Monday, December 19, 2016

Charles River Charting project press in the Globe

Nice write-up in the Globe this weekend about the Charting project.  the link is below and the text is copied for those of you without a Globe subscription.  the text does not include the nice Charles River history and photos that accomplanied the story.  The story also links to a page of the chart at the bottom, and also to teh CRAB website which details the project.  You can find that at CRAB - Charles River Alliance of Boaters  



Many thanks to Carl Zimba and to the MIT Seagrant program for getting this project done and to all of the contributors, large and small, who have helped to fund the project.





 The Charles River Basin — at least, the one we recognize — was born on Oct. 20, 1908.
Before then, much of the waterway between Boston and Cambridge was an estuary, with expansive, foul-smelling mud flats emerging at low tide. But on that Tuesday more than a century ago, workers on the first dam at the mouth of the Charles lowered 84 massive timber gates into the water, creating the placid, lake-like river so familiar today.
Now, for the first time since it was submerged, the riverbed is coming back into view, this time in vivid digital detail. A Massachusetts Institute of Technology engineer and a longtime sailor and scientist have collaborated to create the most thorough, accurate chart of the lower Charles yet. It promises to become a foundational tool of multiple efforts to study, navigate, and manage the increasingly crowded Charles.
"The Charles is now one of the busiest recreational rivers in the country, but I can tell you from personal experience: The data that's available out there is just not right," said Carl Zimba of the Charles River Alliance of Boaters, or CRAB, a scientist who has sailed on the river for decades. "The focus of our project was to generate hard data on the real depth of the river."
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The lack of such data was surprising to many. After all, the Charles is teeming with boaters and located between several large cities — hardly remote or unexplored territory.
MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
MIT's autonomous boat Remote Explorer IV bristled with antennas and sensors as it navigated the Charles River basin.
But the few existing charts of the river were approximate at best, Zimba said, cobbled together from dubious or obsolete data. So while ships in commercially navigable waters travel in channels marked with a standardized buoy system, recreational boaters on the Charles instead rely on experience, landmarks, and a complex "honor system" negotiated by various clubs and universities to avoid collisions and shallows.
The charting effort began in 2015, when a friend at the Head of the Charles Regatta asked Zimba for a chart to help place booms and buoys along the race course. Finding none of usable quality, he contacted a friend, Michael Sacarny, a research engineer at MIT's Sea Grant College developing technology for autonomous boats. Could one of the university's robot boats map the Charles?
Sacarny was game, and he commandeered MIT's 16-foot autonomous catamaran Rex. To the boat's suite of sophisticated cameras, lasers, and other sensors, he added a relatively ordinary gadget: a sonar fish-finder of the kind found in most outdoor-equipment stores.
With Sacarny and Zimba in a chase boat, Rex swept a portion of the Charles by MIT in a neat, lawnmower-like grid, pinging the bottom with sonar pulses from the fish-finder. The sonar data and GPS coordinates were loaded into map-making software that wove the raw numbers into a high-resolution chart.
"We intentionally used proven, off-the-shelf technology," Zimba said, "because it allows you to go back in five years, measure the same areas again, and know that you're comparing apples to apples."
Encouraged, Sacarny and Zimba drummed up money to fund a full-scale survey of the 9.5-mile section of the lower Charles to the Watertown dam.
As they moved into the shallower, narrower waters upriver, however, the team had to dock Rex in favor of a conventional motor boat. The autonomous ship struggled to navigate tight quarters, and its safety system killed the engines whenever rowers and other boaters got too close — which was often.
Over the following months, the two took numerous trips, squeezing the simple sonar-and-GPS rig into every cove along the way. They had to adjust depth readings to account for changes in the water level because of rain or releases by the dam.
The chart, now nearly finished, hints at the Charles's past: Trenches of deeper water trace the narrower river channel that existed before the 1908 damming. The mud flats that once surrounded that channel, meanwhile, show up as large plateaus of uniform shallowness. And underneath the Harvard Bridge, the chart reveals a channel where a swing span once rotated to allow larger ships to pass; it was replaced with a fixed span in 1924.
The map also spotlights areas of potential concern, including a shallow shelf of sediment near the Watertown Yacht Club. Another mound, where the Muddy River joins the Charles near Kenmore Square, is just 18 inches under the surface, a hazard to all but the smallest boats. Follow-up studies will measure how quickly the sandy muck is piling up.
"You can get out and stand on it," Zimba said. "It's a problem."
A second "side-scan" sonar unit recorded fuzzy images of objects under the water, including tires, pilings of wrecked piers, and a tangle of bent pipes, probably the remnants of a defunct "bubbler" system the state installed decades ago in an attempt to oxygenate the fetid waters.
Peering at the hidden underwater world is "almost magical," Sacarny said. "There are undoubtedly stories that go along with all these things."
The team plans to publish its chart in several formats, including as a printed booklet, an interactive digital chart, and a format for Google Maps and Google Earth.
Before the MIT-CRAB project, the most recent chart was published in 2000 by the United States Geological Survey as part of a pollution study. However, it is outdated and imprecise: Researchers videotaped the screen of a fish-finder and transcribed the depths by hand later. The 2000 version gives boaters only a rough picture of the bottom and is a static image, not an interactive chart.
Yet with the cleaned-up waters of the Charles drawing ever-larger numbers of boaters and tourists, river groups and state agencies badly need a good picture of the Charles's depths.
Last winter, for example, the state spent $800,000 dredging an accumulating sandbar near Watertown where boats were running aground. And with the Charles River Conservancy planning a swimming area near the Museum of Science, it will be crucial to understand how and where polluted muck at the bottom of the river moves over time.
"Once we have high-quality information everyone can get behind, instead of just anecdotes, then you can have a more rational discussion about, 'Now what do we do?' " Zimba said.
Conservancy president Renata von Tscharner said the new chart will make boating safer and boost efforts to study and use the river.
The new mapping data might also be useful to Northeastern University professor Ferdi Hellweger, who's working on a digital simulation of the river's flow. His software could be used to determine when swimming areas should close by predicting how bacteria and other pollutants travel through the Charles after heavy rain.
Boston Duck Tours, whose restored World War II-era amphibious vehicles take tourists on tours of the Charles, helped fund the charting project. Jim Healy, the company's safety officer, said the lack of a reliable chart forced him to take his own depth readings several years ago to check the routes his boats took and to find locations where a duck boat could exit the river in an emergency.
"The soundings I took couldn't possibly be as detailed," Healy said.
"The river's never been charted to the extent that they've done it. It's rather impressive."
 
 
Check out the CRAB website at www.charlesriverallianceofboaters.org

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Anderson BridgeTraffic Pattern Alert...all systems normal

Well isn't this something to be thankful for.l (see below). see the note from the State below.  I'm not sure if this means that work is done or not....they may still be buzzing around so continue to use caution . 

Happy Thanksgiving everyone.


On Wed, Nov 23, 2016 at 9:10 AM, Connelly, Roderick (DOT)
<Roderick.Connelly@dot.state.ma.us> wrote:

Good morning All,

The Boston barrel at the Anderson Bridge has been reopened.  All barrels at the bridge are now open.

Thanks,

Roderick M. Connelly III
Resident Engineer Anderson Memorial Bridge
Mass DOT District 6 Construction

Friday, November 18, 2016

Fw: (CRAB) What is Happening on the Charles.




On Friday, November 18, 2016 10:36 AM, CRAB via CRAB <CRAB@groupspaces.com> wrote:


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CRAB

This should be our last scheduled communication of the year.  Thank you to everyone who helped us communicate all the formal and informal events on the river, as well as unexpected hazards and happenings.  From now until, oh, March or so, we'll only be communicating on an as-needed basis.  If you have something coming up that you want to alert or invite the River to, just let us know.  If you're still on the water, use good judgement.  The smaller your boat, the more friends you should have near by.  Dress in layers.  And look out for each other.

Upcoming Events.

 Saturday, November 19, 2016
8:00AM - CBC timed scrimmmage (aka, the Row-off).  Races from Cambridge Boat Club (Eliot Bridge) to River St. Bridge and back using the right hand arches.  Be especially careful at the turning point.  Good luck to all racers.

 
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Thursday, November 10, 2016

Fw: (CRAB) What is Happening on the Charles.




On Thursday, November 10, 2016 1:34 PM, CRAB via CRAB <CRAB@groupspaces.com> wrote:


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CRAB

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 12
8AM to 1PM, Women's Foot of the Charles.  I think this one runs from MIT Rowing, above the Mass Ave Bridge to Newell boathouse, above Anderson Bridge.  But keep your eyes peeled in case they are using the Head of the Charles course.  Best spectator event of the year.  Go our and yell for novices.  It is amazing how much impact you can have.

10AM til Dark  College Sailing Atlantic Champs.
 Hosted by MIT, BU and Harvard and runs our of MIT sailing (downstream of Mass ave) on a trapazoid course.  36 sail boats.



SUNDAY NOVEMBER 13
8AM to 1PM, Men's Foot of the Charles.  I think this too runs from MIT Rowing, above the Mass Ave Bridge to  Newell boatous , above Anderson Bridge.  But keep your eyes peeled in case they are using the Head of the Charles course.  Also a great spectator event.  

10AM til 3PM College Sailing Atlantic Champs.  Hosted by MIT, BU and Harvard and runs out of MIT sailing (downstream of Mass ave) on a trapazoid course.  36 boats.



UPCOMING EVENTS

Saturday, November 19, 2016 
8am, CBC Timed Scrimmage (aka, the Rowoff).  Eliot Bridge to River St. and back, using right hand arches (except where inappropriate due to bridge construction), all combatants welcome.

 
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Wednesday, November 2, 2016

(CRAB) What is Happening on the Charles.




CRAB via CRAB <CRAB@groupspaces.com> wrote:


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CRAB

A friendly yet stern Rowing Traffic Pattern reminder about the Powerhouse bridges (and those are River and Western ONLY):  Center arches remail UPSTREAM ONLY from 5am to 1pm, then go back to BI-DIRECTIONAL  after 1pm.  This remains in effect until Thanksgiving.
One note about this....just because the center arches are dedicated upstream, boats should still TAKE CARE TO NOT CROSS THE CENTER LINE of the river.  And of course, keep your eyes peeled for power boaters as they use the center arches bi-directionally.

Upcoming Events.

Saturday, November 5, 2016
  • 8:30AM, BU/MIT/Harvard pairs head race, from Longfellow Bridge to the 2k finish (below the BU Rowing Boathouse),   Roughly 35 pairs expected.  Thanks to BU for the heads up.

  • 7AM Possible UBC race???? I don't have details on course.  Hopefully, this is coordinated with the event above.
Sunday, November 6, 2016 
  • 9AM, Headless Halloween Regatta.  HOCR finish line to CRI.
  • I'm also hearing rumors of a Weld scullers regatta?  If someone could supply course and race times, it would be appreciated.  If it is an interclub thing and others are not welcome, just let us know.  It is nice to warn folks when there is an event to avoid.
Saturday, November 12, 2016
9AM, Women's Foot of the Charles.  If someone could supply course and specific race times, it would be appreciated.
10AM til dark, College Sailing Atlantic Coast Champs, hosted by MIT, BU and Harvard sailing, from the MIT sailing pavillion.  36 boats on a trapazoid course.
 
Sunday, November 13, 2016
9AM, Men's Foot of the Charles.  If someone could supply course and specific race times, it would be appreciated.
10AM til 3pm, College Sailing Atlantic Coast Champs, hosted by MIT, BU and Harvard sailing, from the MIT sailing pavillion.  36 boats on a trapazoid course.
 
Saturday, November 19, 2016
I'm hearing rumors of a possible CBC loop race (thank you CBC for sending those rumors my way).  If someone could supply course and race times, it would be appreciated.  If it is an interclub things, and others are not welcome, just let us know.  It is nice when we can tell folks how to avoid an event.

Did we miss something?  email us at CharlesRiverAllianceofBoaters@gmail.com
 
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Thursday, October 27, 2016

Traffic Pattern Alert! Anderson Bridge

see the note below from the State.



On Thursday, October 27, 2016 1:46 PM, "Connelly, Roderick (DOT)" <Roderick.Connelly@dot.state.ma.us> wrote:


Good Afternoon All,
On Monday the 31st the contractor at the Anderson Bridge will be closing the Boston Side barrel.  The center and Cambridge barrels will remain open.
Thanks,
Roderick M. Connelly III
Resident Engineer Anderson Memorial Bridge
Mass DOT District 6 Construction


Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Fw: (CRAB) What is Happening on the Charles.

On Wednesday, October 26, 2016 1:55 PM, CRAB via CRAB <CRAB@groupspaces.com> wrote:




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CRAB

Well, fall has finally come to the Charles River, on the calendar and in the weather reports.  Some important tips for fall rowing:
  • Sailors are still out.  use caution in the basin. 
  • you still aren't the only rowers out there.  Keep your eyes open for other shells. 
  • lights are not optional if you are rowing anywhere near down/dusk/dark.  buy a good set and use them.  So says the Coast Guard and everyone else.
  • paint your blades.  really.  so says the State Police and everyone else.
  • As it gets colder, get a buddy.  I know, I know, the water is MUCH warmer now than in March, but you can still get into trouble pretty quickly.
  • dress in layers, bright colors are helpful to other boats looking for you.

Upcoming Events.

Sunday, November 6, 2016 
  • 9AM, Headless Halloween Regatta.  HOCR finish line to CRI.
  • I'm also hearing rumors of a Weld scullers regatta?  If someone could supply course and race times, it would be appreciated.  If it is an interclub thing and others are not welcome, just let us know.  It is nice to warn folks when there is an event to avoid.
Saturday, November 12, 2016
9AM, Women's Foot of the Charles.  If someone could supply course and specific race times, it would be appreciated.
 
Sunday, November 13, 2016
9AM, Men's Foot of the Charles.  If someone could supply course and specific race times, it would be appreciated.
 
Saturday, November 19, 2016
I'm hearing rumors of a possible CBC loop race (thank you CBC for sending those rumors my way).  If someone could supply course and race times, it would be appreciated.  If it is an interclub things, and others are not welcome, just let us know.  It is nice when we can tell folks how to avoid an event.


 
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Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Fw: (CRAB) What is Happening on the Charles.






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CRAB

So, the rowers of the world are all consumed with Head of the Charles this weekend, and we will be as well since the prep needs a little focus.
Folks:  now is not the time to be inventive with the traffic pattern.  Everyone on their best behavior, right?  It is not race day until Saturday, so stay will on your side of the river, and be kind to slower boats.
Got a visitor launching from your club this week?  Even if they have they have raced internationally and on the world or olympic stage/ have rowed longer than you have been alive/ have rowed the Head of the Charles since year one - unless they row here daily, they don't know that we care which arch they use, that cutting corners is a bad idea, and lights are not optional in the dark.  Please, take a minute (or 5!) to explain the traffic pattern.  Don't want to try to explain the Mass Ave bridge/Union Lane/MIT lane to them?  Tell them they have to spin at the HOCR start.  

One more note on lights.  Please make it very clear to your visitors that if their lights die, they return immediately to dock.  They don't finish their piece....like the sculler this morning....who almost got run over by an eight and still ignored the coach telling him he wasn't visible.

If they are your guest, you are in charge.
Let's all be a little CRABby and look out for each other.


 
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Friday, October 14, 2016

Fw: (CRAB) What is Happening on the Charles!

 On Friday, October 14, 2016 2:54 PM, CRAB via CRAB <CRAB@groupspaces.com> wrote:




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CRAB

Quick and dirty email this week.  Time to be very cooperative as the river heats up for the big, fall events.  Lets all help each other out there....

Event Calendar

 Saturday, October 15, 2016
7:00AM to 8:15AM,  Heads of the Kevin III.  Head of the Charles course (BU Rowing Boathouse to the shiney, new finish line marker, about 10 strokes above the wooden boardwalk at Herter Park), 3rd and largest installment of this best 2 of 3 event.  Please stay way off the course while this events runs a whole lot of people up the river - and then you will have far lest people to contend with.  Please, no jumping in - it screws up the timing.


Sunday, October 16, 2016
Noon to 1:15PM, Head of the Quinnobequin Youth Single Sculling Regatta (Eliot Bridge to North Beacon St. Bridge).  Everyone is asked to stay off the course as 150 kids, as young as 11, race singles.  Lots of launches on hand but still, you do not want to be in the middle of this event, which moves off the line fairly quickly.  Be advised, it gets very messy from about 11:15 AM on in the warm up area (Anderson Bridge to Eliot Bridge), and after the race, kids pull in to CRI for refreshments and awards, then many of them row back to boathouses as far away as Riverside.  Read: use caution if you're on the water.  This is a great spectator event too, so head to a bridge and cheer the kids on...
Next Weekend (Oct. 22, 23)
All Day, both Days, Head of the Charles Regatta aka:  Rower Christmas.  Need we say more.  Thousands of rowers from all over the world, including everyone's 'old country' and many of the local rowers you have come to know and love, all vying to put on their podium pants.  Come join the fun.
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