Traveling Central America - The Panama Canal
The country of Panama holds a unique strategic geographic
location, and it has tried its best throughout the ages to
exploit this to the full. From the time of the Portobello fairs
to the first transisthmian railroad to the present waterway,
often considered to be the eighth wonder of the world.
A canal linking the Atlantic with the Pacific oceans had been a
dream since the first Spanish colonizations. In fact it was
Charles V of Spain who first envisaged a shortcut through the
Panamanian jungle to ease the difficult crossing. So in 1524 he
ordered a survey of the land. However what inspired the king
initially was not so much the possibilities for trade, so much
as how to bring back to Spain with least difficulty the hoards
of treasure recently discovered in Peru. Unfortunately for him,
earth-moving techniques were to need major improvement before
his idea could be undertaken.
It was not until 1826 when the United States started
investigating a treaty with South American countries to "protect
the companies intending to open a communication system between
both oceans", that the building of a canal attracted worldwide
interest, with France, England and the United States looking for
locations and means to avoid the long, difficult and dangerous
voyage around Cape Horn. The first attempt at this was the
construction of the Transisthmian Railroad in 1855, which
eliminated about 8,000 miles from the journey.
The first attempt at a canal was in 1854 by a multinational
expedition comprising the United States, France, England and New
Granada. But the impenetrability of the jungle was to take its
toll and the attempt failed with many resultant deaths. But not
to be daunted in this most crucial endeavor, in 1878 the French
obtained a concession from Colombia to build a waterway. Yet
again, after seven years of fighting disease and other jungle
problems, the attempt was to fail with yellow fever, malaria and
various plagues holding sway. This project, with the idea of
building a level canal, was ultimately abandoned at the turn of
the century.
Eventually the creation of a canal was to become a military
imperative for the United States who commenced (fruitless)
negotiations with Colombia in 1902. Finally, Panama declared its
independence from Colombia in 1903 and the project went ahead.
The monumental construction took 10 years to complete at a cost
of $387 million.
The Panama Canal is 50 miles in length running from northwest to
southeast. About 8 hours is needed for a typical vessel to
transit the canal, whilst being lifted gradually to a height of
85 feet through three sets of locks - the Gatun, Pedro Miguel
and Miraflores.
Operating the gigantic locks consumes vast amounts of fresh
water. For every ship passing along the waterway, around 52
million gallons of water flows into the locks then out to sea.
This comes from the Gatun and Madden lakes. The lock gates,
themselves engineering wonders, consist of pairs of towering
leaves from 47 to 82 feet high, 65 feet wide and 7 feet thick.
Their weight is from 400 to 700 tons, yet each can be opened or
closed in 2 minutes, powered by electric motors.
To navigate the canal, a ship's captain must relinquish
responsibility for his vessel to a Panama Canal Pilot. Currently
over 250 pilots steer over 14,000 ships through the canal each
year. The total time spent in the canal is around a full day.
Navigating through the canal is not cheap for vessels, averaging
several 10s of thousands of dollars, depending upon the size of
vessel and its contents. However, whatever the toll, it is
typically ten times what it would have cost to navigate around
Cape Horn.
The Panama Canal Commission welcomes visitors at the Miraflores
Locks on the Pacific side of the Isthmus seven days a week, from
9am to 5pm. Ships passing through the locks can be viewed from a
pavilion where commentators provide an English and
Spanish-language commentary, giving all the details of the canal
including the amazing statistics. From yachts and small crafts
through to container vessels, huge cruise liners and even small
submarines, the Panama Canal is truly an international crossing
point.