Witte describes the "shock value" of
his first flyby over Plaquemines Parish
— where everything from Belle Chasse
to Venice and Pilot Town beyond is or
was located — as "sobering." As much
as the sight of it all would prompt
immediate responses, the future in this
scenario was as sobering as the past. The
Atlantic zone does not have just hurri-
canes, it has a "hurricane season," which
like hunting and fishing seasons has a
formal closing. It's at the end of
November. Katrina, in the final days of
August, left plenty of time for an encore.
Not every storm for the season of '05
has been a hurricane, of course. With
winds under 75, they're just "tropical
storms." But they're impressive enough
to get names, and to recommend against
moving high objects through the ocean.
There was, for example, Ophelia, and
the Donjon 1,000-ton crane Chesapeake
1000. With the tug Atlantic Salvor, the
crane sat in the bay of its name for well
over a week. The tug Powhatan with the
Columbia, a 400-ton revolving derrick
barge, was similarly confined by the ele-
ments. With the Powhatan and the
Columbia moving on for Alabama, the
Chesapeake 1000 finally arrived at
Venice on September 29.
"The Captain of the Port of New
Orleans had anticipated the hit," said
Kevin Teichman, representing a second
generation at T&T. "Before the storm
had hit, they'd moved to Alexandria — I
assume they expected to have quite a lot
of damage — and requested our 53-ft.
command trailer." Just after the storm,
the Coast Guard requested helicopters,
and Teichman found himself on his first
of several flights over Venice, and the
tip of another finger in the Louisiana
Gulf, Port Fourchon, "taking note of
how many vessels were beached or
sunk. I remember the first time I flew
over there, and the destruction and dev-
astation was just overwhelming — it's
something I'll never forget."
On Sept. 2, they moved the trailer to
Belle Chasse "and used it for the air ops
at the navy base, where the power had
gone out. Meanwhile we were preparing
our barges to come over. We didn't
expect to find services or hotels where
they were headed, so we put quarters by
Martin Quarters of Galiano on with
complete systems to be totally self suffi-
cient, bunks and showers, and provi-
sions for large supplies of diesel and
gasoline. It took about a week to get the
barges ready, and we mobilized at
Venice on September 10."
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42 Gulf Coast Resources Guide Maritime Reporter & Engineering News
From here it's a quarter- to half-mile to the water, according to the salvors at Titan. The boats are high and dry, but their removal had
to wait for other parts of the same highway to be de-flooded. (Photo: Don Sutherland.)
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