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EUR 80 - 250 Alter Hotel
Alter Hotel is in the heart of Barge, next to Barge Station. Once a textile factory, this design hotel now offers contemporary accommodation with free… More | ||||||
A barge is a flat-bottomed boat, built mainly for river and canal transport of heavy goods. Most barges are not self-propelled and need to be moved by tugboats towing or towboats pushing them. Barges on canals (towed by draft animals on an adjacent towpath) contended with the railway in the early industrial revolution but history of the British canal system|were outcompeted in the carriage of high value items due to the higher speed, falling costs, and route flexibility of rail transport.
Self propelled barges may be used as such when traveling downstream or upstream in placid waters and operated as an unpowered barge with the assistance of a tugboat when traveling upstream in faster waters.
Types of barges:
On the Canals of the United Kingdom|UK canal system, the term barge is used to describe a boat wider than a narrowboat.
The people who move barges are often known as lightermen.
In the U.S. deckhands perform the labor and are supervised by a leadman and or the mate. The Captain and Pilot steer the towboat. The towboat pushes one or more barges that are held together with rigging and is called collectively the tow. The crew live aboard the towboat as it travels along the inland river system and or the intracoastal waterways. These towboats travel between ports and are also called line haul boats.
Poles are used on barges to fend off the barge as it nears other vessels or a wharf, often called pike poles, and on shallow canals for example in the UK long punt (boat) | punt poles are used to manoeuvre or propel the barge.
Both are probably derived from a Greek baris "Egyptian boat", ultimately from m Coptic language|Coptic bari "small boat."
By extension, the term "embark" literally means to board the kind of boat called a "barque".
The long poles used to manoeuvre or propel a barge have given rise to the saying, "I wouldn't touch that (subject/thing) with a barge pole." This is a variation on the phrase "I wouldn't touch that with a (insert length) pole." It appears that the association with barge poles came after the phrase was in use. Modern usage uses a ten foot pole, but the earliest instances in print involve a forty foot pole, which is improbably long for operating a barge.
This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Barge". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
Barracks barge (living quarters)
Company barge
Dry bulk cargo barge (coal, rock, grain, etc.)
Hopper barge
Jackup barge
Lighter (barge)|Lighter, Dumb steel lighter
Liquid cargo barge (fresh water, finished petroleum products)
Oil barge, Dumb steel oil barge
Pleasure barge- providing a floating bedroom, dance floor, or viewing platform
barge slip)
Royal barge (ceremonial) (e.g. Thailand's_Royal_Barge_Procession|Thailand's Royal Barges)
Row barge
Sand barge
Severn trow
Vehicular barge, often used to transport vehicles to natural shorelines such as Beach|beaches
Ware barge
West country bargeEtymology
Barge is attested from 1300, from Old French barge, from Vulgar Latin barga. The word originally could refer to any small boat, the modern meaning arose around 1480.
barque|Bark "small ship" is attested from 1420, from Old French barque, from Vulgar Latin barca (400 AD). The more precise meaning "three-masted ship" arose in the 17th century, and often takes the French spelling for disambiguation.See also
Narrowboat
Thames sailing barge
Theodore TugboatExternal links
Living aboard ex-commercial barges or any other type of broad-beam inland waterways craft
news page, which lists notable barge shipments through the port.
, Associated Press, Tuesday June 27, 2006