It’s taken awhile to figure out our next leg of the Great Loop, but as of now we plan to cruise the Illinois Waterway this summer. More below.
Much of my attention this fall and winter was focused on cleaning out and selling my Mom’s house in Madison, WI. I spent my entire childhood there and my parents owned it for 60 years. Dad passed away in 2022, then Mom moved to the Twin Cities in early 2024, so the house and its decades of accumulated possessions sat vacant. The clean-out was a ton of work, and probably not an unfamiliar story to those who have had parents who never threw anything away. We were extremely fortunate to find a buyer that we knew—a childhood friend who wanted to move back into the neighborhood—and executed an amicable and straightforward for-sale-by-owner transaction. Selling a house without a realtor was something that I’ve always been curious about and I was totally surprised at how easy it was. Besides avoiding a big sales commission, eliminating real estate agents on both sides simplified negotiations, since we communicated directly with the buyer. Your mileage may vary, but we had a great experience and would do it again.
Now that this important and time-consuming task was in the rearview mirror and winter dragged on, it was time to think about boating again. January in Minnesota was the warmest on record, with little snow. Fun fact: Parts of Louisiana and Florida received more snow than the Twin Cities. February, however, was colder than usual, with subzero Fahrenheit lows for about half of the month. Recently, temperatures have been in the 40s and low 50s, giving hope for spring and a chance to go check on Dragonfly, still under its winter tarp.
If you missed our February 8 post, we don’t intend to continue cruising the Florida Gulf Coast aboard Dragonfly, given time, money and interest level constraints. I’ve crossed the Gulf of Mexico twice aboard another vessel and am counting that towards Great Loop completion. Feb 8, 2025: Gulf Crossings. Editor’s Note: We will not be referring to this body of water as the Gulf of America. The original name pre-dates our country, which was named after a foreigner anyway. Bonus Question: Who was America’s namesake? (Answer at end of post) Where will it end? I feel for the people of California, Colorado, Florida, Montana and Nevada, with Spanish-named states, not to mention New Mexicans, who must be worried that their state’s name is no longer acceptable. But I digress.
We’re planning to continue our Loop in segments, with shorter legs of one month or less. This June, we expect to cruise the Illinois Waterway from Lake Michigan to the Mississippi River. This is the last of our powerboat legs, due to the number of low bridges in Chicago, including a fixed bridge at 19 feet that all Loopers must get under to complete the route. We'll leave the mast and sails at home again, hopefully for the last time, with the intent of sailing the remaining portions on the Great Lakes and Atlantic Coast.
The Illinois Waterway consists of the Chicago, Des Plaines and Illinois Rivers, eight locks and runs 336 miles from Chicago to Grafton, IL, where it meets the Mississippi River just north of St. Louis. French-Canadian explorer Louis Joliet first suggested connecting Lake Michigan to the Mississippi in the late 1600s by eliminating the portage between the Chicago and Des Plaines Rivers. It wasn’t until 1848 that the Illinois and Michigan (I&M) Canal was completed connecting the Chicago River to the Illinois, bypassing the Des Plaines, which was too shallow during most of the year to carry cargo.
In the 1820s, Chicago was a tiny hamlet with a few dozen homes and a population of about 200 people. With the completion of the I&M Canal, the new water route between the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River transformed Chicago into one of the world’s fastest growing cities, ballooning to more than half a million people by the end of the 19th century. The rapid growth created many problems, including turning the Chicago River into an open sewer that flowed into Lake Michigan, the source of the city’s drinking water. On January 1, 1900, the direction of the river was reversed, sending Chicago’s waste down the Illinois River. There was significant opposition to this project from communities along the Illinois and Mississippi Rivers, who weren’t in favor of human and industrial waste heading their way. As legal challenges were threatening, Chicago Sanitary Division workers blasted open the final dam in the dead of night on New Year’s Day to start the river flowing south before a lawsuit could prevent it.
Our cruise down the Illinois Waterway should only take about two weeks, depending on weather, river levels and barge traffic at the locks. There are two options to enter the waterway from Lake Michigan—one through downtown Chicago and the other about 15 miles south in Calumet, IL. Vessels over 17 feet in height must take the southern route, which is more industrial, but has fewer bridges. We plan to travel relatively early in the boating season, when water levels are higher, most other Loopers are north and east of here and all of the locks are working. The waterway was closed to navigation for significant portions of the 2020 and 2023 seasons due to scheduled maintenance at multiple locks. This was a factor in our decision to begin our Loop on the Upper Mississippi River in 2023, as three of eight locks on the Illinois River were closed June-September, creating a backup of commercial vessels and more than 280 Looper boats waiting to get downriver. Currently, the Brandon Road Lock is only open on weekends, and the Lockport Lock is completely closed for repairs, but both should be fully operational by the end of March, and no other lock maintenance is scheduled for 2025. Fingers crossed…
Bonus Question Answer: The Americas were named after Amerigo Vespucci, an Italian explorer, navigator and mapmaker. A contemporary and friend of Christopher Columbus (who never got closer than the Bahamas), Vespucci charted the South American coastline from 1499-1501 and was the first European to correctly identify that the land mass he was mapping was not the east coast of Asia as hoped but a different continent entirely, publishing his findings in a pamphlet titled “Mundus Novus,” (New World). In 1507, a German cartographer honored Vespucci’s discovery on a world map, labeling these new continents “America,” a Latinized version of his name. Historians believe that this new map didn’t reach Spain, Vespucci’s adopted home, until after his 1512 death and he likely never knew of the tribute and lasting fame that had been bestowed upon him.