
Carter Fish Company by N. Rauam
A wonderful show by Naima Rauam. It captures everything about the old market with the possible exception of the smell of fish.
Fifth Annual Remembering Fulton Fish Market Art Exhibit 2010
Carter Fish Company by N. Rauam
A wonderful show by Naima Rauam. It captures everything about the old market with the possible exception of the smell of fish.
Fifth Annual Remembering Fulton Fish Market Art Exhibit 2010
The Boston Globe has an interesting interview with Geoffrey Wolff, who has written a new biography of Joshua Slocum, The Hard Way Around: The Passages of Joshua Slocum. The book also got a rave review by Nathaniel Phibrick in the New York Times Sunday Book Section.
While the biography sounds intiguing, reading the interview made me want to go back to reread Slocum’s classic Sailing Alone Around the World. Joshua Slocum was the first person to sail around the world alone in1897 in his 37-foot sloop, the Spray. He wrote Sailing Alone Around the World, a masterpiece of nautical literature, in 1900 on the return from his epic voyage.
From the Boston Globe interview:
Continue reading
Photo: Shaun O'Boyle
The Witte boneyard, often referred to as New York’s graveyard of ships, usually sits unnoticed on the shore of Staten Island on the Arthur Kill in a far corner of New York harbor. In the last week, however, it has appeared in the media twice – as a set on a network crime show and as a podcast on a local radio station. On this week’s CSI:NY (Do Not Pass Go – Season 7, Edisode 6) , a television show about crime scene investigators in New York City, a murderer hid a body on an abandoned ship in the Witte Boneyard on Staten Island. Through the wonder of editing, the scene inside the ship was shot on the windjammer Peking, tied up at South Street Seaport. Sadly, the interior of the Peking looks no better than the exterior shots of the ship graveyard, which is obviously why the ship was chosen as a set. (This takes place at about the 38 minute mark of the episode.)
Then a local radio station, WNYC, featured the salvage yard in a pre-Halloween podcast. Click on the red arrow below to listen.
The Witte Boneyard: A Different Kind of Graveyard
Along the lower part of Staten Island’s Arthur Kill waterway, historic ships rot and rust in the mud.
This is satire, though given the rather drastic cuts in the Royal Navy budget, it doesn’t feel too far off the mark. From News Biscuit:
HMS Victory to replace Trident and Ark Royal
HMS Victory, Nelson’s flagship at the Battle of Trafalgar, is to be brought back into service, replacing Trident and the Ark Royal.
Continue reading
4th Mumbai International Match Race Begins Today
The city of Mumbai with its great maritime history adds an exciting new event – the West Coast Marine 4th Mumbai International Match Race 2010.
Continue reading
The Thames sailing barge Cambria was built in Greenhithe, Kent in 1906. Remarkably, she kept sailing and carrying commercial cargo under sail alone until 1970. She is now undergoing a complete restoration by the Cambria Trust with major funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund. They are still, however, in need of sponsors to ensure a complete and full restoration.
The British Maritime And Coastguard Agency has reported that the sail-training vessel, Fryderyk Chopin, has been secured to a buoy in Falmouth harbour, Cornwall, and the crew of 47, including 36 cadets, aged between 14 and 16, has been taken ashore.
The calendar has been out since July, but I only got around to ordering mine yesterday.
Thad Koza’s Tall Ships 2011 calendar features SAGRESs II, JOLIE BRISE, PICTON CASTLE, WESTWARD, BOUNTY, EUROPA, the schooner THOMAS E LANNON, and five other tall ships. Beautiful photogaphy of glorious ships.
Last Thursday, Bulgaria’s defence ministry lifted the ban on women serving aboard Bulgarian submarines. Also on Thursday, the Bulgarian parliament voted to moth-ball the only Bulgarian submarine.
The Falls of Clyde, built in 1878, is the only surviving iron-hulled four-masted full rigged ship and the only surviving sail-driven oil tanker in the world. After years of neglect by the Bishop Museum, the ship has been taken over by Friends of the Falls of Clyde, a wonderfully dedicated group of volunteers, who are working hard maintaining the ship and struggling to raise the money needed to restore her. Fortunately, the ship is good structural condition and an excellent candidate for restoration.
The Friends of the Falls of Clyde have been nominated to receive a grant from Hampton Hotels “Save-A-Landmark” program. The project which receives the most votes gets the funding. The voting will continue through the end of November. Please vote now for the Falls of Clyde. Click here to vote . It costs nothing and could do a world of good. The Falls of Clyde is truly a ship worth saving.
Brig Fryderyk Chopin
Update: UK coast guard: Polish teen sailors safe after their ship loses both masts
A group of teenage sailors whose ship was drifting at sea after it lost both masts in gale-force winds is safe from harm, coast guards said Friday, and the vessel was to be towed to a British port for repairs.
The Maritime and Coastguard Agency said that the Fryderyk Chopin, a tall ship used to train young Polish sailors, is about 100 miles (160 kilometers) southwest of Britain’s Isles of Scilly. The crew of 47 is mostly made up of 14-year-old cadets.
There have been no injuries reported and the Royal Navy has stood down their search and rescue helicopters, which are returning to base.
The brig Fryderyk Chopin, a Polish sail training ship with 47 aboard, lost one of its two masts during a severe gale this morning off the Isles of Scilly.
Fryderyk Chopin, Polish Training Vessel, loses mast
Continue reading
Not long left to register for the International Sail Training and Tall Ships Conference 2010 to be held on 12th – 13th November 2010 in Stavanger, Norway.
The International Sail Training & Tall Ships Conference 2010
Continue reading
On this eve of the eve of All Hallows Eve, it seems worthwhile to list a few of the “ghost” ships open to the public on Halloween.
Hornet Ship of Spirits – This evening , on the historic aircraft carrier USS Hornet in Alameda CA, there will be a presentation the real stories of the ghosts on the USS Hornet, followed on Saturday by a USS Hornet Monster Bash.
The Haunted Ship at the USS Salem – Spooky tours and events through Sunday on the heavy cruiser USS Salem in Quincy, MA.
Captain Fishsticker’s Ship of Horrors – Revival Burlesque is performing “Captain Fishsticker’s Ship of Horrors” tonight through Sunday on the lovely Barkentine Gazela in Philadelphia, PA.
Continue reading
Maine Maritime Museum in Bath is having its 15th Annual Pirates Party this Saturday, October 30, 2010 from 5:00 PM – 8:00 PM. They have filmed a rather remarkable commercial promoting the party, starring Tomm Tomlinson, a.k.a. Crudbeard, Barbara Tomlinson, better known as Bloodthirsty Barbara, and Jim Nelson, known to authorities as Black Jim Spudcake. The location is aboard the schooner Sherman Zwicker at Maine Maritime Museum. Jim Nelson, when not in his role as Jim Spudcake, is an award-winning author of maritime fiction and non-fiction. His history, George Washington’s Secret Navy, was the recipient of the Samuel Eliot Morison Award for Naval Literature.
The new cruise ship terminal at Pier 91 in the Port of Seattle appears to have been built over an old munitions terminal. Live high explosive ammunition dating back to World War II, and possibly earlier, has been found beneath the terminal berths.
Thanks to Dave Shirlaw for pointing out the article on the Marine History list.
This is a great story. Thanks to Irwin Bryan for passing it along. Congratulations to Bonnie Schubert and her 87-year old mother Jo, two highly successful salvage divers.
Elderly woman, daughter find incredible ocean treasure
After decades of hunting for treasure along Florida’s coasts, a woman and her elderly mother have made the find of a lifetime.
Bonnie Schubert and her 87-year old mother Jo were diving near Frederick Douglass Beach when they made the discovery: a 22-carat solid gold bird, a relic which they believe dates back to the lost Spanish Fleet of 1715.
Continue reading
Fifty five years ago today, on October 29th 1955, the battleship Novorossiysk, flagship of the Soviet Black Sea fleet, moored in Sevastopol Bay, was shattered by a powerful explosion which caused the ship to capsize and sink. Over six hundred sailors lost their lives. The cause of the explosion remains a mystery to this day. The sinking itself remained classified until the late 1980s. Theories of what sank the ship include an explosion by a German limpet mine left over from WWII, a torpedo attack from an unknown submarine as well as sabotage by the Italians, the English or the KGB. So far no explanation has yielded a fully plausible explanation for the sinking. The ship was raised in 1957 and scrapped.
Honor Frost had many talents – as artist, ballet designer, scholar, writer and publicist, to name a few – but her consuming passion was the world beneath the oceans. Honor, who has died aged 92, initiated underwater archaeology as a serious field for study, and pioneered its pursuit as a scientific discipline.
Continue reading
HMS Hobart, artist's conception
In the good (or bad) old days, ships were built from the keel up, with the frames rising from the keel, and the plating or planking secured over the frames. These days ships are built in modules, large blocks of steel with piping, wiring and coatings already in place. The blocks are then welded together and a new ship emerges. It is all highly complicated but extremely efficient, at least until there is a mistake. In the construction of the HMAS Hobart, the shipyards building the modules discovered that their blocks don’t fit together.
$8bn navy flagship founders after construction bungle
Continue reading
The factory fishing ship Athena caught fire early today in the Atlantic, 230 miles south-west of the Isles of Scilly. Eighty one non-essential personnel were evacuated to liferafts and subsequently rescued as the remaining 30 aboard fought the fire, which is now reported to be under control but not extinguished. The Athena was built in 1992, but was rebuilt in China this year due to damage from a previous fire.
Ship fire crew rescued from life-rafts in Atlantic
Continue reading