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Big visitor

Tuesday morning found the big Kirby Sea Hawk / ATC 21 ATB emerging from the fog on the North River opposite Port Imperial. The unit had dropped anchor a bit south of the usual North River anchorage area after returning from Boston during the heavy rains late Monday. With an 8,000 HP tug and a 450-foot 120,000 barrel barge, this is on the large end for ATBs we see on the Hudson.
This unit does not travel to terminals upriver but rather seems to be moving product from New Jersey terminals to Boston lately though we have seen her using the anchorage area during at least one storm in the past.


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Reinauer parking

Monday morning finds a pair of Reinauer ATBs at anchor on the North River having stopped here on the way back from product deliveries in Albany. The Janice Ann / RTC 103 unit, a 4,400 HP tug paired with a 108,000 barrel barge, was off Guttenberg, while sitting at anchor about half a mile north was Josephine / RTC 83, a similarly powered tug paired with a smaller 85,000 barrel barge. After a beautiful weekend, heavy rain and thunderstorms are expected to move in this evening.


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Made in New York

Island Trader, an 800-HP tug owned by Stevens Towing of South Carolina, came down the North River heading for the Upper Bay with a deck barge loaded with a shrink-wrapped piece of heavy equipment. This is likely something manufactured by GE in Schenectady and transferred to a barge at the Port of Albany. From here it will likely be transferred to a ship for export or continue by barge to a port closer to an ultimate destination in the US.


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Getting stone

Norfolk Tug’s George Holland, 18 years old and 3,000 HP, was northbound on the North River with the company’s hopper barge Ellen on Tuesday morning. The tow was en route to the Clinton Point quarry just south of Poughkeepsie where they would likely be loading a stone cargo for delivery back in New York Harbor.

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Remember Hess

Sea Wolf Marine tugs Sea Fox and Sea Lion brought a construction barge down the North River on Sunday from the work site at the location of the old Hess tanks in Edgewater, NJ. The green tanks were a landmark on that stretch of the river for decades but have been gone for over 10 years now.

The site, one of the last remaining brownfield lots along the Gold Coast, needed extensive remediation but is now being redeveloped as luxury housing with park land along the water. The development is also slated to include a ferry landing built on the footings of the oil product terminal’s old loading pier, though it is not clear (to me) whether this will supplement or replace the existing Edgewater ferry terminal a bit further south by the Edgewater Marina.

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Decommissioning

Donjon tugs Douglas J (4,800 HP) and Paul Andrew (1,200 HP) brought the company’s big Chesapeake 1000 crane down the North River on Thursday afternoon, passing Guttenberg on the way back to the harbor after heavy lift work at the old Yonkers sugar refinery. My guess is that work there probably relates to decommissioning the sugar plant which closed at the end of last year after operating in that location for over 100 years and used to take deliveries by ship and barge around 40 times per year.

The city wants to see the property redeveloped for residential and public use and Bisnow reported in April that the 33-acre site has now been listed for sale by the owners, American Sugar Refining. This means one less node on the Hudson River marine highway, and leaves the wallboard plant in Buchanan and fuel terminal in Peekskill as the only working waterfronts on the Westchester shoreline aside from a handful of boatyards for smaller vessels.











