• Back from the shop and atypical moves

    Back from the shop and atypical moves

    Saint Emilion was anchored in the North River Saturday. Saint Emilion is a regular on the New York Harbor to Albany route, but has been absent for several months, a period coinciding with her being hauled out for maintenance at a Bayonne boat yard (as well-documented in August by the Tugster blog). Otherwise, Saturday was notable in that tug and barge activity was somewhat atypical in a couple of instances, which it is tempting to attribute to the significant stresses now being experienced in the diesel market right now, though perhaps it is just a product of normal random variation.

    Saint Emilion back at home on the North River Saturday

    Vane Brothers Patuxent came south with a loaded looking barge after anchoring Friday north of the Bridge. Anchoring with loaded barges is somewhat unusual, as was Patuxent’s subsequent route. The tug and barge headed south out of the harbor and were signaling Baltimore as their destination. Its not typical for oil products loaded in New York to move south.

    Patuxent heading for Baltimore after anchoring overnight on the River

    Meanwhile, the visitor from the Gulf who anchored here Friday, Copper Mountain, left the River and headed for the Cadell repair dock on the North Shore of Staten Island. Another tug arrived though, with the Beatrice (the former Rhea Bouchard), anchoring off 72nd Street. Beatrice has been recently working in Philadelphia and has only recently reentred service under Centerline’s flag after the dissolution of the Bouchard fleet according to tugboatinformation.com.

    Centerline’s Beatrice anchored off 72nd Street

    Reinauer ATBs were on more typical missions Saturday, with the Haggerty Girls and the venerable Dace Reinauer, born the same year as me, bringing light barges south. But a smaller Reinauer boat, Jason Reinauer was bringing a loaded barge north on the hip as the sun set, which is also atypical in that Jason is not one of the big Reinauer ATBs we normally see on this route.

    Haggerty Girls heading south
    And the older Dace Reinauer on a similar route
    Jason Reinauer with a barge on the hip heading north at sunset
    DonJon tugs were swapping loaded for light mud scows as dredging continues south of Pier 99
    A bunkering tug departed after visiting Norwegian Joy at the cruise terminal
    Joy continues to work the Bermuda route in October, before heading for the West Coast for the winter next month. She left Saturday afternoon, with the DonJon dredge in the foreground
    A Coast Guard Dolphin chopper was on patrol at just a few hundred feet above the River and at eye level with the top off the cliffs

  • Out of town visitors

    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
  • Protecting navigation

    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

  • Burning off

    Burning off

    The thick layer of haze that sat over New York from Sunday through Tuesday was finally burning off Wednesday afternoon. Temperatures were unseasonably warm, but with the sun setting before 6pm now for the rest of the winter, opportunities for photography are somewhat reduced. Tanker traffic remains heavy on the River, and the DonJon dredgers were back, this time working by the DSNY Pier 99 facility. Meanwhile, the crane that had been working at Pier 96 appears to have finished its business and made an early Wednesday departure. The Disney Magic was back at Pier 90, and Holland-American’s Rotterdam, its first time here in a while. Usually the H-A boats dock in Brooklyn, but Rotterdam was on a transit cruise, arriving in NYC from Europe on its way to take up its winter duties in the Caribbean.

    The dredgers working in the fog Tuesday morning at Pier 99
    And maneuvering nearby as the fog lifted Wednesday
    Rotterdam arriving with sunrise Wednesday, pulling in south of Disney Magic
    Centerline tugs follow with a bunkering barge
    Which leaves lighter later in the morning
    Two Miller tugs removed the crane from Pier 96 just at sunrise Wednesday
    Dean Reinauer headed north with a loaded barge
    And Kristy Ann came south with an empty
    Pinuccia also had a loaded barge going north
    Buchanan12 was heading back for more crushed dolomite

  • Send in the clouds

    Send in the clouds

    The string of perfect fall days came to an end on Sunday, with periodic rain and fog rolling in and lingering through Monday. The Dutch and Danish NATO frigates that had been sitting at Pier 88 headed back to sea Monday morning, perhaps to rejoin the brand new U.S. carrier Gerald Ford off Virginia Beach for more drills, or maybe to head back to Europe. In any case, the cruise terminal was empty Monday for the first time in some days. Tanker and cement barge traffic remained heavy, and a bulker arrived with a shipment of Brazilian sugar heading for Yonkers.

    HNMLS de Zeven Provincien was also on the way out
    Dean Reinauer killed some time Sunday, stemming the flood with a loaded barge off 72nd Street before heading north for Newburgh
    The Haggerty Girls and Janice Ann Reinauer anchored in the Monday fog south of the (invisible) bridge after returning from Albany. Janice Ann was on the move again soon to IMTT Bayonne for more cargo, but Haggerty Girls stayed put into the evening.
    Janice Ann heading for Bayonne
    A Haugland Group tug Miss Madeline brought a stone cargo down from the company’s Tomkins Cove port on Sunday
    Dann Marine’s Discovery Coast brought a light tanker barge back from Poughkeepsie Sunday
    Kirby’s Skip Jack was on a similar run from Albany
    Centerline had a bunkering barge leaving the cruise terminal Sunday
    American Petroleum’s Stephen B cut the Monday fog with a light barge coming back from Rensselaer heading for a Tottenville boat yard
    Coral Coast headed back to the Lafarge Ravenna plant with a light cement barge after visiting Lafarge’s Flushing and Brooklyn docks
    A crane was in position to assist repairs at the Hudson River Park’s kayak and canoe dock at the Pier 96 Boathouse

  • Crisp and cool

    Crisp and cool

    Autumn colors and crisp conditions have continued into the weekend, though some rain is expected Sunday. Loaded tankers were heading north, probably mainly carrying heating oil, empty tankers, stone hoppers, and loaded cement barges came south, and leaf tours were also heading north.

    The largest of the Hudson tour boats, the American Constitution, has finished its last Hudson cruise of the season and was heading for Baltimore to cruise the Chesapeake into November
    The Adirondack tacked into a southerly wind on Friday, heading back to its Chelsea Piers base
    NY Waterway had a full house for its Saturday leaf tour run up to Haverstraw Bay
    Vane Brothers Charleston had a cargo heading for the Buckeye terminal north of Newburgh
    Janice Ann Reinauer also was heading for Newburgh, but to the Global Terminal there
    Kimberly Poling was coming the other way with a light barge
    Sapphire Coast headed north light Friday
    And came back the other way with a loaded cement barge Saturday, heading for Lafarge’s Bayonne terminal
    Buchanan12 had heavily loaded hoppers on its daily dolomite run Friday
    A pair of Blackhawks from Lakehurst airbase in New Jersey made a loop up the River
    A Coast Guard Dolphin chopper patrolled on Friday
    Disney Magic continues to work the Bermuda route, and refueled with an unattended barge on Friday at Pier 90
    The Ocean Insignia was next door at Pier 88, refueling with help from Cape Fear ahead of a cruise to New England and Montreal

  • NATO in New York

    NATO in New York

    October continues to provide stunning clear cool days as autumnal colors push south. A trio of NATO frigates arrived in New York Thursday, two Dutch and one Danish, and took up residence on the south side of Pier 88 following participation in NATO exercises. Commercial traffic has remained rather light.

    Dutch frigate arriving at Pier 88 Thursday morning
    The trio of NATO frigates tied up on the south side of the passenger terminal
    A massive Navy E-6B Mercury, a command and control plane that communicates with ballistic missile submarines, made a run up the Hudson Thursday afternoon as part of a big loop over the northeast
    US Coast Guard small harbor tug Wire was heading north up the river Thursday
    Dace Reinauer headed south on Wednesday with an empty barge
    Janice Ann Reinauer…
    …and Haggerty Girls were both anchored off 125th Street Wednesday afternoon. Janice Ann headed to Bayway for new cargo Thursday, but the Girls remained at anchor.
    Asphalt Sailor headed for sea Tuesday after delivering a cargo of asphalt from Curaçao to Albany, passing Buchanan12 on two whistles.
    A fisherman caught a 27” stripped bass north of the North River plant Wednesday.

  • Glorious weekend

    Glorious weekend

    Glorious fall conditions prevailed through the weekend with temperatures in the 60s and light winds. The leaf color line has finally moved down to New York City, with trees along the river looking fiery. River traffic was light, though there were many recreational boats heading north to see the colors.

    A Dann Marine tug towed a light dry bulk barge back to Florida after unloading sugar at the Yonkers Domino refinery.
    A loaded Curtis-Poling barge headed north with a cargo, passing autumn colors on the Weehawken shoreline.
    Colleagues brought a light barge south
    Don Jon Marine muscled a loaded paper recycling scow out of the shed on Pier 99
    The DEP’s Hunts Point was trailed by a flock of seagulls as her screws brought up the menhaden
    Fall colors were increasingly evident in the woods surrounding the Englewood Cliffs monestary
    A Marine attack helicopter flew up the Hudson

  • Friday catchup

    Friday catchup

    Lovely fall weather was interrupted by a stormy Thursday, but conditions improved dramatically again at the end of the week. River traffic seemed light, and a couple of tugs anchored in the River Thursday after a period of empty anchorages. Cruise terminal activity was sporadic, and the dredgers appear to have moved on, with the Delaware Bay tied up at a dock in Newark now.

    Norwegian Joy was at Pier 88 on Wednesday, and received bunkering service from Centerline’s Lightning
    The Viking Octantis got similar assistance from the Vanes Brothers’ Cape Fear on Thursday before heading for Puerto Rico
    The tugboat Pegasus has been on the River making runs up to the sugar plant in Yonkers for unknown reasons
    The Chandra B, a small bunkering tanker, services the Circle Line boats
    Reinauer’s Josephine spent Thursday and Friday at anchor off 86th Street
    Pocamoke was anchored closer to the bridge after a return from Philadelphia Thursday evening, but then headed for the Upper Bay Friday afternoon
    FDNY’s Three Forty Three boat had business on the Upper West Side Wednesday afternoon
    The bitumen tanker Asphalt Sailor was likely carrying asphalt enroute to Albany from Curaçao
    Sarah Dann, released from dredging duty, brought a scow down from the Sims Metal dock in Albany to Sims Bayonne. Sarah seems to be working for DonJon Marine, which makes Sims runs and ran the dredging operations.
    Another DonJon boat brought empty hoppers north
    DonJon also services the DSNY Pier 99 waste paper transfer station, with Thomas D Witte positioning a scow there Friday
    Buchanan12 remained busy as usual, passing Josephine Friday evening

  • Lovely October

    Splendid weather has persisted as we move deeper into October and leave the hurricanes that dominated the beginning of the month behind. Leaves are reportedly turning up north, but things still look pretty green down here. Limited time for observation, shorter days, and seemingly lighter commercial traffic means blog posts have become shorter and less frequent.

    Disney Magic was back in town Monday, seen here heading back out for a run up to Nova Scotia with help from Moran Towing
    Silver Whisper arrived from Quebec City via Nova Scotia, Bar Harbor and Newport RI.
    Vendors waited at a security checkpoint before servicing the ship
    Vane Brothers Fells Point provided bunkering service
    Vane Brothers Fort Schuyler returned Monday from a delivery of probably heating oil to a depot in Poughkeepsie
    Another Vane Brothers boat, the Charleston, brought a cargo north on Tuesday
    Miss Madeline, a Haugland Group tug not seen before, pushed hoppers north, probably heading for the company’s Tomkins Cove facility