HI54UNI wrote:dbackjon wrote:
Why is that so funny? Trust me, when barge delivery costs go up, you feel it. Corn and soybeans are a major product shipped via barge, as well as rice from the Delta - when the river is too low to use barges, prices go up. Delays reduced, fuel costs reduced, prices go down.
Without our Federal Government supported infrastructure, you'd be paying a lot more for plant-based goods, such as your rice-brewed Bud Light
Serious question - do you know how much barge traffic there is on this piece of the river? I ask because the Corp of Engineers is required to keep Missouri River flows sufficient to have barge traffic to Sioux City but a barge hasn't made the trip all the way to Sioux City in several years. Very few go north of Kansas City. I read somewhere that
annual barge traffic on the Missouri is about the same as two days of traffic on the Mississippi. Just curious if it is actually productive or something similar.
Let me look - but I imagine quite a bit. It is near the mouth of the Ohio, and after the Tennessee and Cumberland Rivers, both which are heavily traveled, empty into the Ohio.
Upstream, at Cincy, there are almost 10K per year (barges) - with the Tenn traffic in there, I would think this lock would see 15K or more per year.
Whenever I would cross that stretch of River going home from Nashville, there was always 5-7 barges in the river.