HawkinsHollow
Veteran Member
I had not heard anything about this before today. But I guess the Mississippi is crazy low. Anyone have any first hand knowledge of this? Is it as bad as the news is saying about it?
I’ve seen photos that look pretty low. Hard to believe it is that low.I had not heard anything about this before today. But I guess the Mississippi is crazy low. Anyone have any first hand knowledge of this? Is it as bad as the news is saying about it?
Only when it’s flooding is what I’ve seen in articles.And they are wanting to take water from the Mississippi and send it out west.
Yeah, we were down along the river from Nashville to Tunica about 4 weeks ago. Sand bars every where and not much barge traffic at all. They were tied up all over the place, but few moving.I had not heard anything about this before today. But I guess the Mississippi is crazy low. Anyone have any first hand knowledge of this? Is it as bad as the news is saying about it?
I think most of the grain transported on barges on the MS is destined for export.I guess it is severely hampering barge traffic. They can carry less tonnage and do it slower. The main commodity that is shipped this time of the year is grains. One more thing to raise food costs.
It is presently 6 feet from its lowest levels in recorded history.
Yeah, probably.I think most of the grain transported on barges on the MS is destined for export.
I'm sure someone somewhere keeps track of that.Good data there Moss. Have to imagine that a lot of the water that could come down the Missouri is withheld for agriculture instead. Wonder if that is accounted for in your stats.
But how much of that water is the Mississippi, and how much is saltwater coming in from the Gulf? I've heard that was becoming a major problem in much of La.For a few times in the last few years we have had to open spillways when the Mississippi got too high. This low is very unusual but we still have plenty of water in the river here, about 10 miles north of New Orleans.