By Larry Pearson Unquestionably the most unique
overnight vessel working on the U.S.
Inland waterways is the River Explorer.
Not a paddlewheeler, nor a sleek cruise
vessel, River Explorer is composed of
two, three deck 300-ft. barges coupled end
to end, being pushed by the Miss Nari, a
130-ft. tug boat. The River Explorer con-
ducts four to 10 day excursions on the
inland waterways to give guests an "up
close and personal" experience on the
river it is traveling.
The lead barge called the DeSoto and
contains the public spaces on the vessel
such as the dining room, galley, two-deck
entertainment venue, a large pursers
lobby, reading/card room and a bar.
The Sky Deck of the DeSoto barge has
a running track, two hot tubs and lounge
furniture.
The aft barge (LaSalle) contains 98
identical cabins (either one Queen bed or
two twins) with bath/shower facilities.
The cabins have 200 sq. ft. of space, a lit-
tle larger than a standard cabin on Carni-
val Cruise Lines. All rooms also have
river views and the second deck rooms
have individual balconies. The Sky Deck
of the LaSalle is a continuation of the top
deck of the DeSoto with lounge chairs,
but also has the pilothouse built on top of
an exercise room and a bar.
The Miss Nari was built in 1952 and
spent much of her time on the Mississippi
River system pushing barges. The vessel
was literally burnt out in 1976 when she
caught fire when the two gasoline barges
she was pushing rammed into a bridge
support and exploded.
For years the tug was considered a hulk
until purchased by Edward "Eddie" Con-
rad, owner of Compass Marine of New
Orleans. Conrad rebuilt the tug, adding
tons of steel to support the weight of the
new engines and drive system. It was
named the Miss Nari, after Conrad's late
wife Narcissa.
The River Explorer was built in 1998
by LEEVAC Shipyards of Jennings, La.
on a design by Conrad, also founder and
CEO of Riverbarge Excursion Lines, Inc.
of New Orleans. LEEVAC also did the
marine engineering for the vessel. New
Orleans, La. Interior designer was Bauer
Interiors, also of New Orleans.
This reporter vividly remembers the
River Explorer being built at LEEVAC.
From the beginning, it was obvious this
was a labor of love for Conrad whose per-
sonal stamp of approval is on every aspect
of the vessel. Even today, almost eight
years after the first cruise, Conrad is on
many of the cruises, joining them without
notice at any port of call he chooses. On
the second deck there is a stateroom
reserved at all times for Conrad since the
staff never knows when he may drop by.
The propulsion system is uniquely
adapted for its sole purpose of pushing of
two passenger barges. The Miss Nari
relies on two 1,500 hp EMD 12-cylinder
645 diesel engines coupled to Niigati Z-
Drives with Kort nozzles to propel the
barges at roughly 6-7 mph usually work-
ing against a 5-7 mph current going up
river. "The Z-drives makes it a lot easier
to navigate a 730-ft. long vessel, especial-
ly with its great sail area," explained
Kenny Williams, one of two Captains on
the River Explorer.
During the spring months the Mississip-
pi River runs high and the current is quite
strong and that has a pronounced impact
on fuel consumption. "We will burn about
15,000 gallons of fuel on a trip from New
22 • MarineNews • March, 2005
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A view of the Miss Nari taken from the third deck of the aft barge. (Photo: Larry Pearson)
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