When I was headed north on MS-25 to Pickwick Landing Dam, I noticed a sign at a bridge indicating the bridge crossed the Tennessee-TombigBee Waterway. I recognized that as the canal between the Tennessee River and a river that goes to the Gulf of Mexico. Soon after I crossed the bridge, I noticed a sign for a boat ramp, so I went down the road to the ramp to check out the view. When I arrived by the river, there was a semi-truck crossing the bridge with a regular trailer. The trailer looking small made me appreciate how big the steel girders were. I waited for another truck to cross to catch a photo with the truck providing scale. Unfortunately, the next three trucks were empty log trucks. But the cab provides some scale. And the girders are even deeper as it crosses the piers. The size of these girders is why I'm doing yet another steel girder bridge.
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The long span over land on the south end must be for floods otherwise they would have just made the embankment on that side longer.
I'm surprised that a canal dug across a divide between the Tennessee River and the Gulf of Mexico would be prone to significant flooding. But this clearance gauge painted on a pier indicates that the river level can be an issue. Note that we were visiting when the Tennessee and Perl Rivers were flooding. Yet this water level seems well within the banks of the canal.
As I left the boat ramp road, I took a photo of the sign marking the facility.
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Scruggs Bridge Boat Storage, cropped |
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