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Pierre Lanuéjols June 1st 10 06:15 PM

Walkway over the Hudson
 
1 Attachment(s)





Bouler June 1st 10 06:38 PM

Walkway over the Hudson
 

"Pierre Lanuéjols" schreef in bericht
...

Nice picture, thanks.
BTW I can see your shadow;-))
--
Greetings
Bouler (The Netherlands)



MWB[_2_] June 1st 10 11:25 PM

Walkway over the Hudson
 
Nice shot.

Please post more.


Mark




joevan[_3_] June 2nd 10 01:18 AM

Walkway over the Hudson
 
On Tue, 1 Jun 2010 13:15:28 -0400, "Pierre Lanuéjols"
wrote:

Wonderful photo. Do you have more that you have taken?
Post some others.

Pierre Lanuéjols June 2nd 10 02:45 PM

Walkway over the Hudson
 

"joevan" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 1 Jun 2010 13:15:28 -0400, "Pierre Lanuéjols"
wrote:

Wonderful photo. Do you have more that you have taken?
Post some others.


Thank you, as soon as I have the opportunity I'll do that!



Andre Blanchard June 3rd 10 04:34 AM

Walkway over the Hudson
 
A very colorful tug and barge. What tug is that?
"Pierre Lanuéjols" wrote in message
...






Vlad June 3rd 10 04:20 PM

Walkway over the Hudson
 
On Tue, 1 Jun 2010 12:15:28 -0500, Pierre Lanuéjols wrote
(in article ):




I've never seen an arrangement like that. Very interesting!

-Vlad

--
Vlad & Genny Kedrovsky
Edina, MN, USA
vjkedrovsky at gmail dot com
Some of Vlad's train & car pix can be seen at:
http://picasaweb.google.com/vjkedrovsky


Pierre Lanuéjols June 3rd 10 05:38 PM

Walkway over the Hudson
 

"Vlad" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 1 Jun 2010 12:15:28 -0500, Pierre Lanuéjols wrote
(in article ):




I've never seen an arrangement like that. Very interesting!

-Vlad

--
Vlad & Genny Kedrovsky
Edina, MN, USA
vjkedrovsky at gmail dot com
Some of Vlad's train & car pix can be seen at:
http://picasaweb.google.com/vjkedrovsky


Such an arrangement is very common on the Hudson River for moving large
barges.

The Hudson River while it is in fact over a long distance a tidal estuary
does not have large waves, this must facilitate this arrangement and make
it quite safe.

I assume that pushing a large barge from the rear from the rear rather than
pulling it from the front is much more energy efficient.

Saving energy must be an important consideration for moving such large loads
as I have noted that the big barges are only on the move when the tides are
going with them.

Outside of New York Bay I have seen very few real tugs on the Hudson.

In fact I know of only one which is based significantly upstream of
New York Bay (which does not mean that there are not many more).

The pushing arrangement appears to be used elsewhere with a
somewhat different configuration.

http://tugster.wordpress.com/2008/05/

Also I am not a maritime specialist, just a landlubber who happens
to be interested in ships.

I assume that among the readers of this NG there must be people
infinitely more knowledgeable and qualified than I am and who
might be able to tell us more.




Pierre Lanuéjols June 3rd 10 05:48 PM

Walkway over the Hudson
 

"Andre Blanchard" wrote in message
...
A very colorful tug and barge. What tug is that?
"Pierre Lanuéjols" wrote in message
...



I do not know. :-)

Except for the "tower" it looks just like a normal tug.
But here it's pushing rather than pulling...
I assume that it can do both.

This type of "tug" is very common on the Hudson River
for moving large barges (from New York Bay to Albany
and vicinity).

I must admit that the one on the picture did look quite
spiffy and neat with its obviously new paint job. :-)





Andre Blanchard June 3rd 10 06:02 PM

Walkway over the Hudson
 
I know that Tug/barge configurations like this are common in the Great
Lakes. When I am near Lake Ontario they are often seen.

"Pierre Lanuéjols" wrote in message
...







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