โMay-24-2013 12:24 PM
โJun-01-2013 09:28 PM
Canadian Rainbirds wrote:
....
These ferries don't have a lot of crossings; The Coho has only one in the winter, 2 spring and fall and three (from each side) in the summer.
โJun-01-2013 12:11 PM
โMay-31-2013 09:57 AM
frankdamp wrote:
We went through Burlington on SR-20 on Wednesday and will be doing it again today. Our RV has been in repair at JR's in Sedro-Woolley (new fridge). I was expecting a lot of grief at the junction between I-5 and SR-20, but it was quite normal - no more congestion than usual.
WA-DOT has revised its detour to go off the freeway just between exits 227 (College Way) and 229 (George Hopper Road). They have re-programmed the traffic-light controllers to give the NB traffic making the left turn from College Way to Burlington Boulevard higher priority. We haven't gone that far south, so haven't seen the back-ups directly.
โMay-31-2013 08:23 AM
bigred1cav wrote:robatthelake wrote:
There will be a clearly marked Detour! Yes it will add some time to Your trip!
don't sweat it!
Rob: How do you take your bus from the Island to the mainland? What Ferry terminal. To Anacortes looks damn expensive.
โMay-31-2013 07:42 AM
โMay-30-2013 10:16 PM
โMay-30-2013 05:11 PM
bigred1cav wrote:robatthelake wrote:
There will be a clearly marked Detour! Yes it will add some time to Your trip!
don't sweat it!
Rob: How do you take your bus from the Island to the mainland? What Ferry terminal. To Anacortes looks damn expensive.
โMay-27-2013 03:09 PM
J-Rooster wrote:
The Kitsap Sun reported today that the Washington State DOT found a temporary span and the I-5 bridge should reopen around June 15th according to Gov. Jay Inslee. The Washington State Patrol said that the Canadian Trucker had been hauling oversize loads thru there for 20 years with the proper permits and a pilot car. Oversize loads have to cross that bridge in the center most lane for the proper clearance. This time the trucker went thru in the far right lane, and there was not enough clearance in the far right lane. This was also in the Kitsap Sun a few days ago.
โMay-27-2013 03:09 PM
โMay-27-2013 01:22 PM
n7bsn wrote:Jarlaxle wrote:
Hmm...here's a question: why not see if the Corps of Engineers can put a temporary floating bridge (as used my the military to cross a river) up to replace the collapsed span until it can be rebuilt?
Trust me, Washington state knows floating bridges. They have built five (and sank two). I-90 crosses Lake Washington on one, as does Wash-520, Wash 104 crosses Hood Canal (a Fjord off Puget Sound).
Part of the first Hood Canal bridge sank 30 odd years ago, the engineers wanted to add generators as back-up power for the sump pumps. The pencil pushers in Olympia decided that the bridge didn't loose power often enough. Forgetting that it usually lost power in major storms, when wind was blowing waves over the bridge and rain added even more water...
In 1990 the I-90 bridge was being rebuilt. The pencil pushers in Olympia decided to save money by using the pontoons to capture the waste water from demolition (it was classed a hazardous waster). That worked fine until there was another major storm, adding waves and rain to the pontoons (which couldn't be pumped out, due to the "waste").
โMay-27-2013 10:35 AM
Jarlaxle wrote:
Hmm...here's a question: why not see if the Corps of Engineers can put a temporary floating bridge (as used my the military to cross a river) up to replace the collapsed span until it can be rebuilt?
โMay-27-2013 09:27 AM
Jarlaxle wrote:
Hmm...here's a question: why not see if the Corps of Engineers can put a temporary floating bridge (as used my the military to cross a river) up to replace the collapsed span until it can be rebuilt?
โMay-27-2013 09:25 AM
โMay-27-2013 09:24 AM
Jarlaxle wrote:
Hmm...here's a question: why not see if the Corps of Engineers can put a temporary floating bridge (as used my the military to cross a river) up to replace the collapsed span until it can be rebuilt?