Okay, since the question has been asked and answered…
I know there is a population of Beluga whales that live in the St. Lawrence seaway. Do they ever make it to Lake Erie? Or even past the falls? Or does there tolerance for fresh water end in the brackish seaway?
:eek:
Damn you.
My partner will sneak up behind me and do the Jaws theme then pinch my neck. She knows all the hairs on my body will stand on end. Cruel woman.
I blame Jaws for my irrational fear, btw.
1,300 is as the crow flys, 1,750 as the shark swims?
BTW, I’ve lived all my life on a great lake, am descended from commercial fishermen on the great lakes, and never heard tell of a shark in the lakes.
Giant sturgeon, yes.
Kraken, maybe. Great Uncle Pilinixi may have been having us on.
Fur bearing whales, perhaps. But Uncle Harko, who put out that claim, also stated that in the early days there were elephants in the local woods, and that Grover Cleveland had once stopped by to get some trout.
The Welland has never been limited to Canadian traffic. Since the opening of the Seaway in 1959, it has been an international waterway that has allowed vessels of all nations to reach as far inland as Chicago, Duluth, and Thunder Bay. Prior to its opening, it accommodated traffic from both Canada and the U.S.
However, prior to the opening of the St. Lawrence, the only significant ports on Lake Ontario were in Ontario and while there was some traffic that made its way to Lake Ontario entrance to the New York State Canal System (formerly the New York State Barge Canal and originally the Erie Canal), the majority of traffic for that system from the upper lakes (even to Rochester) went to the Lake Erie entrance of that system, so the pre-1959 traffic on the Welland was heavily tilted toward Canadian Traffic.
Subsequent to 1971, all U.S. lake freighters have been standardized at lengths of either 760’ or 1,000’ and are unable to pass through the Locks on the St. Lawrence that built to handle ships up to 730’ long. This action was taken in recognition of the fact that the overwhelming number of U.S. lakers never went farther east than Lake Erie, making Buffalo and Lackawana their easternmost terminus and so they could get better scale of economy being built larger to take advantage of the longer locks at the Soo. In contrast, Canadian lakers were standardized at 730’ and routinely take ore to the mills of eastern Quebec and the granaries and international ports downriver from Quebec city.
My remarks were intended to indicate the principal use of the Welland prior to 1959 and not intended to imply that Canada held it exclusively for Canadian traffic.
When you are out in the water, and your legs are just dangling underneath you, and you are just hanging there, bobbing up and down …just floating in the water with your legs dangling , you will probably react the same whether a piece of seaweed or a Great White Shark brushes past your foot.
I react that way and I’ve never gone for a swim in the ocean.
To me, the concept of swimming in the ocean is tantamount to tieing me up with a rope, throwing me off of a boat and using me as chum. Not gonna happen.
I remember reading a newspaper story about a teenaged girl who required psychiatric (sp?) help due to that movie. She was completely unable to enter any body of water larger than a bathtub without experiencing disabling panic attacks. She was a life long resident of Kansas.