• Scrap Sunday

    Carver Marine Towing’s Daisy Mae came down the North River on Sunday bringing hoppers loaded with scrap metal and one with some kind of aggregate down from the Port of Coeymans heading for the harbor.

  • Stone run

    Norfolk Tug’s George Holland came up the North River late afternoon Friday, passing the Stevens Institute on Castle Point in Hoboken with a light hopper heading for the Clinton Point quarry near Poughkeepsie. George returned on Sunday with a stone cargo heading for the materials dock at the Brooklyn Navy Yard and then continued out to Port Jefferson on Long Island Sound.

    As of Monday morning, she is on Long Island Sound, returning from Port Jeff and signaling her next destination as back to Clinton Point. The quarry has long been a major supplier of stone for the construction industry in the New York region.

    ©2024 Daniel Katzive
  • Back for more

    The Janice Anne Reinauer/RTC 103 ATB (4,400 HP tug with a 108,000 barrel barge) came down the North River Saturday evening, returning to the harbor after a run up to Albany. By Sunday morning, the unit appears to be loading a new cargo at a terminal in Perth Amboy on the Arthur Kill.

    ©2024 Daniel Katzive
  • Up from the depths

    DonJon’s Delaware Bay dredge prepared to dump a load of mud from the bottom of the North River by Pier 88 into a scow on Thursday. Seasonal dredging at the Manhattan Cruise Terminal is underway to maintain 38 feet of depth at mean low water.

    ©2024 Daniel Katzive
  • On the cement trail

    Dann Marine tug Coral Coast (56-years-old, 3,000 HP) came down the North River just before sunset on Thursday, passing Hoboken’s Stevens Institute and Jersey City with a loaded cement transporter barge from the plant in Ravenna, NY. Coral brought the tow to the distribution terminal on Flushing Bay in Queens, where they remain Friday morning.

  • Thursday morning haze

    Reinauer’s Josephine/RTC 83 ATB, a 4400 HP tug pinned to a 85,000 barrel barge, was Albany-bound on the North River in the Thursday morning haze after loading a New York Habor cargo overnight at Tremley Point on the Arthur Kill.

    ©2024 Daniel Katzive
  • Long may you run

    The Army Corps of Engineers Drift Collection Vessel Driftmaster was on the North River in mid-April, on patrol for hazards to navigation brought down by the spring melt to be cleared with her big crane. Driftmaster was launched in the 1940s making it probably the oldest vessel regularly working in New York Harbor. We don’t see this vessel all too often on the North River and she spends more time around the Upper Bay but she did come upriver again last week.

  • The Season of the Dredge

    Returning to the North River this week finds twice-yearly seasonal dredging operations underway at the Manhattan Cruise Terminal. DonJon Marine crews are scooping up mud to maintain the 38-feet mean low-water depth between the piers in order to accommodate cruise ships and the naval vessels that will visit for then 250th Independence Day celebrations.

    On Tuesday the crews were working on the area north of Pier 90 even though the pier structure itself has been closed due to structural concerns. I believe the berth might still be usable for smaller non-passenger vessels as Canadian navy patrol boats did tie up there last month.

    In the photos, DonJon tugs Mary Alice and the powerful Atlantic Salvor were maneuvering dump scows which Salvor will haul out to the Federal remediation area off Atlantic Highlands, NJ.

  • Comparative bulk

    NOT THE NORTH RIVER: A visit to another inland waterway this weekend found the Liberian flagged bulk ship Ocean Lorry departing New Orleans after loading a cargo at the Cargill terminal, I think probably some kind of grain. Lorry passed under the Crescent City Connection bridge and rounded Algiers Point heading for the Gulf of Mexico and then on to Singapore, her next port of call.

    At 738 feet in length, Ocean Lorry is considerably bigger than the bulk ships we see on the North River, and also lacks the cranes we see on ships that use our local marine highway, instead relying exclusively on shore side equipment for unloading.

    As for the cargo, it has been about 8 years since grain exports last moved through the historic elevator in the Port of Albany and down the North River to overseas markets, with Cargill having concentrated exports via the Gulf and Pacific ports. But the Albany terminal has since been converted to receive imports, and bulk ships from Europe will sometimes bring grain to the mill now located there.

  • The Vision thing

    Genesis Energy’s Vision with the barge GM 6508 left North River anchorage on Monday and headed for the Kills. We saw Genesis units on the river quite a bit last summer, but less often so far this year. Vision left town by the middle the week and headed for the Delaware River where she remains as of Sunday morning, anchored near Philly.