coal, woodchips, etc. quicker and easier than using the Mississippi River.  It's also a safer way for recreational boaters to get to the Gulf of Mexico-hence, most Loopers and other SnowBirds use it.  The first section of 25 miles is called the Divide Cut, the second section of 52 miles is the Canal Section and the third section of 149 miles is called the River Section.  There are ten  large locks but they have bollards to tie on to so the descent is very comfortable.


25 miles of this


Enough of the stats…
Before we left Grand Harbor Marina, Pete again rebuilt the bow thruster but this time added the brushes Bob had so intelligently left with the spare parts and guess what...they were just what the doctor ordered...the bow thruster never worked as strong as it does now...again, THANK YOU,BOB!!!

Grand Harbor is the kick-off point for this last of the river systems.  It was an easy run from Grand Harbor to Bay Springs because we didn’t have to deal with any locks-not that they’re that difficult here but you could have to wait 2-4 hours for commercial traffic to lock through and that’s a pain.  In Bay Springs Marina we were given a slip with a roof which should be a good thing but these roofs harbor spiders that poop all over your boat-really disgusting-Pete keeps scrubbing them off and they keep pooping!  Anyway we used their courtesy car to go to the Bay Springs Visitor Center that had interesting displays about the history of the Tenn-Tom and then went into Belmont (the closest town) to pick up some perishables and a needed oil gauge for Tony M.  The town is a victim of our dying economy-very sad to see the condition of America upclose and personal.

Belmont, Mississippi

We left Bay Springs Marina bright and early and completed SIX locks and 46 miles- quite an accomplishment for one day.  We hit all the locks at the right time (or are we just getting so good at this?) and sailed through each one.  We did meet dredging going on and had to slow down and  not "rock the boat".

Dredging on the TennTom


In case you need to make a phone call...

No Anchoring Here!
Bridge to Nowhere
White Cliffs of Epes

We read about a FREE dock at Blue Bluff Recreation Area so we decided to try it.  While we were talking over the radio to our traveling buddy Magoo,  the folks on I Love Lucy hailed us with good directions about how to safely get into this lagoon- type embayment.  We stayed close to the green buoys, took a sharp left (or to port) and found a beautiful T dock with enough room for us and Magoo on one side and I Love Lucy on the other side. We were a week late for the Aberdeen Festival at this lovely park but were told it was enjoyable.  I Love Lucy had been tied up here for three weeks and came for the festival.  Buddy enjoyed the romp in the park and swim at the beach.

Tony M leaving Blue Bluff

From Blue Bluff we traveled 2 more locks and 51 miles to Pirates Cove Marina.  At the first lock we met up with a tow who generously, allowed us to lock through with him-something many do not allow.  It was intimidating to be tied next to this tow who filled up the lock with his six barges.
Tony M fit in this space as we locked down

At Pirate's Cove Marina we met Summertime, a fellow Looper from Old Saybrook, Connecticut.  It was enjoyable to talk to a fellow New Englander-there are very few of them doing the Loop, many from FL but not Northerners.  We all (us, Art and Sandra from Magoo, Ray and Linda from Summertime and Dick, a Dutch crew member for his brother-in-law's boat) went out to dinner to share stories and company.
Summertime joined our group and traveled with us thru one lock and 57 miles to Sumpter Recreation Center.  Again a very intimidating entrance to a beautiful, peaceful anchorage but with careful navigating we anchored safely.  Another boat later joined us.  Buddy enjoyed his dinghy ride to shore to investigate the shoreline campsites and meet the campers and their dogs. We watched the muskrat family swim to their den, probably complaining we were interrupting their lives,  The heron never seemed to get flustered about our presence; they just let us watch their grace and beauty.

Heron with muskrat swimming in front of her

Demopolis Yacht Basin was our next stop after one more lock and 47 miles (Demopolis marks the end of the Tenn-Tom Waterway as the Black Warrior River enters the Tombigbee River.  It’s now called the Black Warrior-Tombigbee Waterway.)  Between little water in the marina and many boats going south, we had to tie up to the fuel dock with Magoo rafted to us for the night and Summertime rafted to another boat.  You would think they would charge us less for this arrangement but it’s all about being the last marina for the next 212 miles so I guess they can charge whatever they want to.  We had dinner at the marina restaurant which was surprisingly good and then borrowed the courtesy car to pick up some groceries since we won’t see civilization for the next four to five days. Yikes!

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Good-Bye Tennessee River

October 24, 2010

After Larry and Donna left us at Goose Pond Marina in Scottsboro (a favorite marina), we traveled on to Ditto Landing Marina in Huntsville, AL.  This municipal marina has brand new docks, clean bathrooms and showers, washer and drier, a beautiful flat bike path that ends at a Publix grocery store, a campground for Buddy to sniff and romp and it only costs $.50 a foot per night-we stayed a week since we also took advantage of the Enterprise car rental weekend rate of 32.36 from Friday at 12 noon to Monday at 12 noon and got to actually drive to places we wanted to see.  There's U.S. Space & Rocket Center where we spent time exploring the hands-on exhibits, flight simulators, IMAX theater, the 354-foot Saturn V moon rocket, full size model of the Space Shuttle  and the Hubble Space Telescope and a U.S. Air Force SR-71 Blackbird spy plane.


Saturn V Rocket
Spy plane

Huntsville is known as the Rocket City because of the aerospace industry, led by the German (he surrendered to the Americans at the end of WWII) Dr. Wernher von Braun.  He and his team were instrumental in the USA's successful rocket program.  The city also is home to the Army's  Redstone Arsenal from which we could hear loud booming testing of some kind of rockets going off-Buddy loved it -NOT!

So between the NASA program and the government presence in Redstone Arsenal, the government money has kept this area in a stable condition.  We found it to be upscale, interesting  and comfortable.  Hmm, we'll keep this place in mind for a possible relocation destination (low taxes too!)

Anyway, the ducks at this Ditto Landing Marina kept us laughing at their quacking at  us. They would swim around the marina and announce themselves to whomever would listen and dare feed them. Different kinds seemed to get along and swim together all day...wonder what their secret is....
Duck diversity
Cliffs outside of Huntsville


Shrimp boil at Joe Wheeler State Park-no, it's not an AARP meeting, but it looks like one!
They'll let anyone in!!!
 Every fall the AGLCA holds a rendezvous at Joe Wheeler Sate Park in Rogersville, AL for interested Loopers.  They hold workshops to learn about the next leg of the Loop, dinners where you'd  meet other Loopers and cocktail hours to party with the Loopers you've met along the way and new Loopers you've just met.  By the time we had decided to sign up for the rendezvous, it was sold out but we decided to go to the marina and catch up with some of the great folks we've met along the way.  What a great time we had with the people there...a gathering every night and a special shrimp boil (feast!) sponsored by a gold looper who contributes the shrimp every year while every one brings some food dish.  How nice is that!
Gloria & Jim(Crawdad) Laura and Bill(Monkey Girl)Ana minus Pete(Blue Yonder)









      Wilson Lock-93' high
Looking up the 90' lock wall

 We left Joe Wheeler with our traveling buddies Art and Sandra (Magoo) to beat the mad rush of boaters traveling up to Grand Harbor where the Tennessee meets Yellow Creek and begins the Tenn-Tom Waterway.  We needed to go through two locks which can be troublesome if a tow is involved.  Usually we had been lucky but this trip reminded us that our luck can run out and it did in, of all locks, Wilson Lock.  We had to wait two hours until a tow locked through before we could lock through.  This lock is over 90 feet and is very intimidating when looking straight up from the bottom to the top.

We have spent over a month on the Tennessee River and were now leaving it.  This river is beautiful and gave us many glorious days and peaceful evenings.  The weather has been as perfect as we could want it, the scenery as exciting as one could imagine and the people as delightful as one would hope for.   This was more than we expected...we will miss this Tennessee River...

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

More Tennessee River

October 4, 2010 to October 12, 2010

Local knowledge from Stacey and Paul (SeaSea) brought us to a favorite dockage.  Shellmound Recreation Area has a free dock right in front of Nickajack Lock and Dam where we spent a couple of nights.  Buddy loved all the smells and the peace and quiet...so did we!
Our view
Tony M at Shellmound

View of Nickajack Dam at Sunset


Lots of wild life
Some kind of tree house!


Onward to Chattanooga
The stretch from Shellmound to Chattanooga brought us through Tennessee's Grand Canyon, an area of some of the most stunning scenery on this river.  The beginning of this section has small farms and homes but then the mountains drop steeply into the river.  Talk about river meandering!  The river now made about a dozen twists and turns through the mountains. The Prentice Cooper State Forest  and Wildlife Management Area line the riverbank with more than 300 kinds of trees-some turning color but nowhere near New England colors.


We passed another TVA wonder- Raccoon Mountain where TVA created a 520 acre lake on top of the mountain into which water is pumped from the river during times of slack power use.  Then when there are peak electric demands, water is allowed to flow down the mountain through giant tubes and turbines, producing electricity.  Pretty clever!
TVA's  Raccoon Mountain
We arrived in Chattanooga and tied up to the city's dock right in their downtown by the aquarium.  What a nice city-people, food, attractions.  We spent an enjoyable day at the aquarium and the IMAX theater. The largest fresh water aquarium has many interactive exhibits for kids of all ages so you know what that means!



Interactive displays

Beautiful butterflies


Waterfall stairs where many kids were having great fun!

Larry and Donna Edwards met us in Chattanooga and stayed with us for two days as we motored back down the Tennessee.  It was so enjoyable to spend time with long time friends(not old) and were disappointed they couldn't stay longer.  As landlubbers they were off to discover western Tennessee by car.
Donna and Larry
The invitation to travel with us is open to ya all so please consider it!!!

Monday, October 4, 2010

The Beautiful Tennessee River


September 24, 2010 - October 3, 2010


 We followed the Tennessee River to the Yellow Creek where the Tenn-Tom Riverway begins.  We stayed at Grand Harbor Marina who has a courtesy van, enabling Laura and Bill (Monkey Girl) and Heidi and Kelly (Prime Time) and us to visit Shiloh National Military Park.  The driving tour showed us the many monuments, cannons  and historic tablets that detailed the Civil War's first major battle in the western theater.  This two day battle caused 23,000+ men to lose their lives in horrific battles.  We were all quieter on the way back, realizing the grim realities of this ghastly war.




This Tennessee River is quite interesting.  Its originates in Knoxville, TN, flows southwest to northeast Alabama and Mississippi where it turns westward to Pickwick Dam and then turns north up to Paducah, KY.  In 1933 the TVA (Tennessee Valley Authority) was created to provide cheap electricity  and jobs to the very poor residents of this area.  To do this, nine dams with locks were built that prevented disastrous floods, generating tremendous amounts of hydroelectric power and providing a deep navigation channel for the 652 mile river.  A bonus was the beautiful lakes that  are attached to the dams and locks.  They are awesome-not too populated but well used by boaters.
 Each lock and dam produces a beautiful lake named after the lock and dam.  Our favorite was Wilson Lake-I wonder why...
Wilson Lock with a  93' lift-WOW!
 It delivers you into Wilson Lake and its beauty...
Typical Lake Wilson house
Rails down to their boathouse

Floating down the river, you see many unique sights.

Collapsed building still attached to bank






Cliffs outside of Huntsville


What is this?  Background for a Stephen King novel?




I wonder what the inside looks like...



Indian artifacts and spirits at the Riverwalk Marina in Decatur, Al
They take their Indian heritage very seriously.


Decatur, Alabama's claim to fame


20,000-45,000 gray bats live here until September when they migrate to cooler caves in the hills north of the river

Carol Wicks and cousin Karen visited Saturday.  We had a lovely visit as we motored from Decatur to Guntersville, AL (pronounced Gunnersville).  Carol brought a yummy lunch and Karen brought her carrot cake which has given her numerous marriage proposals (I think Pete was one!) Sorry, Geri, I think this is better than your recipe which is over the top!  Unfortunately, I forgot to take photos of them-could kick myself!  They'll just have to come back!

In Ditto Landing Marina, Huntsville, AL, we were neighbors with the Nina and Pinta traveling boat replicas that a gazillion kids came to see...most enjoyed it but some were looking for the Gift Shop...some things never change...sorry , kids, no gift shop in the marina!




Pete changing the oil






Bill from Monkey Girl waving goodbye after traveling with us for a week



Right now we're in Goose Pond Colony Marina in Scottsboro, Al, run by the city.  There's a championship golf course, amphitheater, restaurant, bait shop, pool and plenty of space for Buddy to run. The people (other boaters) have been very friendly and we'll have cocktails and dinner with them tonight.
Do they fry up the left over bait for chips?
Public docks at Goose Pond



Right now we're enjoying a gorgeous sunny day of 65 degree weather.  Combine that with being on the water and what could be better than that!  We do miss the New England Fall Foliage so you all enjoy that cause there's nothing prettier than those colors!