Charlotte wanted to stay with us in Chattanooga and cried when told it was not going to happen. |
Salty Paws departed Chattanooga on 10/22 with 700 miles of rivers, canals and locks to cruise before the Gulf of Mexico. We planned some of our stops along the way but events rarely turn out as planned. I witnessed a major tree falling and landing less than a 100 feet from our rental, Bill falling overboard, flooding and swift currents strong enough to keep most boaters at the dock and freezing early morning temperatures as far south as the Gulf. What is a First Mate to do, other than look forward to our three weeks home for Thanksgiving and the wedding of our daughter Caroline and Noah.
This beautiful morning on the Tennessee River included a little morning fog. |
The rainy day going through the lock just before Florence was just the beginning of our weather challenges. |
The winds subsided after 45 minutes or so, and we turned the
car around to see if we could get to Corinth. Soon we discovered that every road from Shiloh was blocked with multiple trees down.
The beautiful fence at the Shiloh entrance did not survive. |
One of the many downed trees around us at Shiloh. |
The next morning we awoke at 4:30 am to bass fishing boats
being launched. Soon we were serenaded by
a loud speaker blaring country music and individual introductions of each boat
participating in a fishing tournament sponsored by Toyota with a $5,000 top
prize . The 234 fishing boats slowly
paraded out of the harbor over 2 ½ hours. Price of admission? The fishermen all had to be owners of a Toyota
truck.
The 60 foot waterfall serenaded us all night. |
The majority of our nights are spent at anchorages or free
docks. Our last night on the beautiful Tennessee
River was at anchor, right in front of a 60-foot waterfall. The next day we entered the Tenn-Tom
Waterway, the largest ever project of the Army Corps of Engineers, which was
completed in the 1980s and connects the Tennessee River with the Gulf of
Mexico, allowing commercial ship traffic to bypass the lower Mississippi.
We began traveling again with other Looper boats to help
expedite passage through the various locks.
After one long day, we anchored at dusk just above a lock that we would
go through before dawn the next morning.
Bill left the bow where he had just set the anchor and was about to
re-enter the cabin when he dropped before my eyes and disappeared into the
murky water. I don’t know who was more
shocked, but I was certainly more frantic.
What do we do now? He just calmly
swam to the stern of the boat and put down the stern ladder to board the boat.
He said that the 65 degree water felt warm compared to the 50 degree air.
Here our friends on Mon Amour are being gently pulled off the sandbar at the entrance to Columbus Marina. |
Later on the Tenn-Tom we stopped at a free dock in Aberdeen
and walked the 2 miles into town to visit this old, now run-down community. Upon our return, we were greeted by Chris and
Dwight on the mast-less sailboat Mon Amour.
Over the next two weeks we became good friends and shared some wonderful
experiences together, including a bad weather day touring Columbus, MS. We visited the childhood home of Tennessee
Williams, a confederate cemetery, a dramatic antebellum mansion, and a most
enjoyable cafĂ© with good ole’ southern cookin’.
I loved the turnip greens, Brunswick stew and cornbread.
Unidentified Confederate Civil War graves in Columbus, MS. |
Waverly Mansion, the antebellum house we toured. |
Here Looper boats are rafted up together at the famous Bobby's Fish Camp, the only stop in 100 miles on the Tenn-Tom Waterway. |
Finally, we made it through the last lock, and our companion
boats went ahead of us as we switched to our small motor, a slow, but great gas
saver. We traveled the last 100 miles
over two days, meeting barge traffic, but little else, as we finally made it to
the Convention Center wall in Mobile, AL.
While I loved my first smell of salt air in months, and thrilled about
finally being off the rivers after nearly 2 months, I was somewhat concerned
about this tie-up location as we were right next to the main shipping
channel. As it turned out, we were fine
putting up with the occasional boat wake and no services, as we loved Mobile,
one of our trip highlights.
The USS Alabama. |
We showered at the YMCA, two blocks away, and ate one meal each day in the fantastic restaurants on Dauphin Street. Tops on our Mobile sightseeing list are the USS Alabama (the ship is as it was during WW II) and the Mobile Carnival Museum to better understand Mardi Gras, which actually started in Mobile, not New Orleans. Neither Bill nor I had any understanding of the number of social societies and their members that spend hundreds of thousands on parade floats, balls, costumes and the annual coronation of a king and queen and their court.
Bill got to play a little basketball at the YMCA. |
Across from us at the Convention Center were two Navy multihulls being built by Austal. We were told that these ships can travel at over 50 knots. |
Just above us on the river was the Mobile Port Authority dock. |
The elaborate robes and dress of one king and queen. |
The morning we left Mobile seemed calm, but as we got out in
the Bay, the waves increased to 3 feet or so on our beam. I was terrified, but
Bill assured me that we were not in danger. It definitely takes some rethinking
to go from calm rivers to sea waves. We need to remember to factor weather and
wave conditions into our planning and wait for a “weather window”. This is much
less important on the rivers. Anyway, the trip was fairly short and we made it
safely to Fairhope on the eastern shore of Mobile Bay. Fairhope was founded by disciples of economist Henry George, who advocated that land be held in common and made available to residents who paid a single tax. Now, Fairhope is a fancy little town with 33
restaurants and many expensive gift and clothing stores. Nice, but not a highlight for us.
Salty Paws at the Fairhope Municipal Pier. |
Sunset at our last November anchorage. |
We left Maine for this? |
We then left Mobile Bay and entered the Gulf Intracoastal
Waterway, on our way to Florida. After a beautiful and quiet night at anchor, where
we were greeted by the first of many dolphins, we went east on the GICW to
Orange Beach. Here we will have our
engines serviced and boat kept while we travel back to Maine. This has been a
great place to hole up as the temps dropped to the 20s Wednesday (11/13)
morning and the wind whipped ferociously. Thank you, shore power and heat!
Now, let's go home for a bit!