| Ports  along the lower Columbia and Willamette Rivers in Oregon and    Washington will soon get more help as venerable Shaver Transportation    celebrates the christening of a brand new, 5,360-HP combination ship  assist   tug. To be commissioned the Sommer S in a  ceremony on the banks   of the Willamette River later this month, the  tug, built by Portland's   Diversified Marine, is a memorial to Sommer  Shaver, one of the company’s   principals who passed away ten years ago  at the age of 43. The M/V   Sommer S is a confident stride into the future of ship assist in the   area. “We  designed this boat to be Columbia River specific,” says Steve   Shaver,  President of Shaver Transportation. Dubbed the Columbia class, the    new boat is the first in a new series of tug designs by the firm, and  will be   the most powerful tug in Shaver’s fleet. History
Portland,  Oregon’s Shaver Transportation has a long history of   service moving  freight on the Columbia, Snake and Willamette Rivers, as well   as a  history of assisting ships into the ports of Portland and Astoria. In  1880 George Washington Shaver and partners founded People’s    Freighting Company. The company’s first vessel was the steamboat Manzanilla,    which they sailed on the Willamette and Columbia rivers between  Portland and   Clatskanie, Oregon. In 1893 Shaver Transportation was  incorporated by George   W. Shaver and sons James W. Shaver and George  M. Shaver. Their next two   steam-powered sternwheelers were the George W. Shaver and the Sarah   Dixon,  named for the founder and his wife. Shaver soon shifted away   from  transporting people and cargo in favor of barge towing, and the fleet    grew to seven tugs by 1914. By  1950, Shaver Transportation had two-dozen steel-hulled diesel   engine  tugs. Log towing was a large portion of the business during these    years, and Shaver established itself in ship assist work in Portland’s    booming harbor and in ocean towing up and down the coast from Alaska to  the   Panama Canal. The  Shaver family remains at the helm today. Harry L. Shaver is the    Chairman of the Board, his son, Steve Shaver, is President, and his  daughter,   Samantha Shaver, is a member of the Board. The company  currently has about 98   employees. Today, Shaver Transportation focuses on three lines of business: ship   assist, grain barging and harbor/specialty towing. Sommer Sondra Shaver
The  new boat is named after Harry   Shaver’s daughter and Steve and  Samantha’s sister, Sommer Sondra Shaver, who   dedicated much of her  life to Shaver Transportation. “Sommer was a strong,   fearless and  brilliant woman,” says her sister, Samantha. “She would be so   proud to  have a tug named after her. She had so much pride in the family    business and the shipping industry.” Samantha  says the company was Sommer’s life. “She did the work of ten.   She  treated our customers like family, and she traveled the world to visit    them.” Ten  years after the loss of Sommer, the company still benefits greatly    from the relationships she forged and the trust she established with the    shipping community around the world.
“She crossed barriers that most  women   would not,” Samantha recalls. “She loved everyone at work,  especially the   boatmen. She looked out for them, making sure they  always knew how much she   appreciated their hard work. She believed at  Shaver the employees were like   family.” The Sommer S
The Sommer S  is an 80-foot   by 36-foot, twin Z-drive, diesel-powered ship-docking  tug, designed   specifically for the particular job of ship-handling,  escort, and related   harbor support activity services on the lower  Columbia and Willamette Rivers.   The boat is equipped with a hawser  winch and line-handling crane forward and   heavy bow fendering for ship  assist and escort work. A series of barge   handling winches are fitted  aft for securing to and pushing bulk barges. Capilano  Maritime Design, in North Vancouver, British Columbia,   designed the  new boat. The firm specializes in the design of commercial   workboats  including tugs, barges, crew boats, dredges, offshore supply   vessels,  marine construction vessels and ferries. Capilano also offers   general  consulting services to the marine industry. Capilano’s  Senior Naval Architect, Mark Mulligan, also had a hand in   the design  of the company’s first Z-drive boat, the 107-foot, 4,000-HP M/V   Portland,  built by Nichols Bros. Boatbuilders, in Freeland,   Washington, in  1981. “At the time of her design I was working for Maritime    Industries, and we did all the engineering. The tug was actually  designed by   my predecessor at Maritime, Jim Towers, so I helped him in  the final design   and sailed with him from Nichols Brothers builders  to Portland on the   delivery voyage as engineers,” he says. “As I  recall, it was the first   Z-drive in the area,” says Matt Nichols, CEO  of Nichols Brothers   Boatbuilders, which delivered the Portland in 1981. Shaver  Transportation president Steve Shaver concurs. “It was   definitely the  first one on the West Coast. There was only one other Z-drive   around  at the time, and that one was on the East Coast. There isn’t anything    older than the Portland with Z-drives out here – we were ahead   of our time.” The company also recently repowered the Portland, which   was built with World War II-vintage engines. The company’s Chairman of the   Board, Harry Shaver, says the Portland’s  Fairbank Morse engines   were replaced with more powerful MTUs, which  will also help with fuel   consumption in the big boat. “It was the  first tractor tug on the West Coast,   and it’s built like a tank,” he  says. In addition to being more efficient and   more powerful, the new  engines are quite a bit smaller. “There’s a lot more   space in the  engine room now,” he notes. “It was pretty roomy before, but you   could  play volleyball in there now.” While the Sommer S is smaller (although deeper) than the   Portland,  at only 80 feet long by 36 feet wide and with a   14-foot draft, the  boat’s twin MTU/Detroit Diesel 16V4000 M61 main engines,   each rated  2,680 bhp at 1,800 rpm, driving Schottel SRP1215 360-degree   azimuthing  thrusters with 94.5-inch diameter fixed pitch propellers, will    provide a bollard pull of more than 65 tons, making her by far the most    powerful tug in the company’s fleet. “We  initially discussed a tower tug with a big tower and push knees as   a  kind of combination upriver and ship docking tug,” Mulligan explains,  “but   the customers decided a pure ship docking tug was what was  needed,” although   the company did specify a push pad on the bow, under  the main fender. “The   result is a simple, hard-working 65-ton bollard  pull ship docker that can   also push barges around.” We  decided a ship-assist boat that can push barges would be better,”    says Steve Shaver. “You can look into the future and see the potential  need   for this boat. The pilots told us what was important to them, and  as a   result, this boat hits the sweet spot for its size and  horsepower.” The bridge of the Sommer S  is very well laid out for   ship assist work. “This boat has some of  the best visibility of a   ship-docking tug that I’ve ever seen,” he  says. “I’m excited about this boat   because in the concept stage we got  a lot of input from pilots and employees. Crew-Friendly Spaces
The  design of the boat was a   collaborative effort, and the company made  sure to get the operators, or   boatmen, involved throughout the design  and construction process. The result   is a vessel that is as well  suited to the operator as it is to the task at   hand. “I spent 17 years  working on the boats,” Steve says, “and I tried to   keep in mind what I  would like if I was living on the boat.” For example,   there’s a  vestibule off the galley that separates the galley and mess from   the  doors to the berths. “I hate to have a door right up against the  galley,”   he says. “Noise in the galley might wake the crew, and the  vestibule acts as   a buffer for that noise. You might walk through the  boat and ask yourself why   that weird hallway is there- that’s why.” Steve  did a lot of research before the design process even started. “I    looked at a lot of boats here on the West Coast, as well as on the    Mississippi, and this boat is laid-out better than any I’ve ever seen,”  he   says. The Sommer S can accommodate 6 crew in two  double berths   and two single berths, although she will normally sail  with two or four.   “It’s amazing how much we’ve been able to fit in to a  boat of this size,” he   says. Rob  Rich, Shaver’s Vice President of Marine Services, started working   on  Columbia River tugboats in 1979, and has been with Shaver Transportation    for 26 years. Rich echoes what Steve Shaver said about the crew  spaces. “It’s   not a giant boat, but it’s doing a big boat’s job. We  tried to make it as   spacious as possible, and the crew has had  significant input in terms of the   wheelhouse and deck machinery and  interior layout and function.” The  company tries to promote from within its ranks, so the possibility   of  training operators is a very real one for the new boat. “We have room  for   extra crew, in case we’re training someone,” Rich says. The  new boat will be performing ship assist work in the ports along   the  lower Columbia River, so the company really wanted to design the boat    around the tasks it would be performing on a day-to-day basis. This  might   include assisting an auto or lumber ship one day, while making  up to a grain   barge for a short trip down river the next. According  to Steve Shaver, the ratio of ship assist to barge towing is   roughly  fifty-fifty. “We were looking at horsepower and maneuverability,” he    says, “and we did things the way we felt would work best for Columbia  River –   she’s definitely not an off-the-shelf model.” For  ship docking the boat is fitted with a heavy duty DEPCF-48 hawser    winch from Markey Machinery, with a 50-hp electric motor. The winch is a    single-drum electric hawser winch with fairlead featuring automatic    tension-selectable render/recover mode, high braking capacities, and  fast   line speeds for escort and ship-assist vessels. The winch drum  will be fitted   with 400 feet of 9-inch circumference Spectra/Plasma  line in 8 layers and   will have a brake capacity of 400,000 lbs.  minimum, at the second layer. The   rated pull is 22,150 lbs. on the  second layer at a speed of 67 feet per   minute. The company prefers  electric hawser winches because, according to   Steve Shaver, “they’re a  lot smoother, and the crews like them much better.” Rob Rich points out that an additional duty of the Sommer S    will be Columbia River Bar escort work, and for this she had to be  built to   American Bureau of Shipping Standard. “Frequently, the Coast  Guard will call   us out to escort a ship due to propulsion, steering or  navigational issues.   These vessels require an escort, and  occasionally a tethered escort, “ Rich   says. “This is where a good  render/recover winch really becomes important.” Another feature of the Sommer S  is the boat’s deck   crane, used for line handling, which she has in  common with the other ship   assist boats in Shaver’s fleet. “The  Vancouver has a crane, and we bought a   crane for the Portland as  well,” Rich says. “We’ve been told by vendors and   other operators that  they’ve only seen that on our boats.” Steve Shaver notes   that the new  crane will be useful in putting a line aboard a ship or running   lines  to a dolphin. Rich points out that, although the Sommer S  is only 80   feet long and primarily designed for ship assist, she is  also set up to   easily handle harbor barge activity. “With rubber down  to the waterline and   four 60-ton barge winches on it, it’s fully  capable of making up to a barge   and working it around the harbor or  down the river.” He  says the lack of a large push surface for more dedicated barge work    was driven by the boatmen. “We looked hard at installing knees on the  stern   or integrated on the bow, but the crew said they’d rather just  have the pad.”   Rich points to decisions such as this one that make the  boat such a unique   blend of Capilano’s cutting edge design and state  of the art equipment   coupled with the input of Shaver’s crews. “In a  small family owned company   like Shaver, where the owner is a step away  from the pilothouse, the crew’s   input rates quite highly,” he says. Looking Ahead
Ship  assist and escort have been a key   part of Shaver’s business for  almost 100 years, and Shaver’s fleet of six   tractor tugs each offer  more than 3,000 HP and more than 40 tons of bollard   pull to handle  ships of any size and configuration. In addition to the Sommer S,  Shaver has three tugs that   are either ABS certified or meet ABS  standards, including one recently   acquired tractor tug from the East  Coast. The new 93-foot tug, to be named Washington,   is  in the process of being outfitted for Columbia River work at Diversified    Marine, where she shared the yard briefly with the Sommer S. “In the space of 14 months we’ve gone from one Columbia River Bar   escort tractor to four, the Sommer S, Vancouver, Washington   and Portland” says Rob Rich. The  company’s fleet of tugs is RCP and ISO 9001/2008 certified, and   the  engines in four of the Shaver boats were replaced with 2007-2009 Tier II    engines, which offer 11 percent more power but burn almost 35 percent  less   fuel and use 90 percent less lube oil. The new engines are  quieter and have   less vibration, leading to less crew fatigue and more  comfort. While  half of Shaver’s business is shipdocking, the other half   involves  moving massive grain barges up and down the Columbia-Snake river    system, and the company’s barge fleet has a combined capacity of almost    55,000 tons. Most of the barges are specially designed to transport  grain and   bulk commodities such as wheat, barley, soybeans, corn,  canola and rapeseed,   and the fleet includes four 298-foot long  self-unloading barges. At 4,000   tons each, these “Magnums” have the  greatest capacity in the region. The   company employs highly automated  cargo systems and weight-saving features   that allow a barge to be  completely discharged within 5 hours. Shaver  currently has two new barges under construction at Portland’s   Zidell  Marine Corporation that are 23 feet shorter than the Magnums, yet    capable of hauling nearly as much cargo. The first of the new barges  will be   ready by August, and the second is scheduled for delivery in  October of this   year. “We’re  trying to become more efficient in the way we use our   equipment,”  says Steve Shaver, “because we have more demand for our bigger    barges.” The  two new barges, to measure 275 feet by 42 feet, will each be   capable  of transporting 3,600 tons of grain. “Not our biggest barges,” he    says, “but pretty big.” Harry  Shaver says the company is planning to have two of the big   Magnum  barges built as well. “It costs as much to push a small barge as a big    barge,” he notes. To handle the barges, Shaver’s fleet of specialized    push-knee tugs includes the 3,600 horsepower tractor tug M/V Deschutes,   and her sister tug M/V Willamette, as well as the recently   repowered M/V Cascades and M/V Clearwater, making   the company’s push-knee tugs some of the cleanest, most reliable and   fuel-efficient tugs in the industry. With the addition of the Sommer S, Shaver Transportation   has a versatile, reliable fleet of tugs and barges to meet the future   head-on. | 
