-
Out of town visitors

Friday brought clear skies but also a sharp drop in temperatures back down to more typical late October levels. The tugboat Copper Mountain anchored in the North River with an empty barge. This tug lists St. Louis as its hailing port, and it arrived here from the Gulf of Mexico this week. Another out of town tug, the Genesis Vigilant, passed up the North River heading upstate. Vigilant lists Houston as its home port and it was operating there as recently as early October. These visits may be related to oil product shortages in the northeast bringing cargos here from Gulf Coast refineries.

Copper Mountain, an out-of-town visitor, at anchor off 96th Street Another unfamiliar boat on the River Friday was the large and unusual looking yacht Asteria which made a loop up to the Bridge before docking at North Cove Marina downtown. Asteria was built as a salvage tug in 1970 and converted to an “expedition yacht” about 20 years ago. The vessel is capable of navigating in the Arctic and Antarctic, and was in Greenland as recently as August. The helicopter deck was crowded with shrink wrapped jet skis which are perhaps being dropped off somewhere for winter storage.

The expedition yacht Asteria on the River Friday 
Meanwhile, more familiar boats from DonJon’s dredging crew were at work Friday morning, adding back depth between Piers 98 and 99 ©2024 Daniel Katzive Uncategorized -
Protecting navigation

Two Federal government boats with cranes were on the River Thursday, from different agencies but with similar missions. The Army Corps of Engineers Hayward patrols for obstructions to navigation on or near the surface, including large tree limbs and trunks. The Coast Guard’s Katherine Walker services buoys which mark the navigation channel for large ships moving north and south on the marine highway. At this time of the year, the regular standard buoys are swapped out for smaller winter buoys, less vulnerable to ice flows. The New York Times had a great article on this process back in 2015.

The Katherine Walker with standard buoys on deck, likely heading for winter storage 
The Hayward on patrol for navigation hazards Thursday Meanwhile, at the cruise terminal, the Holland-American line’s Rotterdam spent the night after arriving from Europe Wednesday en route to her winter territory in the Caribbean. By Thursday evening she was on her way, leaving without tugboat assist thanks to her variable pitch propellers.

The Rotterdam leaves Pier 88 on Thursday evening 
Dann Marine’s Discovery Coast headed north with a loaded tanker barge as the sun set behind Weehawken




















































































