My uncle Allen Kalmon sank on the Edmunds Fitzgerald. I was about 7 years old and I remember it well. I got off the school bus with my brothers and sisters and went in the house, my mom and dad were crying so hard I thought they were laughing. And they told us the news. This video is an excellent look into life on the Great Lakes, I seriously enjoyed it. Thank you.
Sorry for your loss. This comment didn't get anywhere close then the reckonition it should have. When we hear about ship wrecks we always think about the ocean. My old man was a New (and dam proud of it and me as well). He never actually worked on ships just unloading on the docks and the stories he was told from the guys who work on them were more scared of the great lakes than any other place on earth. It definitely says a lot about the topic. Again sorry for your loss and ty for putting this up for the world to see this type of thing. No one thinks about how they get things. Its the same as the "if you got it a truck brought it " type of thing. Take care 👍🇨🇦
Im sorry for your loss. The legacy of the Edmund Fitzgerald is essentially immortalized in Michigan, I remember learning about it in school and listening to the Gordon Lightfoot song in class. That song is pretty much an anthem for any bar i walk into here.
@@Nate_has_DogsI'm not sure about that. Watching this video brought back memories from my childhood. Just a kid out fishing the Detroit river I remember this ship being on the river everyday I've seen many come through.
Right. Lake Superior alone holds enough water to cover ALL of North America and all of South America in water about 1 foot deep. 2900 cubic miles of water.
Living in Michigan, we get to see many of the freighters. The Sam Laud is about in the middle of the pack as far as age goes. There are still plenty of boats built in the 40's and 50's plying the Great Lakes every day! The Alpena, built in 1942, has sailed for 81 seasons this year, still boasting a steam turbine engine.
@@driverv86 , Yes, the M/V Lee A. Tregurtha has a long and distinguished history since her construction as a World War II tanker. One of the most altered vessels on the Great Lakes, she also boasts two battle stars for WWII service as the Chiwawa. Her original dimensions were 501’8” x 68’ x 30’8” and her speed was 15 knots. Chiwawa served on both the Atlantic and Pacific oceans during the war and was present in Tokyo Bay during the September 2, 1945, surrender ceremony. The vessel was decommissioned on May 6, 1946, and transferred to the Maritime Commission shortly thereafter. (from Interlake's website)
I’m so glad to see the old Sam Laud is still out there on the lake doing her thing. My dad worked as a shipkeeper for ASC for like 25-30 years. I spent many winters running around this and the many other freighters that ASC owned. Even during the rest of the year a few times he’d be on them. I’d live up there and hold down the fort for him many times. Our port was Toledo where I’m from. I can remember taking a mattress up to the pilot house, turning on the air conditioning and just chilling out up there during thunderstorms was an amazing feeling. Loved this boat and the American Mariner, American Republic but I never got to be on the 1000 foot Indiana Harbor. I’ve always wanted to go out on them boats but never knew how to get into it. I’m glad you got to experience the Sam Laud!? Happy sailing buddy!!
Honestly Joe , you're a master at this ; you have a tender eye for detail and your soothing narration is spot on . Captivating off beat Americana , love it , thanks .
Rode the Great Lakes on 2 different USCG buoy tender/ice breakers over 4 years then spent another 27 years on the ocean. The Great Lakes are indeed unique in the marine world and though they don't have glamourous ports they are steeped in history, the people are exceptional, and the natural beauty is spectacular. Of all the waters I've sailed they were my favorite. Great video it gives the viewers a factual perspective of life as a mariner on the largest inland ocean in the world, Thanks much!
Each dock is like it's own little world. Each body of water is full of quirks and idiosyncrasies. Such a crazy, fascinating, necessary job. Thanks Joe!
You got on one of those new fangled modern boats. Back in 1968, the Lackawanna was my ride. Built in 1900 and scrapped in 1969. We didn't have fancy self unloaders or ladders. We got swung over the side on a Boswains chair (2×8 with a rope through a hole). To handle cables to stop the boat.
Thank you for taking us on board. It's hard when watching this not to remember about the fate of the Edmund Fitzgerald, " the pride of the American side ... as the big freighters go, it was bigger than most".
The Fitz was "Queen of the Lakes" (longest freighter) from the time it launched in 1958 until the next year when it was surpassed in length by 1 foot! It's still the biggest Lake freighter that sank in the Great Lakes. It set a lot of single-trip records for hauling the biggest loads at the time, and 6 times it set seasonal haul records too.
The Fitzgerald is simply a much better known wreck on the lakes. There were a great many wrecks on the lakes during that time. My favorite story is of a ship that broke in half, with both halves remaining afloat for a while. The only survivor was in the front end of the ship, and he recalled watching the back half of the ship sail away into the night, lights still on and under power. Can't recall what ship it was.
I don't understand how this channel doesn't have 500k+ subs, and 1M+ views per video? Joe is an amazing narrator, the editing is perfection, and the content is mesmerizing. The YT algorithm is broken.
The old bluesey music was kind of cool. You make unique videos Joe. Makes me feel old,I went through Marine boot camp when that old ship was being built..
I could seriously watch a 2 hour long video of yours! Your editing, music, narration, landscapes, shipscapes, seascapes are always fantastic!! (I've already watched all of your channel)
I live near Lake Ontario and I grew up watching the lakers come and go out of Hamilton Harbour. To this day, I never tire of seeing the ships sailing past.
I live and work right next to lake st clair and see freighters constantly. Mad respect for what you and those other guys do. You keep this country running.
Man, that was really good! Very well put together. I can't remember enjoying a TH-cam video this much. I've long had a romantic fascination with the Great Lakes and the freighters that traverse their waters. This video represents so much more than just your time on a Great Lakes freighter, it represents history and a lifestyle most people know so little about. Thank you for posting this. Ted Marshall Sanford. Florida
When you talk about the lifespan of these ships, the other factor at play on the US side of the Great Lakes is the Jones Act. The first new US laker in 30 years was launched last year.
Hey Joe. Glad you decided to revisit the Sam Laud. You really hit the magic formula with the 16 part series. So seeing more of your earlier adventures is cool. My favorite line: "what a bleeping rust bucket." Sounds like my life growing up on a farm with all the equipment pre 1970. Wasn't pretty but got the job done.
There are beach's on the lakes that rival any beach anywhere on any sea. Real good job Joe. Going under Duluth Lift Bridge is always cool.Lot of people just come down to Canal Park to see these ships, wave to the crews, the salute to the ships and back to the bridge boss.
My grand dad used to captain one of these behemoths. He must have been crazy. Retired after 42 years on the Great Lakes. He had a long and happy career, spanning 42 year and was once was captain of the MS Benson Ford, the 600-foot freighter that hauled iron ore, coal and stone for the Ford Motor Co. He started out as a deckhand and worked his way up. In the early days of his Ford seafaring career, he got to know Henry Ford who use to celebrate his birthday by taking cruises on one of the freighters. He became captain of the MS Benson Ford in 1952 and retired 10 years later.
I grew up in Michigan, right off of Lake Huron. I spent alot of time watching these ships on the st Clair river and on the lakes. It’s so impressive what these captains can do. It’s under appreciated what the lakes handle as far a freighters go. Very exciting to see you touch on this subject.
I have a home outside Cleveland and a small place in Marblehead, Ohio. I have seen the Sam Laud numerous times over the years and marvel at the comings and goings of these Lakers.
During the 90's and 2000's, I worked across the channel from Zug Island in Detroit. We would also get cement ships from Toronto and other ships carrying limestone. Spent many afternoons and nights having meals with the various crews on their ships. They were all great to be around.
I lived down in Windsor while I went to university and I loved seeing the freighters coming through the Detroit River going up to Sarnia. They were enormous! I couldn't believe how big those boats were. Love the Great Lakes so much. They're less like lakes and more like inland freshwater seas.
I live up in the Keweenaw and see the big freighters quite often, always cool to see them going by out on the lake, especially at night. Fun fact, the oldest freighter on the great lakes right now is the SS Alpena. Yep, SS. As in, 'Steam Ship'. She was built in 1942. A bunch of the ships floating around on the lakes were built in the 50s and 60s. The E.M Ford had the longest career, launched in 1898 and sailed until at least 1996 before being scrapped in 2007! Heck, there are still some WWII vintage boats on the lakes. The old SS American Victory, originally the Neshanic, a WWII fleet oiler and converted to a bulk carrier on the lake which was sadly scrapped in 2018. Was really cool to see a lake freighter with battle stars on her bridge. Her sister ship, Chiwawa, is still sailing the Great Lakes as the MV Lee A Tregurtha, but has been converted to diesel power.
Great video, I really enjoyed it. I dont know what it is but the lore and tradition of the Great Lakes "lakers" just draws me in. The cities may be rust belts but one has to admit that the the country between the two countries these lakes call home is spectacular. Thank you for sharing your story on your work journey out there, stay safe.
It’s weird seeing the places where I have watched ships come in and out hindered of times in Cleveland from the point of view of the ship. Keep up the good work! What you said at the beginning is very true, everybody forgets about the Great Lakes!
Those of us who live in the Great Lakes region don’t forget about them. They have quite the effect on our weather system and the resulting rain, snow, humidity, etc. I’m from the downriver suburbs of Detroit and love the Great Lakes region, even with the issues that we have. ✋🏽Hello from Michigan!
Thanks Joe, I lived next to Cuyahoga river and watched the ships go up and down the river. Amazed when ships got thrusters and multiple rudders and no longer needed tugs.
When you said 'coal,' I saw pellets. Coal goes into Cleveland by rail. You didn't load in 'bays,' you loaded into hatches. The use of steel wire rope 'cables' for mooring or shifting might have been worth mentioning. Mooring at Zug with your own deckhands and an end-loader dragging wires for you is about the worst thing we do. But then, a northeast blow at Marblehead is no picnic, either. All of that said, I liked the music you used.
Awesome video. I'm a Master mariner from Europe & during maritime high school we learned about all different types of ships in the world & that included Lakers. Since then they were always capturing my imagination & I always had a desire to sail on one of them, even if just for couple of weeks. My seaman career is now over & I probably won't ever see a Laker from up close, but this is the 2nd best thing
That's too bad you never got to sail the Great Lakes. They are vast & some of these Lakers are as big as aircraft carriers. In fact during WW2 a whole lot of the US Navy fliers were trained on the Lakes before being sent to the Pacific. Lakers had the top infrastructure removed & flat tops installed for airplanes. Of course a main Navy recruitment / training center was (& still is) located just North of Chicago. Interesting history all around. Ocean pilots will attest to our storms too.
I live in Cleveland and have a boat and have seen the Sam Laud many times! You refer to Cleveland as the rust belt, which it is, but it is still a great city and I love living here. Seeing the steel mill from the Cuyahoga is an amazing sight and one that very few get to see.
As a lifelong Michigander I've been obsessed with freighters since I was about 12 (I'm 46). I knew the JW Westcott II - the mail boat - had been around a LONG time, as long as I've been a freighter buff, but I don't know it has been around since 1949. It even sank underneath the Ambassador Bridge in Detroit in 2001 killing 2 people. It was salvaged, repaired, and put back in service. I didn't know it was still around. This was a great video. Thanks so much.
I enjoy your videos very much. I have a sailboat that I keep in Racine, WI and I spend the Summer's sailing up and down the Wisconsin shoreline and across the Lake to the various ports on the Michigan side and I am always blown away when I encounter a big Laker either out on the Lake or coming in/out of ports. The captains are so skilled at moving those ships around not only without pilots but also without tugboats.
My Brother in Law & his Father were both Captains on the Great Lakes. Their sailing was from Minnesota to Cleveland for over 60 years. I see you went under the 5 mile Mackinac Bridge. Try going over the Bridge at Midnight on a Sunday, take the 1st Left for 150 miles to my USAF Base. Cool video you done did.
Seeing this just makes me wanna leave the Netherlands and go to America and work there in the shipping business. Right now i work in the fuel bunkering in amsterdam on a 160 ton 100ft long bunkering vessel delivering fuel to inland barges, its a fun job but after a few years you just start to miss challenges
The Maritime Union has sailors from all over the World working on these ships. Some work the ships in Summer & do Carribean/ Southern ports in the winter. Check into it.
beautiful brother! Me and my autistic nephew follow these ship through the great lakes daily! I work at ArcelorMittal in hamilton ontario right at the bays edge and get to watch these alot of these beauties come thru everyday im there! Ive had my nephew from sault ste marie to windsor sarnia and our yearly trip up and down the welland canal.....hopefully soon ill get him on his dream trip....to Duluth to hear the lift bridge and the Paul R Tregurtha do a captain salute:)
Thank you for such a lovely wee video. Very very well presented. Growing up on the north east coast of Northern Ireland, where my late Dad was a Belfast Harbour pilot and ex master mariner. He often talked of transiting the Atlantic Ocean into the Great Lakes. I sometimes went on ships in the early 90’s and lots of pilot boat trips with him as a kid. I now live in Indiana and kind of land locked lol. Have made a couple of trips to the Great Lakes watching the freighters coming in. Funny you mentioned about the age of the vessels compared to ocean goers. I knew it was because of the salt water vs the fresh waters of the lakes. I love anything maritime and couldn’t go to sea due to defective color vision. As some mentioned, it gave reminders of the Edmund Fitzgerald and the price mariners pay to risk the world getting their cargo. Thanks for this, much appreciated 👏
I was on the USS Enterprise in the 80s and pulling in and out of San Francisco Bay (or any port) was always tricky. I used to sit along the Cuyahoga down in the Flats to watch those ships navigate the river and that made our maneuvers look like a cake walk.
Wow, again a great video. My father was a seaman on the great lakes. Had some great stories. A few years ago, had the opportunity to take my motorcycle and travel to the Great Lake ports. Kind of felt a connection. Thanks again. Keep them coming.
Hi Joe. I’m Joe from Delaware. Watch your videos all the time and they are better than the shows on cable . I can visualise being on some of the ships and very relaxing to kick back and watch.
I can tell you look fondly back on this time of your life. That period of time of innocence before experience that seems so difficult when your in it but at the same time is so sweet and fleeting. This video captures that. We all can relate in our own journey from innocence to experience. Just wonderfully done. I hope there is some new content in the future.
What a TREMENDOUS post! Detroit native here, and love everything about the Great Lakes........the Lakers near top of any list. Thanks so much for sharing. (Safe travels)..........
Great Lakes I love the video, when I drive up to Erie from a hill top on a good day you can see that blue lake and I never get tired of seeing it😊 By the way I liked listening to Robert Johnson music, Joe you must be an old soul 👍
Love my Great Lakes Freighters! I saw the SL passed the Lee A. Tregurtha. There’s a ship with some wartime history! You also have the Queen of the Lakes, the Paul R. Tregurtha, coming in at 1014’ in length. So much history on the Great Lakes shipping industry. Loved this video.
My dad's sister's husband and son were sailors on the Great Lakes. We used to go to the Aerial Bridge in Duluth to see them go out or come in to port. My Uncle make Captain on a 1000 footer just a short time before he had a heart attack and had to retire. He's buried on a hillside in Duluth overlooking Lake Superior. I wish I had been able to go on a trip with him. Thanks for this video.
Last year I got to stick my feet in Lake Huron during a down day I had during a work trip. It was interesting to see this ships and people working on different boats out and I remember seeing one of the big bulk carriers doing a run towards somewhere way out in the distance. The Great Lakes truly are a world of their own.
Great video! I used sail them lakers myself.... Brings back the memories of taking the swing chair down to those dolphins at Marblehead. The ships I was on were much older (pre-war era).... Steam powered winches and leaf style hatches..... Good stuff.
I worked on a great lakes freighter years ago. It was a great job: and yes, it was like stepping into a Rust Belt time machine. This was really well done and thanks for rekindling the memories. 😊
Great snapshot, especially when you said something like "it's like a surreal movie set". I sailed on the Northern Venture as a part time summer job. My late teens, in the late 70's. Running coal from Sandusky Ohio to Dofasco in Hamilton. It wasn't a self unloader. Watching them drop an articulating front loader into the hull the first time to move the last coal around in the hull was eye opening, then for afternoon break we'd watch "The Y & R". Great cooks, good solid people, a world of 180 degree variations almost every time you turned around.
Thank you for your vidéo! Un marin français qui a fait aussi la tournée des grands lacs en 1979 à bord du MS "François L.D", j'avais 18 ans. Nous venions charger du blé au port de Duluth dans le lac supérieur, pour l'Europe. Merci à vous pour votre vidéo. Amicalement. Daniel.
I’ve seen the Sam laud on ship cams across the lakes. My dream job is on these freighters. Either that or welding and I’d rather tell my grand kids I was a sailor welder lol. thanks for the honesty Joe. Even during the hard times like Nova Scotia. I’m referring to (16 days stuck at anchor.) I just want to do something more important than throwing bags of feed for tractor supply. Keep up the good work. You have been an inspiration.
Joe, this possibly one of the best audio/visual vlogs I've ever encountered (including PBS). You need to enter it. Looks like you didn't go through the canal at Sturgeon Bay (Door County, WI). It's a favorite for many aboard the working behemoths. Bay Ship is also located in Sturgeon Bay, so as a resident there I've seen many come in for Winter and leave in Spring. You'd find friendly folks who stand along the canal sides welcoming in our friends with smiles, waves and car horns. It's a little sad to see departure in Spring but exciting to be a part of it! Your voice inflection is perfect, by the way! Make more!
@Joe Franca, good to see clips back again live (i was watching in catch-up mode before). This time last year i was caring for my Mum in her final months before she passed away and things were crazy, everything was upside down. Your 15minutes clips (taken in sections when I could often in the small hours) gave me an escape to somewhere i couldn’t be, so many thanks for that as it was a comfort.
Beautiful editing, footage and commentary. It's amazing to see people with such a love for their line of work. Working as a contract pilot and being on the road a lot I can identify with many aspects of your videos. Thanks for sharing the experience
Welcome back Joe! I was with a group of friends down along the Cuyahoga River in a restaurant eating a stake dinner 🍽 and to look up and see the bow of the ship 🚢 passing the restaurant's window and the steel wall that followed. It kept coming and coming then finally the stern passed. Great 👍 dinner 🍽 entertainment!!! BTW, The stake was EXELENT!!! Welcome back. Richard Bause Cooperstown and Charlotte Valley RR.
Thanks for posting this, Joe. On this side of the Atlantic we know very little of the mariner's life on the Great Lakes so this was very informative and interesting. Great work on the editing, music and voice-over.
Wow!!! A rush of memories. I was born in Cleveland. One evening, on a dinner cruise, we passed a docked ship on the Cuyahoga River. The ship's crew were leaning over the rail. "That's what I want to do...go to sea" That was the beginning of my maritime career. Never worked The Lakes. 200 ton, LA/LB, Gulf of Mexico, both ends. Having to row shipmates to shore...never. I ran the contracted crew boats, taking crew to shore. You mentioned the skill of the Laker captains. I saw a video. Phenomenal!! I know some of the "old heads" would boast of a successful, tricky and intricate maneuver to dock and undock while drunk. 😮😅
Award worthy prduction....great video. Not something I'd do but I love learning about what you and admire those who do it...Be safe...Love the Vids....
As A resident of Michigan, I am never far from these Lakers & have been most of my life. They are in your blood, just part of the DNA!! PRETTY HARD FOR OTHER FOLKS TO UNDERSTAND. HISTORY, TRADITION, FOLKLORE, A NECESSITY FOR THE Nation.
Fascinating. When i retired, id sit in a park on the Detroit river with a coffee and donut and watch the lakers go by...never got tired of it. And id often wonder what it would be like if i werent so old to head out on one of those ships. Great video.
I’m in awe of you. I’m 66 and on disability. Worked so many different jobs when I was young. I can’t believe I didn’t get into working on the Lakers and sailing around on the Great Lakes. Would have been awesome!!!!! You are a fortunate and blessed man. Thanx for letting me tag along.👍🇺🇸❤️
I was lucky enough to come across Joe pretty much from the get go. He's pretty damn good at this stuff. Like the rest of us I can't get enough. Thanks Joe.
I did 10 years in the British Merchant Navy and often wondered how other nations merchant fleets operated,thanks for the insight in how things are done in America.
Man what an awesome video! Awesome glimpse into what they do day in and day out. Always have been fascinated with these ships even when I was a kid watching barges come down the Delaware River. These ships and railroads are my two things I will geek over for hours.
Joe, Toledo Docks coal and ore pier are manned by Longshoremen. Not sure if you loaded or offloaded there. It’s a CSX Railroad Terminal but the employees are members of a Longshoremen Union.
My uncle Allen Kalmon sank on the Edmunds Fitzgerald. I was about 7 years old and I remember it well. I got off the school bus with my brothers and sisters and went in the house, my mom and dad were crying so hard I thought they were laughing. And they told us the news. This video is an excellent look into life on the Great Lakes, I seriously enjoyed it. Thank you.
RIP in to your Uncle and to Gordon Lightfoot.
Sorry for your loss. This comment didn't get anywhere close then the reckonition it should have. When we hear about ship wrecks we always think about the ocean. My old man was a New (and dam proud of it and me as well). He never actually worked on ships just unloading on the docks and the stories he was told from the guys who work on them were more scared of the great lakes than any other place on earth. It definitely says a lot about the topic. Again sorry for your loss and ty for putting this up for the world to see this type of thing. No one thinks about how they get things. Its the same as the "if you got it a truck brought it " type of thing. Take care 👍🇨🇦
Im sorry for your loss. The legacy of the Edmund Fitzgerald is essentially immortalized in Michigan, I remember learning about it in school and listening to the Gordon Lightfoot song in class. That song is pretty much an anthem for any bar i walk into here.
I just saw this channel and am looking forward to watching this video now. I am sorry for your loss of your uncle. That was such a tragic event.
link to a model for ya
It's a great day when Franta drops a new video
You can't say this if it isn't a GTA freighter
100%!
@@Nate_has_DogsI'm not sure about that. Watching this video brought back memories from my childhood. Just a kid out fishing the Detroit river I remember this ship being on the river everyday I've seen many come through.
Is it new?
He can be the narrator for deadliest catch
No one, absolutely no one, has a better video of a Laker. Thank You
“One long two short” TH-camr. Give it a look
Nice photography, but little, or no, narration. Joe has that "New Jersey" flair.@@crazyworldoccupant7386
Tim Telep made a great series on the Paul R. Tregurtha , he went quiet sadly 😞
A piece of America most people don't see. Also, most folks don't realize how huge the Great Lakes are! Thanks for a great vid!
Right. Lake Superior alone holds enough water to cover ALL of North America and all of South America in water about 1 foot deep. 2900 cubic miles of water.
piece of Canada too der bud
@@run_run_walk6021 Canada is America though. It's part of North America.
@@run_run_walk6021The other reply is, let's say, a unique understanding but bless 'im.
@@br.m Oh then by this logic, all of Chile's lakes are a piece of America, because it's South America?
Living in Michigan, we get to see many of the freighters. The Sam Laud is about in the middle of the pack as far as age goes. There are still plenty of boats built in the 40's and 50's plying the Great Lakes every day! The Alpena, built in 1942, has sailed for 81 seasons this year, still boasting a steam turbine engine.
There are great lakes ships that were literally in ww2
@@driverv86 , Yes, the M/V Lee A. Tregurtha has a long and distinguished history since her construction as a World War II tanker. One of the most altered vessels on the Great Lakes, she also boasts two battle stars for WWII service as the Chiwawa. Her original dimensions were 501’8” x 68’ x 30’8” and her speed was 15 knots. Chiwawa served on both the Atlantic and Pacific oceans during the war and was present in Tokyo Bay during the September 2, 1945, surrender ceremony. The vessel was decommissioned on May 6, 1946, and transferred to the Maritime Commission shortly thereafter. (from Interlake's website)
Obligatory Jones Act joke..
@@markradius Great info! The TV show about the Paul Tregurtha is one of my favorites. Was not aware there was another Tregurtha. Thanks!
nothing beats a true steam whistle
my grandfather was the captain of this boat and worked for this company for years. its great to see a video on such a great boat.
No he wasn’t
@@SPIKESPIEGEL1969grand River or ASC
I’m so glad to see the old Sam Laud is still out there on the lake doing her thing. My dad worked as a shipkeeper for ASC for like 25-30 years. I spent many winters running around this and the many other freighters that ASC owned. Even during the rest of the year a few times he’d be on them. I’d live up there and hold down the fort for him many times. Our port was Toledo where I’m from. I can remember taking a mattress up to the pilot house, turning on the air conditioning and just chilling out up there during thunderstorms was an amazing feeling. Loved this boat and the American Mariner, American Republic but I never got to be on the 1000 foot Indiana Harbor. I’ve always wanted to go out on them boats but never knew how to get into it. I’m glad you got to experience the Sam Laud!? Happy sailing buddy!!
Honestly Joe , you're a master at this ; you have a tender eye for detail and your soothing narration is spot on . Captivating off beat Americana , love it , thanks .
Rode the Great Lakes on 2 different USCG buoy tender/ice breakers over 4 years then spent another 27 years on the ocean. The Great Lakes are indeed unique in the marine world and though they don't have glamourous ports they are steeped in history, the people are exceptional, and the natural beauty is spectacular. Of all the waters I've sailed they were my favorite. Great video it gives the viewers a factual perspective of life as a mariner on the largest inland ocean in the world, Thanks much!
Crazy to think that most of the ships are 50+ years old and some of them are pushing 90!
The oldest active freighter on the Great Lakes was launched in 1942, the SS Alpena
My grandfather was a laker after he came home from the pacific in WW2. He was Detroit born-and-raised. Thank you for this.
I grew up and still live in Port Huron where we see MANY of these Lakers. Seeing that opening shot of the Blue Water Bridge was awesome to see!
God bless Port Huron always, one of His greatest works~Glory to God
I grew up in Sarnia….Pt Huron was like our second home…great bars there when I was a kid mid 70’s rock era.!!
Each dock is like it's own little world. Each body of water is full of quirks and idiosyncrasies. Such a crazy, fascinating, necessary job. Thanks Joe!
You got on one of those new fangled modern boats. Back in 1968, the Lackawanna was my ride. Built in 1900 and scrapped in 1969. We didn't have fancy self unloaders or ladders. We got swung over the side on a Boswains chair (2×8 with a rope through a hole). To handle cables to stop the boat.
I work on the boats 74-76 and your right. This was a fancy new boat!
They still use the swing out bosun chair at places like the locks.
The bosun chair is still used. Those ladders only go down once the deck gang has swung out and tied her up.
Yeah the self unloaders are really nice. In and out in hours with no rest or time to go up the street.
@@pm565b2yeah, but nothing good happens up the street
Ship watching in the 1,000 Islands is one of my favorite things in the world to do. The lines of the classic lakers are stunning.
Thank you for taking us on board. It's hard when watching this not to remember about the fate of the Edmund Fitzgerald, " the pride of the American side ... as the big freighters go, it was bigger than most".
Agreed. I was thinking that too.
The Fitz was "Queen of the Lakes" (longest freighter) from the time it launched in 1958 until the next year when it was surpassed in length by 1 foot! It's still the biggest Lake freighter that sank in the Great Lakes. It set a lot of single-trip records for hauling the biggest loads at the time, and 6 times it set seasonal haul records too.
"On the big lake they called Gitchegumie"
Actually that happened in the summer of 75 when the Sam Laud was being built!
The Fitzgerald is simply a much better known wreck on the lakes. There were a great many wrecks on the lakes during that time. My favorite story is of a ship that broke in half, with both halves remaining afloat for a while. The only survivor was in the front end of the ship, and he recalled watching the back half of the ship sail away into the night, lights still on and under power. Can't recall what ship it was.
I don't understand how this channel doesn't have 500k+ subs, and 1M+ views per video? Joe is an amazing narrator, the editing is perfection, and the content is mesmerizing. The YT algorithm is broken.
We can't watch all the videos. Subs and views are all about money anyway
Agreed. Best maritime channel I've found
@@gregorylyon1004That makes zero sense fyi.
Former interlake sailor of 5 years, cool to see some representation about what we do.
What was the pay like for entry? Just got my mmc!!!!!
The old bluesey music was kind of cool. You make unique videos Joe. Makes me feel old,I went through Marine boot camp when that old ship was being built..
I could seriously watch a 2 hour long video of yours! Your editing, music, narration, landscapes, shipscapes, seascapes are always fantastic!! (I've already watched all of your channel)
I live near Lake Ontario and I grew up watching the lakers come and go out of Hamilton Harbour. To this day, I never tire of seeing the ships sailing past.
Those are the little Wellandmaxes
Enjoyed that. We'll done. Music was terrific. Remembering the Edmund Fitzgerald. ❤
I worked on this boat in 1982 good to see it still going
Awesome!
It never ceases to amaze me the massive size of the Great Lakes.
I live and work right next to lake st clair and see freighters constantly. Mad respect for what you and those other guys do. You keep this country running.
A perfect companion to Joseph Conrad's "Youth," and his other sailing stories. Thank you!
Man, that was really good! Very well put together. I can't remember enjoying a TH-cam video this much. I've long had a romantic fascination with the Great Lakes and the freighters that traverse their waters. This video represents so much more than just your time on a Great Lakes freighter, it represents history and a lifestyle most people know so little about. Thank you for posting this.
Ted Marshall
Sanford. Florida
Your narration, subject matter, editing, composition, music selection, are stellar, as always! Love everything you do.
I've watched videos on different subject matter for 10 years. A few have shown a unique talent to set themselves apart. Joes for sure one of them.
When you talk about the lifespan of these ships, the other factor at play on the US side of the Great Lakes is the Jones Act. The first new US laker in 30 years was launched last year.
Exactly, the Jones Act is what keeps my whole career in existence.
Eliminate the Jones act and you destroy the American Merchant Marine.@@JoeFranta
Would that be the Mark W Barker?
@@vernwallen4246Unlikely. It’s just protectionism and it artificially inflates costs for no reason other than “Murica!”
1981-82 winter .
First commercial ship as a cadet was the Sam Laud .
We got stuck in the ice right off the dock from Loraine .
Hey Joe. Glad you decided to revisit the Sam Laud. You really hit the magic formula with the 16 part series. So seeing more of your earlier adventures is cool. My favorite line: "what a bleeping rust bucket." Sounds like my life growing up on a farm with all the equipment pre 1970. Wasn't pretty but got the job done.
There are beach's on the lakes that rival any beach anywhere on any sea. Real good job Joe. Going under Duluth Lift Bridge is always cool.Lot of people just come down to Canal Park to see these ships, wave to the crews, the salute to the ships and back to the bridge boss.
My grand dad used to captain one of these behemoths. He must have been crazy. Retired after 42 years on the Great Lakes. He had a long and happy career, spanning 42 year and was once was captain of the MS Benson Ford, the 600-foot freighter that hauled iron ore, coal and stone for the Ford Motor Co.
He started out as a deckhand and worked his way up. In the early days of his Ford seafaring career, he got to know Henry Ford who use to celebrate his birthday by taking cruises on one of the freighters. He became captain of the MS Benson Ford in 1952 and retired 10 years later.
Born Raised and still live the Thumb of Michigan. We love our freighters. At the SOO locks they lower tie ups from a boatsum chair. Cool vid Joe.
I grew up in Michigan, right off of Lake Huron. I spent alot of time watching these ships on the st Clair river and on the lakes. It’s so impressive what these captains can do. It’s under appreciated what the lakes handle as far a freighters go. Very exciting to see you touch on this subject.
48 years old is some age. I remember working on a 30+ year old gas tanker many years ago. She was dropping to bits. Your videos are excellent.
I have a home outside Cleveland and a small place in Marblehead, Ohio. I have seen the Sam Laud numerous times over the years and marvel at the comings and goings of these Lakers.
During the 90's and 2000's, I worked across the channel from Zug Island in Detroit. We would also get cement ships from Toronto and other ships carrying limestone. Spent many afternoons and nights having meals with the various crews on their ships. They were all great to be around.
I lived down in Windsor while I went to university and I loved seeing the freighters coming through the Detroit River going up to Sarnia. They were enormous! I couldn't believe how big those boats were. Love the Great Lakes so much. They're less like lakes and more like inland freshwater seas.
I live up in the Keweenaw and see the big freighters quite often, always cool to see them going by out on the lake, especially at night.
Fun fact, the oldest freighter on the great lakes right now is the SS Alpena. Yep, SS. As in, 'Steam Ship'. She was built in 1942. A bunch of the ships floating around on the lakes were built in the 50s and 60s. The E.M Ford had the longest career, launched in 1898 and sailed until at least 1996 before being scrapped in 2007!
Heck, there are still some WWII vintage boats on the lakes. The old SS American Victory, originally the Neshanic, a WWII fleet oiler and converted to a bulk carrier on the lake which was sadly scrapped in 2018. Was really cool to see a lake freighter with battle stars on her bridge. Her sister ship, Chiwawa, is still sailing the Great Lakes as the MV Lee A Tregurtha, but has been converted to diesel power.
Great video, I really enjoyed it. I dont know what it is but the lore and tradition of the Great Lakes "lakers" just draws me in. The cities may be rust belts but one has to admit that the the country between the two countries these lakes call home is spectacular. Thank you for sharing your story on your work journey out there, stay safe.
It’s weird seeing the places where I have watched ships come in and out hindered of times in Cleveland from the point of view of the ship. Keep up the good work! What you said at the beginning is very true, everybody forgets about the Great Lakes!
Those of us who live in the Great Lakes region don’t forget about them. They have quite the effect on our weather system and the resulting rain, snow, humidity, etc.
I’m from the downriver suburbs of Detroit and love the Great Lakes region, even with the issues that we have. ✋🏽Hello from Michigan!
Thanks Joe, I lived next to Cuyahoga river and watched the ships go up and down the river. Amazed when ships got thrusters and multiple rudders and no longer needed tugs.
Huge Kudos to your Music man! He does a super job of selecting the best music for each segment of your videos!
When you said 'coal,' I saw pellets. Coal goes into Cleveland by rail. You didn't load in 'bays,' you loaded into hatches. The use of steel wire rope 'cables' for mooring or shifting might have been worth mentioning. Mooring at Zug with your own deckhands and an end-loader dragging wires for you is about the worst thing we do. But then, a northeast blow at Marblehead is no picnic, either. All of that said, I liked the music you used.
Awesome video. I'm a Master mariner from Europe & during maritime high school we learned about all different types of ships in the world & that included Lakers. Since then they were always capturing my imagination & I always had a desire to sail on one of them, even if just for couple of weeks. My seaman career is now over & I probably won't ever see a Laker from up close, but this is the 2nd best thing
That's too bad you never got to sail the Great Lakes. They are vast & some of these Lakers are as big as aircraft carriers. In fact during WW2 a whole lot of the US Navy fliers were trained on the Lakes before being sent to the Pacific. Lakers had the top infrastructure removed & flat tops installed for airplanes. Of course a main Navy recruitment / training center was (& still is) located just North of Chicago. Interesting history all around. Ocean pilots will attest to our storms too.
I live in Cleveland and have a boat and have seen the Sam Laud many times! You refer to Cleveland as the rust belt, which it is, but it is still a great city and I love living here. Seeing the steel mill from the Cuyahoga is an amazing sight and one that very few get to see.
While on land recently I spent some time in Cleveland and I agree it is a great city.
As a lifelong Michigander I've been obsessed with freighters since I was about 12 (I'm 46). I knew the JW Westcott II - the mail boat - had been around a LONG time, as long as I've been a freighter buff, but I don't know it has been around since 1949. It even sank underneath the Ambassador Bridge in Detroit in 2001 killing 2 people. It was salvaged, repaired, and put back in service. I didn't know it was still around. This was a great video. Thanks so much.
I enjoy your videos very much. I have a sailboat that I keep in Racine, WI and I spend the Summer's sailing up and down the Wisconsin shoreline and across the Lake to the various ports on the Michigan side and I am always blown away when I encounter a big Laker either out on the Lake or coming in/out of ports. The captains are so skilled at moving those ships around not only without pilots but also without tugboats.
My Brother in Law & his Father were both Captains on the Great Lakes. Their sailing was from Minnesota to Cleveland for over 60 years.
I see you went under the 5 mile Mackinac Bridge.
Try going over the Bridge at Midnight on a Sunday, take the 1st Left for 150 miles to my USAF Base.
Cool video you done did.
Seeing this just makes me wanna leave the Netherlands and go to America and work there in the shipping business. Right now i work in the fuel bunkering in amsterdam on a 160 ton 100ft long bunkering vessel delivering fuel to inland barges, its a fun job but after a few years you just start to miss challenges
The Maritime Union has sailors from all over the World working on these ships. Some work the ships in Summer & do Carribean/ Southern ports in the winter. Check into it.
beautiful brother! Me and my autistic nephew follow these ship through the great lakes daily! I work at ArcelorMittal in hamilton ontario right at the bays edge and get to watch these alot of these beauties come thru everyday im there! Ive had my nephew from sault ste marie to windsor sarnia and our yearly trip up and down the welland canal.....hopefully soon ill get him on his dream trip....to Duluth to hear the lift bridge and the Paul R Tregurtha do a captain salute:)
Thank you for such a lovely wee video. Very very well presented. Growing up on the north east coast of Northern Ireland, where my late Dad was a Belfast Harbour pilot and ex master mariner. He often talked of transiting the Atlantic Ocean into the Great Lakes. I sometimes went on ships in the early 90’s and lots of pilot boat trips with him as a kid. I now live in Indiana and kind of land locked lol. Have made a couple of trips to the Great Lakes watching the freighters coming in. Funny you mentioned about the age of the vessels compared to ocean goers. I knew it was because of the salt water vs the fresh waters of the lakes. I love anything maritime and couldn’t go to sea due to defective color vision. As some mentioned, it gave reminders of the Edmund Fitzgerald and the price mariners pay to risk the world getting their cargo. Thanks for this, much appreciated 👏
I was on the USS Enterprise in the 80s and pulling in and out of San Francisco Bay (or any port) was always tricky. I used to sit along the Cuyahoga down in the Flats to watch those ships navigate the river and that made our maneuvers look like a cake walk.
Wow, again a great video. My father was a seaman on the great lakes. Had some great stories. A few years ago, had the opportunity to take my motorcycle and travel to the Great Lake ports. Kind of felt a connection. Thanks again. Keep them coming.
Hi Joe. I’m Joe from Delaware. Watch your videos all the time and they are better than the shows on cable . I can visualise being on some of the ships and very relaxing to kick back and watch.
Joe, Thank You, as always First Class, appreciate being able to go along on your travels…Fair Winds
Living in a Cleveland suburb, I've loved the Great Lakes and these boats my entire life! Thanks for a wonderful video :)
A great video and the music outstanding!! Thanks. 🙂🙂
Love your videos. A great storyteller. Thanks for taking us along.
I can tell you look fondly back on this time of your life. That period of time of innocence before experience that seems so difficult when your in it but at the same time is so sweet and fleeting. This video captures that. We all can relate in our own journey from innocence to experience. Just wonderfully done. I hope there is some new content in the future.
What a TREMENDOUS post! Detroit native here, and love everything about the Great Lakes........the Lakers near top of any list. Thanks so much for sharing. (Safe travels)..........
I'm a michigander and think this video is incredibly cool.. my son always asks what it's like and this was awesome to share..
Thanks for the journey and sorry you missed Lake Superior and Duluth. It's the best.
Great Lakes I love the video, when I drive up to Erie from a hill top on a good day you can see that blue lake and I never get tired of seeing it😊 By the way I liked listening to Robert Johnson music, Joe you must be an old soul 👍
Love my Great Lakes Freighters! I saw the SL passed the Lee A. Tregurtha. There’s a ship with some wartime history! You also have the Queen of the Lakes, the Paul R. Tregurtha, coming in at 1014’ in length. So much history on the Great Lakes shipping industry. Loved this video.
The Tregurtha is the real Queen of the Lakes. Biggest freighter out there
My dad's sister's husband and son were sailors on the Great Lakes. We used to go to the Aerial Bridge in Duluth to see them go out or come in to port. My Uncle make Captain on a 1000 footer just a short time before he had a heart attack and had to retire. He's buried on a hillside in Duluth overlooking Lake Superior. I wish I had been able to go on a trip with him. Thanks for this video.
man your narration is excellent. Great tone, articulation, etc
Last year I got to stick my feet in Lake Huron during a down day I had during a work trip. It was interesting to see this ships and people working on different boats out and I remember seeing one of the big bulk carriers doing a run towards somewhere way out in the distance.
The Great Lakes truly are a world of their own.
Great video! I used sail them lakers myself.... Brings back the memories of taking the swing chair down to those dolphins at Marblehead. The ships I was on were much older (pre-war era).... Steam powered winches and leaf style hatches..... Good stuff.
I worked on a great lakes freighter years ago. It was a great job: and yes, it was like stepping into a Rust Belt time machine. This was really well done and thanks for rekindling the memories. 😊
That was a great video. I'm from Cleveland originally and it brought back many memories of seeing the ships out on Lake Erie.
Your stuff is 100% top tier. Thank you.
Thanks so much Jared!
Great snapshot, especially when you said something like "it's like a surreal movie set". I sailed on the Northern Venture as a part time summer job. My late teens, in the late 70's. Running coal from Sandusky Ohio to Dofasco in Hamilton. It wasn't a self unloader. Watching them drop an articulating front loader into the hull the first time to move the last coal around in the hull was eye opening, then for afternoon break we'd watch "The Y & R". Great cooks, good solid people, a world of 180 degree variations almost every time you turned around.
I grew up watching these ships pass my backyard on the saginaw river. Was really cool watching this. Thank you.
Thank you for your vidéo! Un marin français qui a fait aussi la tournée des grands lacs en 1979 à bord du MS "François L.D", j'avais 18 ans. Nous venions charger du blé au port de Duluth dans le lac supérieur, pour l'Europe. Merci à vous pour votre vidéo. Amicalement. Daniel.
Those lakers can live a long life. Arthur M Anderson is in her 70s and still going strong
I’ve seen the Sam laud on ship cams across the lakes. My dream job is on these freighters. Either that or welding and I’d rather tell my grand kids I was a sailor welder lol. thanks for the honesty Joe. Even during the hard times like Nova Scotia. I’m referring to (16 days stuck at anchor.) I just want to do something more important than throwing bags of feed for tractor supply. Keep up the good work. You have been an inspiration.
Joe, this possibly one of the best audio/visual vlogs I've ever encountered (including PBS). You need to enter it. Looks like you didn't go through the canal at Sturgeon Bay (Door County, WI). It's a favorite for many aboard the working behemoths. Bay Ship is also located in Sturgeon Bay, so as a resident there I've seen many come in for Winter and leave in Spring. You'd find friendly folks who stand along the canal sides welcoming in our friends with smiles, waves and car horns. It's a little sad to see departure in Spring but exciting to be a part of it! Your voice inflection is perfect, by the way! Make more!
That was so amazing. the Great Lakes are so amazing.
@Joe Franca, good to see clips back again live (i was watching in catch-up mode before).
This time last year i was caring for my Mum in her final months before she passed away and things were crazy, everything was upside down. Your 15minutes clips (taken in sections when I could often in the small hours) gave me an escape to somewhere i couldn’t be, so many thanks for that as it was a comfort.
4:56 you guys are going past my work. I get that scenery everyday plus I was watching you guys come on through.
I grew up in Ohio and remember seeing freighters on the Maumee River. It was interesting to see the life of a laker. Thanks for the video!
Beautiful editing, footage and commentary. It's amazing to see people with such a love for their line of work. Working as a contract pilot and being on the road a lot I can identify with many aspects of your videos. Thanks for sharing the experience
Welcome back Joe!
I was with a group of friends down along the Cuyahoga River in a restaurant eating a stake dinner 🍽 and to look up and see the bow of the ship 🚢 passing the restaurant's window and the steel wall that followed. It kept coming and coming then finally the stern passed. Great 👍 dinner 🍽 entertainment!!!
BTW, The stake was EXELENT!!!
Welcome back.
Richard Bause Cooperstown and Charlotte Valley RR.
Thanks for posting this, Joe. On this side of the Atlantic we know very little of the mariner's life on the Great Lakes so this was very informative and interesting. Great work on the editing, music and voice-over.
Wow!!! A rush of memories. I was born in Cleveland. One evening, on a dinner cruise, we passed a docked ship on the Cuyahoga River. The ship's crew were leaning over the rail. "That's what I want to do...go to sea" That was the beginning of my maritime career. Never worked The Lakes. 200 ton, LA/LB, Gulf of Mexico, both ends. Having to row shipmates to shore...never. I ran the contracted crew boats, taking crew to shore.
You mentioned the skill of the Laker captains. I saw a video. Phenomenal!! I know some of the "old heads" would boast of a successful, tricky and intricate maneuver to dock and undock while drunk. 😮😅
Award worthy prduction....great video. Not something I'd do but I love learning about what you and admire those who do it...Be safe...Love the Vids....
As A resident of Michigan, I am never far from these Lakers & have been most of my life. They are in your blood, just part of the DNA!! PRETTY HARD FOR OTHER FOLKS TO UNDERSTAND. HISTORY, TRADITION, FOLKLORE, A NECESSITY FOR THE Nation.
Great video! You’ve got a knack for storytelling
Fascinating. When i retired, id sit in a park on the Detroit river with a coffee and donut and watch the lakers go by...never got tired of it. And id often wonder what it would be like if i werent so old to head out on one of those ships. Great video.
I’m in awe of you. I’m 66 and on disability. Worked so many different jobs when I was young. I can’t believe I didn’t get into working on the Lakers and sailing around on the Great Lakes. Would have been awesome!!!!! You are a fortunate and blessed man. Thanx for letting me tag along.👍🇺🇸❤️
With you, I saw a different life, work at sea and a lot of interesting things. Thanks, bro! We are waiting for big videos.
I was lucky enough to come across Joe pretty much from the get go. He's pretty damn good at this stuff. Like the rest of us I can't get enough. Thanks Joe.
I did 10 years in the British Merchant Navy and often wondered how other nations merchant fleets operated,thanks for the insight in how things are done in America.
Man what an awesome video! Awesome glimpse into what they do day in and day out. Always have been fascinated with these ships even when I was a kid watching barges come down the Delaware River. These ships and railroads are my two things I will geek over for hours.
It was a pleasure to watch this video with the old and honest machinery. Thank you!
So happy to see a Great Lakes video. Each of them has it own character with rust belt towns and glittering metropolises dotted across their shores
Agreed with your description and hope this video got that across.
Wow what a video fantastic music as well that's a famous ship on the great lakes
Joe, Toledo Docks coal and ore pier are manned by Longshoremen. Not sure if you loaded or offloaded there. It’s a CSX Railroad Terminal but the employees are members of a Longshoremen Union.