Irish Rover
Well-Known Member
Thanks to vas for the heads up on this last night. I hope they get it cleared soon
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-canal-for-ships-after-rockfall-idUSKCN1GA2D4
I wonder how fastidious the H&S bods are in Greece. If anyone has any better information or updates I'd be grateful.
I hope that's true and that they reopen it sooner rather than later. I'd prefer to take that risk than have to contemplate going the long way around.I recommend you buy a crash helmet before your trip.![]()
Good to see they're beavering away at it. The weather forecast for the next 10 days is mainly dry with temperatures getting into the 20's. As I said earlier I don't think clearing what fell already is going to be the problem and I would expect that it would be done in about 2 weeks if there are no further falls. Will they declare it "safe" then is the big issue. I'm planning to come W to E on 06 April :black_eyed:
Planning started. Still the company operating the canal are, as far as I know, a private company so they'll be doing everything possible to get it open asap. It would be different if they were a state company.I would start planning to go the long way round. The damage seems significant and infrastructure things take a long time in Greece. You may be surprised and find the canal is open but I really wouldn't bank on it.
This video provides a drone perspective and shows the collapse is pretty major and involves a substantial amount of material:
Like most of Greek infrastructure it bears witness to little investment. A Canal in such soft limestone/sandstone has no hard engineering at wash level and there is massive undermining throughout the length of the canal. I have a planned transit 2nd week of May - mmmmmm
The video posted today by NormanB #6 shows the dredger and barge onsite and working so I'm hopeful - if there are no more serious falls and H&S don't get involved.Content deleted
I’m expecting Paddy’s Day 17 March to be a great day with Ireland beating the Auld Enemy to clinch the grand slam and Galatasaray to beat Fenerbahçe so I’m going for the hat trick with the Canal to open as well.Just pondering this a bit. I reckon that there's the best part of 18,000 tonnes of rock in the canal. The spoil barge alongside looks like it'll take say three hundred tonnes. lets say the barge does three trips a day: that'll mean say 1000 tonnes a day. That'd take 18 working days to shift the fall, five working days a week so say four weeks to clear the fall.
Shall we open a pool to see how long it takes? Virtual pint to the winner?
I’m guessing only but I imagine they only have one dredger. Current is wind generated apparently and can be up to 4 Kns either direction.Some of those rocks are way to big to shift, aren’t they? Do they use dynamite? Or is that likely to bring down more? And why not have a barge at each side of the fall?
One more dopey question; in the first vid there is obviously a flow through in the canal. Is it only flow in one direction, and why does it flow at all in a (effectively) tideless sea?
I’m expecting Paddy’s Day 17 March to be a great day with Ireland beating the Auld Enemy to clinch the grand slam and Galatasaray to beat Fenerbahçe so I’m going for the hat trick with the Canal to open as well.
One more dopey question; in the first vid there is obviously a flow through in the canal. Is it only flow in one direction, and why does it flow at all in a (effectively) tideless sea?