Charlie – I have a web site I uploaded the photos to and have linked to them here.
I figured it would not be fair to use this sites band width when I have a site available for that.
I explained in an earlier post that there were three submerged pilings that could give me a problem, depending on the tide.
This photo taken the day after the move show the two highest ones. None show up in our move photos, however I could tell where the highest one was by the swirls around it some of the time.
Saturday afternoon, Mike and Brian bounced on the ramp at high tide and it became unstuck in the mud. When it did that, we changed our plans. Instead of waiting for a low tide Sunday morning, we decided to see if we could unload the hinge pin.
In this photo we have build a support to lift the ramp and it is chained in place. There is an old theater wall up river we will tie to, to hold the ramp in place when it is lowered into water. There is an outgoing tide as well as the river current running from the right to the left.
Alex is on the theater wall catching the 350 foot rope from Mike.
Brian is taking it down the ramp to tie it as low as possible.
Alex and Mike are getting the rope over the wall and making sure it is not snagged anywhere.
I make a last flip of the rope to get it ready.
We have the ramp secured and the hinge pin unloaded so we decided to lower it to see how it floats.
I hate to not finish the story but Les, TBM and I are up to our eye balls getting the final details of the fiberglass done on the Marinaut, so this is all I have time for until later tonight or possibly tomorrow night.
Dave 
www.marinautboats.com