Chickens!going around the fall, not over them
Tell that to the railroad companies. "The heaviest trains in the world carry bulk traffic such as iron ore and coal. Loads can be 130 tonnes per wagon and tens of thousands of tonnes per train." https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rail_freight_transportPretty sure a track would have problems with a 100,000ton ore freighter.
No. Of course, it's on my list. My wife has talked about taking Dragonfly through the canals to the GoM. It took her parents 50 years of marriage before they could go.Have you been to Niagara Falls and the Niagara River?
Keel? What keel? We don’t need no steeenking keel!Will, my wife swears sailing works just fine til we get off the track. She says that is what the keel is really for, to keep the boat in the track!
Haha! Yes, we tri-hull people like to run with the fast pack!Keel? What keel? We don’t need no steeenking keel!
Edit: PS - it’s the hard things that keep us in the track. See that reef in the upper left of my photo? Invisible at mid tide.
Yes they do. Like “curb feelers” I know when it’s too shallow. 6.5’ draft centerboard down all the way. 3.5’ minimum draft. Centerboard and rudder are both buoyant and swing aft so they pop up easily and quickly when needed. They are cleated to a spring-release mechanism. The prop and shaft are protected by a skeg so the boat can dry out on mud or sand without damage, but point loads like debris or rocks are still a concern.snip
Do the board and rudder kick up on that dragon fly?
I think it is a foot bridge for lock personnel to get from side to side.What is the crane arm that goes down and back up before they drop in the lock?
Not Ever?so that a ship can never ever run into the lock doors.
What if a volume of water roughly 75 feet x 25 feet x 1000 feet was suddenly let loose?Not Ever?
No Never...
But what if?