Adam and I were crossing a high-speed bridge with no sidewalks when was saw a Crounse boat coming down the Ohio River. We tried to get a shot, but all we could do was point the camera out the window and hope to get something other than a steel beam. This was the result.
You can't win 'em all, I guess.
Saturday, December 17, 2011
News and history
Here's an article from Forbes magazine about the towing industry. Being Forbes, they got access to executives that people like me can't get near. It's a good read.
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Sorry, but I missed an important anniversary yesterday. It was the 200th anniversary of the New Madrid earthquake.
But we have anniversaries of the aftershocks coming.
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Construction is under way on a natural gas processing plant at Natrium, W.Va., in West Virginia's Northern Panhandle. The plant will process shale gas from West Virginia and Ohio.
###
Sorry, but I missed an important anniversary yesterday. It was the 200th anniversary of the New Madrid earthquake.
But we have anniversaries of the aftershocks coming.
###
Construction is under way on a natural gas processing plant at Natrium, W.Va., in West Virginia's Northern Panhandle. The plant will process shale gas from West Virginia and Ohio.
Labels:
Crounse,
deckhand,
Dominion,
earthquake,
Forbes,
Ingram,
Natrium,
New Madrid,
Ohio River,
Olmstead,
shale gas,
towboat,
West Virginia
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