View allAll Photos Tagged SHIP
Taken on the beach amongst the chaos of the Chittagong shipbreakng yards. Truly amazing and humbling to see these massive vessels stripped down piece by piece with very little infrastructure other than hard working local labor.
Queensway Bay
Long Beach, CA
03-06-22
The Carnival Radiance, Queen Mary, a Long Beach Transit Aqualink and the Catalina King, one of the fleet of Catalina Express boats to the island, photographed at 109mm.
After the sinking of the original Pride in May 1986, the Board of Directors of the non-profit public-private agency that operated Pride for the city were reluctant to build a replacement, but an outpouring of unsolicited financial support from the public encouraged the Board into going forward with a new ship. By late summer of 1986, plans for a replacement were under way. The ship was to be named Pride of Baltimore II and serve as a sailing memorial to the original Pride. It was to be another "Baltimore Clipper" topsail schooner that would continue the mission of the first ship. With an insurance payment of just under $500,000, along with a state grant of $1 million, and various contributions from private citizens, students, corporations, and foundations of over $2.5 million, sufficient funds were available to build a new ship and endow an operating fund.
The fifth image in this series of images I took in and around downtown Toronto. The tall ship Empire Sandy, which runs chartered tours along Toronto's waterfront was originally built as an Englishman/ Larch Deep Sea-class tugboat for war service by the British government in 1943. After the war she served a number of different roles under different names. In the early 1970s she was to be sold for scrap, but fortunately got a new lease on life when she was bought by a new owner who had her completely rebuilt and converted as a three-masted schooner in the style of the 1880s.
For more information: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empire_Sandy
Grande Hermine
While the now deceased owner of this vessel never realized much benefit from it, many others have over the years enjoyed watching the slow decay of the ship.
The QEW is a major highway connecting Toronto to Buffalo NY and is heavily traveled given the amount of cross border trade. Heading west on the QEW just past Grimsby, as you crest a hill the ship comes into sight and for a moment, it appears to almost intersect the highway. Pretty hard to miss ! The full history of the ship can be found in the link below.
www.cliftonhill.com/falls_blog/abandoned-ship-niagara-la-...
Typ: tank Ship
IMO Number: 9200926 Country: Bahamas
MMSI Number: Length: 246.0m
Callsign: C6FY3 Beam: 42.0m
Typ: Cargo Ship
IMO Number: 9320001 Country: Liberia
MMSI Number: 636090930 Length: 208.0m
Callsign: A8HQ7 Beam: 30.0m
Typ: Cargo Ship
IMO Number: 8808056 Country: Hong Kong
MMSI Number: 477898300 Length: 325.0m
Callsign: VRDB4 Beam: 58.0m
Typ: Cargo Ship
IMO Number: 9000730 Country: Brazil
MMSI Number: 710287000 Length: 200.0m
Callsign: PPSO Beam: 32.0m
TAKEN IN SEPETIBA PORT - ITAGUAI - BRASIL
It's been misty and raining all day today. This morning I was looking across the river at the gloom, wondering where the eastern shore might have disappeared to, and then I saw this. When I raced downstairs to grab a suitable camera/ lens combination I returned to see that it had vanished! Then it reappeared after being behind some foliage ... or it was a real ghost ship? It did seem odd anyway ...
Doug Harrop Photography • August 2, 1992
A Santa Fe Super Fleet GE leads a train of mixed freight running parallel to a sea of piggybacks at Wilbern, Illinois.
Schiffsdetails
Schiffstyp: Patrol vessel
Baujahr: 1996
Länge x Breite: 28 m X 7 m
Bruttoregistertonnen: 146, Tragfahigkeit: 0 t
Eingetragene Geschwindigkeit (Max./Durchschnitt): 26.3 / 15.5 knots
Flagge: Germany [DE]
Rufzeichen: DLVP
IMO: 9109067, MMSI: 211238320
Typ: Cargo Ship
IMO Number: 9007269 Country: Brazil
MMSI Number: 710074011 Length: 192.0m
Callsign: PPSE Beam: 32.0m
NLV Pharos is a lighthouse tender operated by the Northern Lighthouse Board (NLB), the body responsible for the operation of lighthouses and marine navigation aids around the coasts of Scotland and the Isle of Man.
Harbour Travemuende with ferry from Sveden and to the left a cruiser from Phoenix.
- - -
Travemünde mit Fähre aus Schweden und links das Kreuzfahrtschiff "Amadea" von Phoenix.
Niagara was constructed from 1812 to 1813 to protect the vulnerable American coastline on Lake Erie from the British and played a pivotal role in the battle for the lake. Along with most warships that served in the war, Niagara was sunk for preservation on Presque Isle in 1820. Raised in 1913, it was rebuilt for the centennial of the Battle of Lake Erie. After deteriorating, the restoration of Niagara was started again in the 1930s, but was hampered by the lack of funds caused by the Great Depression and remained uncompleted until 1963. A more extensive restoration was carried out in 1988 in which much of the original ship was largely destroyed. The incorporation of new materials and modern equipment makes it ambiguous as to whether it is or is not a replica. (Wikipedia)
The Niagara is the third reconstruction of the original. This two-masted square-rigged sailing vessel was launched in 1988 for the 175th anniversary of the Battle of Lake Erie. (Erie Maritime Museum)