HUDSON RIVER SOJOURN: Through Albany and then 13 locks
CHAMPLAIN CANAL - We left Albany yesterday morning. Two days at Albany Yacht Club. $25 bucks per night. Not bad considering it included showers, water, access to washer and dryer.
Working. Buying groceries. Gassing up and watering. Dockmaster Ron all business until we talked about snowmobiling. He lives an hour away, inside the bounds of Adirondack State Park, more than 3,500 square miles of forests and mountains. Delaware would fit comfortably inside the park.
“I have to live in the woods,” he said. He snowmobiles in the winter. New York State maintains hundreds of miles of snowmobile trails. When the countless lakes freeze, the woodsy trails connect the open expanses of wide-open snow covered ice. “That’s when we can open up the snowmobiles,” Ron said. “Mine will do 100 piles per hour. My wife’s, 80. We go out for days. That’s what we love to do.”
He and his wife own a bar there. He works at the marina three days a week and helps his wife run the business the rest of the time. When hunting season comes, they maintain a scale where deer hunters weigh their kills, each vying for heaviest honors. Celebrating the hunts is good for the bar business.
We toured the impressive downtown capital of New York.
In the center, on 73 acres, the remarkable Gov. Nelson Rockefeller Empire State Plaza. Dedicated in 1973, the plaza faces the long south-facing facade of the New York State capitol building, again with strong Dutch- influence architecture.
New York’s tallest building outside of Manhattan - something like 78 stories - flanks one side of the plaza. Four shorter identical structures, in the same severe modernist style of the big one - line the west side. At the end opposite the capitol building, the contemporary New York State Museum building houses archives and other administrative offices. The anomaly in it all is an entertainment venue called The Egg. It hosts concerts and other events. Everything else in the plaza, studded with the contemporary art that Nelson Rockefeller loved, is symmetrical, right angles, square. The Egg is none of those.
The museum is astounding in its breadth and execution. It covers the state’s history from millions of years ago - think dinosaurs, woolly mammoths and mastodon skeletons - up to New York City’s 911 tragedy and all eras in between.
A few miles above Albany, at Troy, we left the tidal Hudson and entered a stretch of 13 locks that we passed through yesterday and continue through today. They will eventually lift us a few hundred feet and open our bow to Lake Champlain.
After two weeks since we left Lewes on Aug. 1 we’ve put 360 miles of water behind us. We’re averaging about eight miles per hour and burning about three gallons of fuel per hour. We go to sleep when the sun sets and rise when it rises.
We awoke today to 55 degrees, clear and low humidity. Summertime New England weather. Ate a breakfast of French-pressed decaf vanilla coffee we bought in New York City at Zabar’s, granola, string cheese, the end of a stale baguette, and fresh cherries. Then we cast off and set out compass north for Champlain. Should make the lake tomorrow.
Here are a few more photographs along the way that I found interesting.
Thanks for reading.
![Looking northward across the plaza, the tallest building right, the stack of other shorter structures paying homage, to the left.](/sites/capegazette/files/2019/08/field/image/IMG_1563.jpg)
![The New York State Museum is free, but they're happy to take donations. Inside are great exhibits with three-dimensional interpretation. This one is part of the display about the state’s historic timbering industry. Against a photo backdrop from the day, it shows figures of men working to break up a log jam in a river after the winer’s ice has thawed and it’s time to get the cold month’s work downriver to the saw mills. This work was the most dangerous in the timbering industry and paid the highest wages.](/sites/capegazette/files/2019/08/field/image/IMG_1567 2.jpg)
![This display shows a 19th century Adirondack fishing camp, one man cleaning trout for the evening’s dinner, the other man sitting on a log reading a book, maybe one of Washington Irving’s histories of the Hudson River Valley. That would be me.](/sites/capegazette/files/2019/08/field/image/IMG_1568.jpg)
![The New York City section of the museum warrants a day unto itself. It shows the historic development of the city from its earliest days with several tableaus peopled with life-size figures to bring history to life. The area dedicated to 911 - including this burned-out firetruck destroyed in its response - is nothing less than chilling in the realism and horror it conveys.](/sites/capegazette/files/2019/08/field/image/IMG_1570.jpg)
![Nellie Peach sat comfortably in her mid-city setting. The Hudson, as always, a river of many faces including industrial, commercial, urban, rural, recreational, pastoral - dynamic.](/sites/capegazette/files/2019/08/field/image/IMG_1555.jpg)
![We had a green light to enter one of the early locks in the 13 we will be passing through. Once inside, the gates closed behind us, pumps began filling the lock with water, we held on to ropes and ladders on our starboard side as the water rose, and the engineering marvel lifted Nellie 20 feet to get us above the dam visible here to the left. Once the lock filled, the northerly gates opened and out we went to the next section of the canal.](/sites/capegazette/files/2019/08/field/image/IMG_4465.jpg)
![Becky manned the forward lock rope while keeping me straight with the stern rope. Here, the lock is full and we’re about to exit to the north.](/sites/capegazette/files/2019/08/field/image/IMG_4479.jpg)
![So why the big grin on the lock master’s face? I asked him if I could take his photograph. “Sure,” he said. His assistant across the lock hollered out: “There’s another picture just like that hanging on the wall at the post office.” His joke harkened back to the day when the government posted pictures of criminals on post office bulletin boards across the country.](/sites/capegazette/files/2019/08/field/image/IMG_4493.jpg)