Google Sightseeing takes you on tour of the world as seen from satellite, using the free Google Earth program, or Google Maps in your web browser. Each weekday your guides James and Alex present new weird and wonderful sights as suggested by readers.

The editors: James & Alex

Blistering Barnacles!

Posted by Alex Turnbull, Friday, 3rd March 2006

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Perhaps the captain of this barge on the Mississippi has had a little too much to drink, as he appears to have crashed into the river bank. Whoops!

Thanks to Sam Phillips.

12 Responses to 'Blistering Barnacles!'

  1. 1. DBerkowitz says:

    Nahhh — even in his most lubricated state Capt. Haddock would never plow into a riverbank - he is far too professional for such shenanigans. Now, if Snowy were at the wheel …

  2. 2. Derek says:

    It’s not as bad as this: http://koti.mbnet.fi/~soldier/towboat.htm (someone posted this in an earlier thread here, so I am NOT taking credit!).

  3. 3. Keith T. says:

    What’s creepy is that this appears to have *just* happened, judging from the visible wake.

  4. 4. kjfitz says:

    This actually pretty common. There was a good article in the New Yorker in the last couple of years written by a guy who spent a week on a tug shoving barges up the Ohio (I think) river and he described this maneuver.

    The navigable portions of the waterways are much narrower than the river in general. They are divided into segments. As a tug enters and leaves each segment he negotiates with other tugs approaching or in that segment as to who will have right of way based on size and direction of travel. If the channel is too narrow for both boats one will nose-in to the bank and hold there while the other passes.

    Hunt up and down these rivers and you’ll find Placemark: other tugs nosed in / Google Earth. In this case I don’t see the ‘other’ boat but usually you’ll see another tug very close either approaching or just past.

  5. 5. Bob E. says:

    You can see the captain there, at the wheel, but he is looking up….his log entry says: “Just spotted something directly overhead, appears to be a lens looking down at us…what the devil?” …. WHAM!

  6. 6. Tim says:

    Gotta disagree with you there, DBerkowitz. Snowy could win the frickin’ America Cup, and he’d be sailing this in it too. It would take the Thompson twins to do that.

  7. 7. Papapenguin says:

    There’s another waiting to beach here:

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

    And here is one that looks as though he is moving out after a passing move:

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

    I’m amazed at how close to the riverbanks a lot of these tugs get.

  8. 8. DBerkowitz says:

    Ya got me there Tim - but what if Snowy spotted a bone on the shore?

  9. 9. Timhogs says:

    Hey, Papapenguin, is it me, or in your second link is there another shot of the same barge just a few hundred meters up the river?

  10. 10. todd says:

    lol good eyes. yeah it looks like the same one

  11. 11. Tom says:

    They also do this in order to re-tension their lines. It’s fairly normal to see them nosed-in.

  12. 12. drew says:

    Barges are also “parked” this way fairly commonly in order to wait for their turn in locks. We see this just outside the locks at Louisville, KY all the time.

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