Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Friday, July 16, 2010
NEWS : OIL SPILL St. Lawrence Seaway closed
Freighter runs over its own anchor in low water.
Tue Jul 13, 5:59 PM
By The Canadian Press
MONTREAL - A shipping accident caused up to 200 tonnes of bunker oil to gush into the St. Lawrence Seaway and had cleanup crews working Tuesday to contain the mess.
The St. Lawrence Seaway remains closed because of the freighter that ran aground Monday night, and ships are queuing up for what could be a wait of a few weeks before they continue their journey.
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St. Lawrence Seaway fuel spill contained
Lock closed as cleanup goes on
Tue Jul 13, 5:59 PM
By The Canadian Press
MONTREAL - A shipping accident caused up to 200 tonnes of bunker oil to gush into the St. Lawrence Seaway and had cleanup crews working Tuesday to contain the mess.
Oil spill cleanup halts ships, may take weeks
The St. Lawrence Seaway remains closed because of the freighter that ran aground Monday night, and ships are queuing up for what could be a wait of a few weeks before they continue their journey.
.
.
.
St. Lawrence Seaway fuel spill contained
Lock closed as cleanup goes on
Photos
After 15 minutes of hammering. Needs two more sessions I estimate.
The before picture of the cement drain pipe.
Engine Block
This is the three pipes and round object I pulled out of the river.
Less than five minutes later after taking this photo today a garbage crew came and picked it up.
This gives me some hope for the engine block. With a winch and etc to get it to the road the city may be responsible for the garbage disposal.
update making progress on the cement pipe:
Thursday, July 15, 2010
Today I pulled an engine block out of the river.
Someone else had started the removal.
I think I saw him on the TV news several years ago ( ten years?).
Single handedly trying to clean up the "back" river. I wonder if I would have joined him in his efforts at that time?
I think I was making rock waterfalls at the time, because I seem to remember how close he was bringing garbage to shore, but not finishing the last few feet, and I was upset that I could have helped or something anyways.
The last few feet out of the river are upwards, twenty feet of a steep slope of random cement block.
I don't know if he did it with scuba tanks or what, but he left a chain on the engine block for it to be handled-manipulated.
I only moved it about 20 feet out of the river, onto the old rusting and rotting sewage outlet from the 1940's. But people will see it now, its no longer hidden. I don't know if this is good or bad. People will hate the view? or people will demand it be removed? Or people will ignore it?
It still needs a winch to pull it up over the cement blocks to the road.
I also pulled out three metal poles and placed them next to the street to be picked up.
Also some kind of large metal hub similar to a wheel rim of a car.
I forgot to take photo's. I will tomorrow.
NATURE is growing everywhere, hiding the garbage that is around and daily deposited by children and the inconsiderate adult.
I think I got a few compliments for cleaning from people I pass, but I really haven't done too much lately. I had hurt my foot and recently got a bad sunburn and was out of it.
When fall comes and the garbage is revealed I will get the opposite of poor job I expect, oh well.
Picking up garbage is like mowing the grass, the grass is always growing and people are always throwing garbage on the ground.
You can't stop the grass anymore than you can stop people from their thoughtlessness.
Someone else had started the removal.
I think I saw him on the TV news several years ago ( ten years?).
Single handedly trying to clean up the "back" river. I wonder if I would have joined him in his efforts at that time?
I think I was making rock waterfalls at the time, because I seem to remember how close he was bringing garbage to shore, but not finishing the last few feet, and I was upset that I could have helped or something anyways.
The last few feet out of the river are upwards, twenty feet of a steep slope of random cement block.
I don't know if he did it with scuba tanks or what, but he left a chain on the engine block for it to be handled-manipulated.
I only moved it about 20 feet out of the river, onto the old rusting and rotting sewage outlet from the 1940's. But people will see it now, its no longer hidden. I don't know if this is good or bad. People will hate the view? or people will demand it be removed? Or people will ignore it?
It still needs a winch to pull it up over the cement blocks to the road.
I also pulled out three metal poles and placed them next to the street to be picked up.
Also some kind of large metal hub similar to a wheel rim of a car.
I forgot to take photo's. I will tomorrow.
NATURE is growing everywhere, hiding the garbage that is around and daily deposited by children and the inconsiderate adult.
I think I got a few compliments for cleaning from people I pass, but I really haven't done too much lately. I had hurt my foot and recently got a bad sunburn and was out of it.
When fall comes and the garbage is revealed I will get the opposite of poor job I expect, oh well.
Picking up garbage is like mowing the grass, the grass is always growing and people are always throwing garbage on the ground.
You can't stop the grass anymore than you can stop people from their thoughtlessness.
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