• Thursday Feb 8–variety pack

    Thursday Feb 8–variety pack
    Dann Marine’s Discovery Coast with their distinctive striped tower was heading up the North River Thursday pushing a products cargo to the Buckeye terminal in Newburgh
    The Corps of Engineers survey boat Hocking was on the river as well.
    DonJon’s Emily Ann was working the paper recycling route
    Saint Emilion and A87 remained anchored off 96th Street for a second day.

  • Wednesday Feb 7–presidential visit

    Wednesday Feb 7–presidential visit

    Most of the action Wednesday was on East River, as President Biden arrived at the Downtown Manhattan Heliport on Pier 6. He headed from their by car to a campaign event on the Upper West Side.

    A pair of Chinook’s arrived first, carrying the entou
    A decoy landed next, followed by Marine 1.
    The NYPD and Coast Guard had the East River locked down usual
    Meanwhile, on the North River, Saint Emilion and A87 anchored off 89th Street on the way back from Albany.
    The Janice Ann Reinauer/RTC 103 ATB left the Bayway terminal after visiting Providence earlier in the week and were pushing for Albany with cargo.
    Catherine C Miller had a crane on a barge doing some work at the FDNY’s Pier 53 Marine 1 base
    Work boat Janice Ann was also involved.
    Marine 1’s 29’ alpha boat remained in its usual parking spot, but the big Three Forty Three boat spent the day at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, returning home at sundown.

    ©2024 Daniel Katzive
  • Tuesday Feb 6–morning rush

    Tuesday Feb 6–morning rush

    The North River got busy after sunrise Tuesday morning, with a cruise ship arriving and a fuel barge getting delivered at Pier 88 while tanker barges moved through.

    Kristy Ann brought a light RTC 80 up from the Kills and anchored off the sewage plant.
    Later, the larger Janice Ann/RTC 103 ATB returned from Providence and came up the North River on a slow bell, getting as far as Pier 66 and Hoboken before turning and heading for the Bayway terminal.
    Evelyn Cutler and the Edwin A. Poling barge, seen returning light from Albany on Monday, reloaded at a terminal in Carteret overnight and were heading north to Albany again by sunrise.
    Patrice McAllister started her second day anchored off 96th Street with RCM 262 but…
    By early afternoon Patrice was set up for towing astern and was heading for the Narrows and Philadelphia.
    Norwegian Getaway made an early arrival at Pier 88
    Shadowed by Fort Schuyler with a bunkering barge
    After refueling and boarding new passengers they were on their way back to the Caribbean by sunset.
    CMT’s new tow boat Erin Elizabeth was heading back to base with a single hopper barge.
    The FDNY’s marine battalion chief boat and Marine 1’s alpha boat were on the river in the afternoon.
    A cormorant and herring gull were not on speaking terms on the kayak dock at pier 96,

  • Monday Feb 5–stop and go

    Kimberly Poling killed some time on the North River off West New York with the Noelle Cutler barge, stopping before sunrise on the way back from Albany before heading for the Newark Shell terminal by 0900.
    Colleagues on Evelyn Cutler with Poling-Cutler’s other medium-sized tanker barge the Edwin A. Poling also returned from Albany but did not stop, heading straight through in the afternoon to head for the Arthur Kill.
    Dace Reinauer made a quick turn after Sunday afternoon’s run up to Newburgh and passed down the North River to anchor in the Upper Bay with RTC 83.
    The upper wheelhouse of Patrice McAllister was just visible poking out above the RCM 262 barge after they came up from Bayonne just before midnight and anchored off 96th Street where they remained through sundown.

    ©2024 Daniel Katzive
  • Sunday Feb 4–pushing and pulling

    Sunday Feb 4–pushing and pulling
    On Sunday morning, Vane’s Potomac arrived on the North River from the Sprague Port Morris terminal in the South Bronx with Double Skin 51 and anchored off 72nd Street.
    Later, the tug dropped alongside the barge and set up for towing astern.
    After securing the tow line…
    The pair then headed for the Narrows and proceeded south to Philadelphia, passing Sandy Hook by sundown.
    Old Dace Reinauer and RTC 83 were heading for Newburgh, just a day after returning from Albany.
    The bulk ship CMA Jordaens headed up the North River for Coeymans after seemingly partially unloading at Atlantic Salt in Staten Island and likely carrying salt from the northern deserts of Chile.
    Maddie K had two hoppers heading north after shuttling between the Bay Ridge flats and Newtown Creek over the previous 24 hours.

  • Saturday Feb 3–new or unusual

    Saturday Feb 3–new or unusual

    Saturday brought some new or less frequently seen travelers to the North River.

    Dann Marine’s Zeus has not previously been seen on NRN, even though the 50-year old tug has been back in New York Harbor for a couple of years after previously working several years in the Great Lakes according to the Tugster blog. Zeus was heading for New Hamburg NY with Vane’s Double Skin 40 barge. The barge is a more regular visitor, most recently pushed by Stephanie Dann, who is currently in Philadelphia, and in the past we have seen it with Discovery Coast and Vane’s Cape Fear.
    Dann’s East Coast, which works sugar, was also on the river Saturday, running light to rejoin a sugar barge in Yonkers after visiting a boat yard on Mariner’s Harbor.
    The Reinauer Twins/RTC 104 ATB has not been seen on NRN in about a year. With over 500’ of combined length this is one of the larger ATBs in the Reinauer fleet. On Saturday they were pushing for Albany.
    North River regulars Saint Emilion and barge A87 returned from Albany and headed for the Shell terminal in Newark.
    The venerable Dace Reinauer with RTC 83 came through at civil twilight, returning from Albany
    With temperatures warming, Coast Guard icebreaker Sturgeon Bay returned to Bayonne base Friday evening after deploying up north during the cold snap.
    The American black duck was back on the North River Saturday morning, along with a mate.

  • Thursday Feb 1–new and not new

    Thursday Feb 1–new and not new

    Thursday brought limited traffic but observations included a very familiar vessel and one not seen before.

    Saint Emilion was heading for Albany Thursday morning with barge A87. The pair are North River regulars. The Saint wears unmarked livery but according to Tugboatinformation.com is owned by Apex Oil and operated by Poling-Cutler whose green and white tugs are familiar on the river. The A87 barge always rides high even when carrying cargo for some reason.
    Seen for the first time by NRN was the newest towboat in the Carver Marine Towing fleet, Erin Elizabeth, heading for the Bay Ridge flats with hoppers loaded with large rocks and crushed stone.

  • Wednesday January 31–fueling the north

    Wednesday January 31–fueling the north

    Tanker barges headed north loaded with fuel Wednesday as temperatures continued to hover above freezing on the final day of January. A bulk ship headed for sea after unloading cement upstate.

    Dace Reinauer, vintage 1968 and the dean of the fleet, headed for Albany with RTC 83 loaded with fuel.
    Poling Cutler’s Kimberly Poling had the Edwin A. Poling barge on a similar mission
    Colleagues on Evelyn Cutler with the Eva Leigh Cutler barge were a few hours behind, passing through just at sunset and moving slowly against the increasing ebb.
    Susan Rose and RCM 252 were also loaded and Albany-bound
    Bulk ship SSI Magnificent was riding high and heading for sea after discharging a cargo of Turkish cement at the depot in Cementon, NY.
    A ring-billed gull presided over A Dock in the shuttered 79th Street Boat Basin Marina.

  • Sunday Jan 28–rain, sugar and cement

    A short window for observation and steady rain makes for a short post Sunday. The morning saw a cargo of foreign sugar arriving for the Yonkers refinery, while a light cement barge headed back to Ravenna.

    Balsa 87 headed for Yonkers with a load of sugar from Dominican Republic.
    Coral Coast had a light cement transporter barge heading back to Ravenna after unloading at the Flushing Bay terminal
    After 36 hours anchored off 79th Street, Vane’s Potomac headed for Bayonne with the loaded looking Double Skin 9 barge Sunday afternoon.

  • Saturday Jan 27—A gap in the weather

    Saturday Jan 27—A gap in the weather

    Saturday brought typical traffic to the north river and moderate temperatures with a break in the precipitation, bringing some paddle boarders out.

    It was still wet Friday afternoon as the Ruth M. Reinauer ATB returned from up north.
    Boston Marine’s Pinuccia brought New York 30 loaded with cargo through heading for Newburgh.
    Vane’s Potomac brought a loaded looking Double Skin 9 barge up the North River Friday evening and spent the next day anchored off 79th Street.
    The bulker Cosco Taihangshan came through Thursday evening, passing J24s moored of Pier 66 and heading for Albany from the Mediterranean. The spent Friday and Saturday anchored off Hyde Park.
    Dann’s Topaz Coast headed for sea, returning to Florida with the Montvale sugar barge on the wire after unloading in Yonkers.
    The B. Franklin Reinauer/ RTC 81 ATB passed the Little Island park heading for Albany.
    DonJon’s Thomas D. Witte brought a DSNY waste paper scow out of Pier 99, heading for Staten Island.
    Vane’s Fells Point had a refueling barge alongside Norwegian Getaway as passengers waited for transportation.
    Getaway headed south a few hours later.
    A Coast Guard 45’ response boat made a patrol up the river to the bridge from the Staten Island base.
    An Atlantic City based MH-65 Coast Guard chopper also made a run up the river.
    Warmer air temperatures brought paddle boarders out.
    An American black duck mingled with the mallards off Riverside Park South.