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How many busses ended up (or down) on the ocean floor before they worked the bugs out of the process.??
You have to love third world ingenuity....
Here is the last operating ferry(s) on the Susquehanna River in PA. There are two operating craft at this crossing. I haven't taken them in many years, but they used to be powered by Farmall M engines. The river is about a mile wide at this point, 30 miles north of Harrisburg.
Each ferry consists of two barges. The first is the one were the vehicles are carried, the second is lashed to its side. It consists of a passenger area and the drive unit consisting of the engine and the stern wheels.
Dude snubbing off the line damn near got himself killed!
I noticed that little tripping event as well--he might have something other than black coffee in his thermos!
For a little more detail, the Captain/pilot is in the barge with the passengers.
If you noticed the route is not straight but significantly bowed. When they leave either side they head up river at maybe 20 degrees. They stay on that heading until about mid river and then straiten out and allow the current to push them back down river and end at the landing on the other side. During periods of high water they go on a greater angle up river, in low water the opposite.
One of the rules on my boat is to never put yourself between the boat and the dock or another boat. Fiberglass is a lot less painful to fix.