Thomas Morton talks with Captain John Cadamuro on the latest episode of 'BALLS DEEP'
In the second episode of our new VICELAND show, BALLS DEEP, host Thomas Morton embeds with the hardworking men and women of Miller's Launch, a tug and barge company based out of Staten Island that has been serving the Port of New York and New Jersey since 1977.Whether it's removing old ship wrecks, cleaning up oil spills, moving barges back and forth in the harbor, or offering production assistance and props for film and TV, the folks at Miller's Launch eat, sleep, and breathe tugs. However, there are real safety risks associated with working this job as we learned after speaking to some Miller's Launch employees about the worst injuries they've ever seen or experienced on the job.Mike "Mikey" Karlick, 57, DeckhandVICE: How long have you been working on the tugs?
About ten years.What is the sort of worst injury you've had or seen happen out on the job?
Oh, I ruined my manicure! That's how I refer to the time I lost my fingers. I had my fingers ripped off. I got them caught under a line. I stood there and watched the line come tight, rip them off, and then I picked them up, put them in my pocket, brought them to the hospital, and they sewed them back on.When you put a line up [to hold a boat steady] and you tie it to the bow of the boat and you twist on it, it becomes rock solid. A 600-pound fat person could walk on it, it's that tight. And my fingers got caught underneath the line, and it just ripped them right off.
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I've been with Miller on and off since 2000. I've been working on boats since I was a kid, probably since I was four years old.
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I really have to think about injuries because we're very careful under my command. My worst injury was when I fell out of a crane, on a barge, on a job we were doing. I missed the bottom step on the little crane, and I fell four feet down on my back. My hard hat popped off, and my shoes came off.I banged my head pretty badly, and it only made my back injuries that I already have worse—a herniated disk, compressed vertebrae, old age. I was recently diagnosed with TMB. Apparently, it gets worse, as you age—it's called, "Too Many Birthdays."I saw one particular incident on the job; we were on a spud wire, which is a big piece of steel pipe that goes in and out of the river bottom. It's operated by a big winch. The winch wire backlashed when [the deckhand Mike Karlick] was working, trying to straighten out the wire, and he got hit in the face with it, and it knocked a tooth out.We work our stern winch with what's called a "soft line"—that's the light blue line we pull out of the back of the boat to tie to a barge to secure it. That winch has about 40,000 pounds of line pull, pressure, or torque on it when it comes tight. When that line snaps, it recoils, and as it recoils, it can cut you in half. It can take your leg off. One particular story I heard was somewhere near New York Harbor. There was a mate on deck going out to tighten a line on what's called a capstan. A capstan is a vertical winch that you can put your line around three or four times to secure it tightly alongside your tow. Apparently, this fellow got tangled up between the capstan and the soft line and crushed himself to death.
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I've been in the towing and marine business for close to 35 years.What is the worst injury you've ever seen or experienced on the job?
Actually more often, we're called to other people's incidents and accidents—everything from fire to drownings to running aground to oil spills. Just within the last two weeks alone, a tugboat was towing a 150-ton crane up the coast. They wanted to go into Atlantic City, and the captain who was trying to tow the barge and make way through the inlet misinterpreted what he saw on his radar and went on the wrong side of the jetty. He basically ran his boat right up onto the beach, and he was towing a crane barge behind him. The crane barge crashed and wound up on the other side of the jetty. Luckily, it was just damages. Nobody got hurt.Another time a 95-foot fishing tour ran aground going through the Rockaways in New York. The ship lost its main engine and was in distress and was being pushed up on the beach, so the Coast Guard came out to try and give him a hand. But the Coast Guard got in a lot of trouble and wound up rolling over the boat, capsizing with five people on board. Luckily, they all got out, and they swam to shore. We then got the job to tow the Coast Guard boat to safety and then work on the salvage effort to remove all the fuel and water that was on board the fishing boat—some 15,000 gallons.
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