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#1
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"Wayne.B" wrote in message He may be thinking of the Tombigbee Waterway which is a combination of rivers and canals which take you from Alabama to the Ohio River. After you get to the Ohio however, there is no alternative to the Mississippi that I'm aware of. If you head upstream on the Ohio from the Tennessee, is it navigable to Pittsburgh? If so, how far beyond Pittsburgh is the Allegheny navigable? That heads up into western NY. JG |
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#2
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On Wed, 19 Nov 2003 00:21:51 -0500, "John Gaquin"
wrote: If you head upstream on the Ohio from the Tennessee, is it navigable to Pittsburgh? If so, how far beyond Pittsburgh is the Allegheny navigable? That heads up into western NY. ========================================= I don't have charts for any of that but I'm reasonably sure that the Ohio is navigable all the way to Pittsburgh and probably part way up the Allegheny, perhaps as far as Oil City, PA. After that it begins to fizzle out and there is a major dam (Kinzua) about 12 miles south of the NY border, definitely a vertical challenge for boats of any draft. :-) The best you could hope for as far as I can tell is canoe portages to the Susquehanna (very shallow in NY), and back down to Chesapeake Bay or maybe Delaware Bay. The route that does work is to go south on the Ohio to the Mississippi, and then north to Chicago and Lake Michigan. This is a fairly popular cruise with trawler folk, and is frequently referred to as "the great loop". |
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