The US Coast Guard Barque Eagle, built in Hamburg, Germany, in 1936, arrived in Philadelphia on Friday, on the first stop of her 75th anniversary tour.
The tall ship Eagle has landed _ in Philadelphia
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The US Coast Guard Barque Eagle, built in Hamburg, Germany, in 1936, arrived in Philadelphia on Friday, on the first stop of her 75th anniversary tour.
The tall ship Eagle has landed _ in Philadelphia
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Tonight the moon will rise larger and brighter than it has in almost twenty years. It will be a super “perigee moon” when the appearance of the full moon coincides with the passing of the moon closest to the earth.
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This sounds like a wonderful gig for the right artist.
Artist required for The Tall Ships Races 2011 onboard Swan
In a first for The Tall Ships Races, the former herring drifter Swan will host an artist in residence for the whole of The Tall Ships Races 2011. In a project called, ‘LK 243 Undersail’, the Swan Trust with partners, Shetland Arts and Taigh Chearsabhagh Arts Centre, North Uist has received funding from Creative Scotland and Scotland’s Islands Fund. The project will focus on Swan, its crew, the host ports and the people involved in The Tall Ships Races 2011.
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Just reading in Treehugger about Nic Kruger, a furniture designer, in Knysna, South Africa, who runs Shipwreck Furniture, which makes tables, benches and shelves from timber recovered from shipwrecked boats. Very interesting stuff. Not sure that it goes with the decor in my house. Then again, most of the time, my office looks a bit like a shipwreck, so who knows. To check out their portfolio of furniture click here.
The son of a fisherman, who moved on to selling khat, Saeed Yare became a pirate only two years ago and “earned” over $2.4 million in 2010 in ransom of ships and crews. It is estimated that piracy is inflicting a $12-billion toll on the global economy.
Somali pirate: I made $2.4 mln from ransoms in 2010
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Maewyn Succat
We have been posting a lot about piracy and kidnapping recently. Today is a reminder about how little things change over the centuries. Somewhere around the year 400 AD, a lad of 16, named Maewyn Succat, was kidnapped by pirates from his home in Britain and was taken as a slave to Ireland. He was a slave for six years, during which time he converted to Christianity. He finally escaped and returned to his family in England. He became a priest and studied at a seminary in France. When he was almost 60, he returned to Ireland. By then Pope Celestine I had given him the name “Patercius” or “Patritius.” We know him better these days as Patrick. He did alright in Ireland. He founded over three hundred churches and apparently had a way with snakes. Today is his feast day. Happy St. Patrick’s Day to all.
It is being reported that Tom Hanks will play Captain Richard Phillips in a new movie about the attempted hijacking of the Maersk Alabama by Somali pirates in 2009. The movie, based on Phillip’s book , A Captain’s Duty: Somali Pirates, Navy SEALS, and Dangerous Days at Sea, is being produced by Kevin Spacey and the team from “The Social Network.”
Tom Hanks to play heroic captain Richard Phillips
Last week we posted about a Laysan albatross, nicknamed Wisdom, who, at at least 60, is the oldest known wild bird and who also recently became a mother again, delivering a healthy chick. The BBC has now reported that while the tsunami killed thousands of albatrosses and other endangered species at a wildlife sanctuary north-west of Hawaii, Wisdom was among the survivors. Perhaps that shouldn’t be too surprising. She is one tough old bird.
An excellent report by ABC which, among other things, highlights the humanitarian support being provided by the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan.
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The German submarine U-106 was believed to have hit a British mine when it sank on October 7, 1917 off the coast of the Netherlands.
On April 1st, last year, fittingly enough, April Fool’s Day, a group of Somali pirates in open boats decided to attack the 445-foot guided-missile frigate, USS Nicholas. The outcome was predictable. Five pirates were captured and their boats were sunk. At the end of November the five were convicted of piracy in a Virginia court, the first piracy conviction in an American courtroom since 1819. Yesterday, they were sentenced to life terms plus eighty years. In February, Abdiwali Abdiqadir Muse, the only surviving pirate from the attack on the Maersk Alabama was sentenced to 33 years and nine months for his crimes.
I am a huge fan of triremes and am looking forward to seeing the trireme Olympias when she visits New York harbor during Op-Sail in 2012. In the mean time, however, the Mariners’ Museum in Hampton Roads, VA is hosting a two day Celebration of the Trireme. Presented by the Friends of the Trible Library and Friends of the Mariners’ Museum Library, it is being held on March 17 & 18, 2011. March 17th with feature a panel discussion, moderated by Bill Cogar: “The Trireme and Athenian Democracy” at the CNU David Student Union, Ball Room at 4pm. On March 18th, there will be a presentation: “Rowing the Olympias” by Dr. Gordon Kelly of Lewis and Clark College.
For more trireme posts, click here.
The Ark Royal, the flagship of the Royal Navy has been decommissioned. It will be another decade before a new aircraft carrier takes her place.
Ark Royal: decommissioning marks end of a long and celebrated history
The early retirement of the fifth Ark Royal marks the end of a triumphant career for one of the most famous names in British naval history.
Thanks to Alaric Bond for passing the article along.
Researchers believe that they may have found the location of the lost city of Atlantis in a coastal Spanish marsh. Plato described the legendary island-city in about 360 B.C. as having “in a single day and night … disappeared into the depths of the sea.” The researchers believe that the ancient city was destroyed by tsunami. Whether or not their research holds up, destruction by a tsunami seems highly credible. Their work is the subject of a National Geographic documentary – Finding Atlantis.
Was Lost City of Atlantis Found in Spanish Marsh?
Thanks to Irwin Bryan for passing along the article.
INS Kalpeni
Last Friday, the Indian Navy picked up as distress call from the container ship MV Vancouver Bridge, which was under attack by pirates in the Indian Ocean, about 600 nautical miles off the Indian coast. When spotted by an Indian patrol aircraft, the pirates broke off the attack and retreated to a “mother ship,” the Vega 5, a fishing vessel hijacked on December 28, 2010. On Saturday night, the Indian Navy’s newest fast attack craft, INS Kalpeni, intercepted the Vega and after a brief firefight captured 61 pirates and freed the Vega’s crew of 13 who had been held as hostages since the ship had been hijacked.
Navy apprehends 61 pirates in 2 day operation
Kesennuma Photo:AP
We have previously posted about the destruction of the town of Minamisanriku by the tsunami, where 9,500 people are reported to be missing. Other news reports now suggest that similar or greater numbers may be missing in the towns of Kesennuma and Rikuzentakata.
USS Ronald Reagan
The US 7th fleet has moved away from the Fukushima nuclear power plants after helicopters from the carrier Ronald Reagan were exposed to an airborne radioactive plume. Seventeen Navy personnel are being treated for what is described as “low levels of contamination.” Sensors aboard the carrier Ronald Reagan indicated that the ship had also been exposed to low level contamination. The carrier group had been roughly 100 miles away from the crippled reactors and has now moved so that that it is no longer down-wind of the power plants.
The battle against piracy in the Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea may be changing. This week Japan announced that it would try four suspected pirates being held by the US Navy after they were captured attempting to hijack the Japanese owned tanker MV Guanabara. Recently pirates have also been charged for their crimes in courts in South Korea, Malaysia, Germany , the Netherlands and the United States.
Happy 100th birthday to Con Thode, New Zealand’s first and only submarine commander in World War Two and long-time sailing master for the Spirit of Adventure Trust.
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