Paul L. Hayden
Tall Ships Duluth 2013: Parade of Sail
U.S. Brig Niagara sails under the Aerial Lift Bridge during Tall Ships Duluth 2013.
Tall Ships returning to Duluth
Tall Ships Duluth will return in 2016, organizers announced on Monday.
The wildly popular festival drew about 250,000 people to town in both 2013 and 2010 – that's almost three times the population of Duluth. The city estimates the 2013 festival’s direct economic impact at $15 million.
Craig Samborski, whose Draw Events produces the festival, says in a news release, “Though tough to believe for those who experienced these events in the past, calling the upcoming Tall Ships Duluth 2016 the biggest doesn’t quite do it justice, but rather something more akin to massive.”
The festival dates are August 18-21, 2016.
The participating tall ships haven’t yet been announced. Nine of the majestic vessels visited in 2013.
+ Photos from the 2013 festival.
+ Our Tall Ships collector’s issues and merch.
Region’s wolves back under federal protection
John Myers, Duluth News Tribune:
Wolves across the Great Lakes region are back under full protection of the federal Endangered Species Act as a result of a ruling by a federal judge Friday in Washington.
Paul Scinocca
Last Saltie of the 2014 Season
The Palmerton leaves the Twin Ports early last Saturday.
Last saltie leaves Twin Ports
Adele Yorde from the Duluth Seaway Port Authority reports on the approaching end of the shipping season, heralded by the year’s final saltie leaving Duluth-Superior. The Soo Locks close on January 15.
This weekend signaled the ‘beginning of the end’ of the 2014 shipping season – as the last oceangoing vessel (“saltie”) to have called on the Port of Duluth-Superior this year departed just after midnight Friday – passing beneath the Aerial Lift Bridge at 12:26 a.m. Saturday morning to be exact.
The Palmerton had arrived earlier in the week to discharge project cargo at the Clure Public Marine Terminal in Duluth. The 436-foot, Antigua-flag Palmerton will be the last saltie of 2014 to make the full 2,342-mile transit of the Great Lakes St. Lawrence Seaway system from the Head of the Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean.
Both the Welland Canal, which connects Lakes Erie and Ontario, and locks on the Montreal-Lake Ontario section of the Seaway are scheduled to close on Dec. 31.
Laker traffic, however, will continue on the Great Lakes for four more weeks as the “Soo Locks” (i.e. locks at Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.), won’t officially close to vessel traffic until midnight on January 15. Those locks are scheduled to reopen for the 2015 commercial navigation season on March 25.
The Final Push
Despite coming off the most brutal winter in decades to start the 2014 season and dealing with rail capacity issues, Great Lakes freighters have worked hard to make up for tonnage and transits lost in the ice-choked months of March and April. In fact, on many fronts, year-to-date shipments through the Port of Duluth-Superior have nearly caught up to where they were at this time last year – sitting at 32.4 million short tons through November. Shipments of iron ore (to domestic and Canadian steel mills) are up nearly 6 percent to 15.3 million short tons; and increases in commodities like limestone and salt plus general cargo shipments helped offset declines in coal and grain this season.
“Higher water levels across the system this year helped tremendously in making up time and tonnage. Thousand-footers, for example, were able to load to another foot deeper draft allowing some 3,000 additional tons of iron ore or coal on every downbound delivery,” noted Vanta Coda, Duluth Seaway Port Authority executive director. “General cargo shipments also ranked significantly higher than last year. By the time 2014 ends, we will have welcomed 14 vessels to the Clure Public Marine Terminal here in Duluth, nearly twice as many as last year, representing a tonnage increase of more than 200 percent.”
Although ice has already formed on Lake Superior and elsewhere in the system, shipping has not been significantly impacted so far this winter. Freighters continue their end-of-season push to deliver iron ore to mills on the Lower Lakes to ensure sufficient inventories for steelmaking while locks are closed … to build up stockpiles of coal at utility companies and other customers in that same region … and, on the inbound side, to ensure there are sufficient supplies of limestone, salt and other bulk commodities on the ground here in the Twin Ports to last until the locks reopen in March. –Submitted
+ Some somber news during this holiday seaason. WTIP reports: Two men perish in Lake Superior near Tofte, Minnesota.
+ Jamie Smith, TBNewsWatch.com: “Nipigon mayor Richard Harvey thinks Nipigon Bay could be delisted as an area of concern soon.”
+ Duluth made Lonely Planet’s list of “the top 10 American destinations primed for a visit in 2015.”
+ SooToday’s Kenneth Armstrong profiles Superior Works’ Insect Rearing program.