Sturgeon Bay Canal

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pcolachap
Posts: 357
Joined: March 16, 2010, 2:03 pm

Re: Sturgeon Bay Canal

Unread post by pcolachap »

With a vessel coming in the somewhat narrow and shallow Sturgeon Bay Canal and then having to line up for two bridges before arriving at the shipyard, the strength and the direction of the wind come into play. You need a certain amount of speed so you don't drift sideways in the canal, but you have to make the turns into the bridges which is better done at a lower speed. With a ship pretty well pumped out to go into the yard, you have a large sail that the wind can catch and push the vessel sideways. Mike
Guest

Re: Sturgeon Bay Canal

Unread post by Guest »

Most likely it was too windy. Or, Maybe they are having thruster problems, or only running on one engine...or some other mechanical problems and want to stay in open water..a portion of the canal is very narrow.
tugboat
Posts: 72
Joined: March 27, 2012, 7:21 pm

Re: Sturgeon Bay Canal

Unread post by tugboat »

Its a very narrow canal for footers.
Darryl

Re: Sturgeon Bay Canal

Unread post by Darryl »

Maybe the Burns Harbor was having a mechanical issue that necessitated going the long way?
LakeWatcher
Posts: 41
Joined: December 10, 2014, 9:48 pm

Sturgeon Bay Canal

Unread post by LakeWatcher »

Do captains take issue with the Sturgeon Bay canal? On several occasions now, I've noticed boats go all the way up and around the penninsula, rather than use the canal. Most recently the Burns Harbor going from Chicago to bay ship, went all the way around rather than use the canal. Just curious.
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