• Thundering Typhoons!

    Thundering typhoons! The bulk ship Captain Haddock came up the North River Monday, Port of Coeymans bound and partially laden with salt after lightering off some cargo in the Upper Bay to Carver Marine barges last month and then killing some time at Ambrose Anchorage. The Captain is no doubt named for Belgian graphic novelist Herge’s mid-20th century sea-fairing adventurer and sidekick to Tintin.

    From the graphic novel Red Sea Sharks by Herge, copyright Casterman 1958

    Archibald Haddock was a stalwart righter-of-wrongs and a competent mariner as long as he stayed away from the booze. Even sober, the irascible captain could unleash a stream of child-friendly profanity at the slightest provocation. Glad I got to see the ship.

    ©2024 Daniel Katzive
  • Cement season

    Cement is moving on the North River this month as construction activity ramps up with the spring thaw. Dann Marine’s Pearl Coast came down from the Amrize cement plant in Ravenna, NY on the first day of April with a loaded cement transporter. Pearl and other Dann tugs make regular runs down the Hudson delivering cement from the plant to terminals around New York Harbor and sometimes up to New England or down the coast. On this trip, Pearl headed for the cement terminal in Bayonne and then continued on to Boston.

    The Amrize plant, formerly Lafarge, is one of three manufacturing facilities operating on the Hudson which uses its own docking facility to access the river (a fourth, Domino Sugar in Yonkers, closed at the end of last year), and the only one which sends out its finished product by water (as opposed to bringing in raw material).

    ©2024 Daniel Katzive
  • Season of the Brant

    The brant are back. Every spring, brant geese spend some time on the North River as they begin their migration back to the Canadian arctic from their winter homes along the Jersey or Long Island shorelines. On Saturday, there were large numbers of these birds, which look like smaller versions of our local Canada geese, hanging out on the North River south of the GW Bridge.

    ©2024 Daniel Katzive
  • Unburdened youth

    The bulk ship Amis Youth (not Aimless Youth), 650 feet in length and Liberia flagged, came down the North River Friday morning heading for sea. Youth was in ballast and drawing less than 30 feet after discharging a cargo at the Port of Coeymans. Bulk ship traffic on the river has been heavy this spring, in part due to high demand for salt to refill municipal stores up north. Most of the salt heading for Coeymans has been coming from Egypt this year, but Amis Youth came here from Chili, which is another supplier of the mineral.

  • On Haverstraw Bay

    Dann Ocean’s Captain Dann ran light up Haverstraw Bay on Saturday morning, having come up from the North River heading for the shipyard in Kingston, probably to collect a barge. After a quick turn, the tug came back downriver, left town and headed for Philly, probably to deliver the barge she probably collected. By then end of the week, the Captain is back in New York Harbor on Newark Bay.

  • Loaded

    The Haggerty Girls/ RTC 107 ATB was anchored in the North River on Saturday with the 107,000 barrel barge looking loaded. We don’t see loaded barges at anchor very often but we do occasionally. The unit has been back and forth between the North River and the Arthur Kill for the rest of the week.

    ©2024 Daniel Katzive
  • Pulp fact

    The cargo ship Timber Navigator, Dutch-flagged and 387 feet long, was Albany-bound on the North River on the last day of March. Arriving from Sweden, she is likely carrying wood pulp headed for northeast paper mills. By Wednesday morning she was approaching her destination having anchored off Hyde Park overnight.

  • In ballast

    The Liberian-flagged 650-foot long bulk ship Aquagemini came down the North River heading for sea on Monday morning. The ship was in ballast and drawing less than 25 feet after discharging a cargo from Egypt at the Port of Coeymans, probably salt. By Tuesday morning she is well offshore and heading southeast.

  • Running light past the cliffs

    Poling & Cutler’s Evelyn Cutler ran light up the North River on Saturday afternoon, passing the Palisades at Englewood Cliffs and heading for the IPT terminal in Rensselaer. Kimberly Poling was there at the same time, and Evelyn perhaps took over her barge as Kimberly subsequently headed for the shipyard in Kingston. As of Monday morning, Evelyn is back in New York Harbor at the Kinder Morgan terminal on the Arthur Kill, with a barge presumably loading new cargo there.

  • Metal and salt

    Carver Marine tug Daisy Mae (9-years old, 3,200 HP) returned to the harbor on Friday morning with a hopper loaded with scrap metal, along with a few light hoppers one of which still had some of what I assume is salt visible along the gunnel. Carver tugs have been ferrying huge amounts of salt upriver this month, most of it lightered off bulk ships from Egypt which anchor in the Upper Bay. Daisy had joined that conveyer belt a few days before, as seen in the last photo, heading northbound at sunset on Wednesday as seen in the fourth photo.

    Daisy Mae heading north with salt on Wednesday