Grand Theft Walleye — Fisherman Charged With Cheating in High Stakes Tournament

On Sept. 30, two fishermen, Jacob Runyan, 42, of Ashtabula, Ohio, and Chase Cominsky, 35, of Hermitage, Pa., participated in the Lake Erie Walleye Trail tournament in Cleveland. The stakes were high. If the fish landed by the pair weighed more than their competition, they would win almost $30,000. The pair were considered serious contenders for the prize. They had come in first place at the three previous Lake Erie Walleye Trail events in June, July, and September.

When their walleye were weighed, however, they seemed unduly heavy for their size. On cutting the fish open, tournament officials found ten weights, each one weighing either 8 or 12 ounces, as well as several walleye fillets stuffed inside each fish. The New York Times reports that a grand jury indicted both men on Wednesday on felony charges of cheating and attempted grand theft. 

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New Aden, Chinese VLCC With Four Rigid Wing Sails

In 2020, we posted that China Merchants Group had signed a contract with Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Company (DSIC) for two Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs) each with four rigid wing sails to provide wind-assisted propulsion.

The first of the two ships, the New Aden, has now been delivered and features four wing sails, each approximately 130 feet tall, totaling nearly 13,000 square feet of sail area, made of carbon fiber composite material. The sails are trimmed by a fully automatic system to maximize their efficiency. The new ship is 1,092 feet long and 300,000 DWT.

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Footage Documents Orcas Killing Great White Shark Off South Africa, Devouring the Liver

Over the last five years, a macabre mystery has been playing out on the South African coast. The carcasses of great white sharks have been washing ashore on local beaches with their bellies ripped open and their livers missing. What had killed the sharks was unclear, although scientists suspected orcas, also known as killer whales, which had been observed in the area.

Now drone and helicopter video footage has documented a pod of five orcas hunting and killing a great white shark in Mossel Bay, South Africa. The grisly video culminates with one of the killer whales gobbling up a large chunk of the shark’s liver.

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Update: New Wind Challenger Sail Assisted Collier Shofu Maru Enters Service

We have been following the development of the Wind Challenger Project since it first was unveiled in 2012. Initially developed by the University of Toyko with the support of Mitsui O.S.K. Lines and Oshima-shipbuilding, the concept is for a sail-assisted ship with retractable rigid wing sails.

As reported by Splash247, the Shofu Maru, the first bulk carrier equipped with a Wind Challenger hard sail propulsion system, has officially started operation following a handover ceremony at Oshima Shipbuilding. The 98,700 DWT bulker will haul coal mainly from Australia, Indonesia, and North America as a dedicated vessel for Tohoku Electric Power Co.

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On World Octopus Day — Amazing Brains & Morphing Skin of Octopuses & Other Cephalopods

In observance of World Octopus Day, here is a short video of a TED talk by Roger Hanlon looking at the amazing brains and morphing skins of octopuses and other cephalopods.

The amazing brains and morphing skin of octopuses and other cephalopods | Roger Hanlon

Damian Browne, First to Row From NYC to Galway, 112 Days at Sea With a Dramatic Finish

Former-professional rugby player Damian Browne became the first person ever to row from New York to Galway.  Browne began the 112-day voyage, titled Project Empower, from Chelsea Piers in Manhattan on Tuesday, June 14 at 3.10am.

After spending 2,686 hours at sea and rowing over 3,450 nautical miles, Browne’s arrival in Ireland was particularly dramatic. When only seven miles from Galway harbor, Browne and his boat Cushlamachree were caught in a storm. He said the boat flipped over in 30-to-35-knot winds and slammed against rocks at Na Forbacha at Furbo Beach, Galway. An emergency services crew was dispatched and took him to safety. Browne received a hero’s welcome from friends, family, and well-wishers.

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Saildrone Joins the Navy!

We recently posted video footage shot by a Saildrone uncrewed surface vehicle (USV) from inside Hurricane Fiona, a Category 4 hurricane, barreling across the Atlantic Ocean.  For the second year, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and Saildrone have sailed through hurricanes with uncrewed wind-powered vehicles. The sailing drones have also crisscrossed the North Atlantic, the Pacific, and the Bering Sea on a variety of oceanographic missions. 

Now, Saildrone is providing its latest and largest sailing drones to the US Navy. Continue reading

Red Hook Open Studios Concert: Shepup & Friends on Historical Tanker Mary A. Whalen

If you are in the vicinity of New York harbor on this Sunday, October 9th, you may wish to check out the Red Hook Open Studios (RHOS) concert featuring Shepup & friends on Portside NewYork‘s historic tanker Mary A. Whalen. The concert will be held from 5:30 PM to 11:00 PM on the ship at Pier 11, Atlantic Basin, Clinton Wharf Brooklyn, NY 11231.

From Portside NewYork’s press release:

Maritime and marinelife costumes encouraged during a night of music ranging from indie folk to Funk/hip hop aboard our historic oil tanker MARY A. WHALEN. The line-up is Sheila Flaherty (Shepup) and musicians Bloodman Steve, Annie Nirschel, and The Loosies curated by Shepup, a female marine engineer performing original songs written from her perspective as a mariner and human being.  Shepup will talk about how her experiences at sea influence her song writing and her work on the water. She invited the other musicians, reflecting the music community she developed from busking and open mics after moving to NYC to work on sewage tankers of the NYC Department of Environmental Protection.

Supercarrier USS Gerald R. Ford — From $13B Berthing Barge to Maiden Deployment

The USS Gerald R. Ford, the first of the US Navy’s newest generation of aircraft carriers and the largest and most expensive warship ever built, is ready to begin her maiden deployment after years of delay and cost overruns.

The Ford’s keel was laid in 2009 and was estimated to cost $10.49 billion. It ultimately cost $13.316 billion.

The ship was delivered to the Navy in 2017, despite several critical ship’s systems not being operational. As of 2020, only five of eleven of the Advanced Weapons Elevators that lift munitions to the flight deck actually worked. 

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The Hurricane That Destroyed the Spanish Treasure Fleet of 1715

The scope and scale of the property damage and loss of life resulting from Hurricane Ian to Florida and the Carolinas are still being assessed. The hurricane is likely to rank among the most destructive storms to strike to state in recent history.   

Hurricanes, of course, are nothing new to the region. On July 31, 1715, a hurricane struck the east coast of Florida, sinking 10 Spanish treasure ships and killing nearly 1,000 people. All of the gold and silver onboard at the time would not be recovered until 250 years later.

As recounted by History.com, on July 24, 10 Spanish ships and one French ship left Havana, Cuba, on their way to Europe, carrying tons of gold and silver coins, about 14 million pesos worth. The Spanish ships stayed very close to the Florida coast, as was the custom, while the French ship, the Grifon, ventured further out from the shore. A week later, as the ships were between Cape Canaveral and Fort Pierce, in modern-day Florida, the winds picked up dramatically.

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Update: Arson Charges on USS Bonhomme Richard Up in Smoke, Seaman Mays Not Guilty

Yesterday, we posted Bonhomme Richard Arson Trial — Will the Case Go Up in Smoke? that discussed the end of the trial phase of the court martial of 21-year-old Seaman Ryan Mays, who was charged with deliberately setting the fire on the amphibious assault ship USS Bonhomme Richard. We asked whether the conviction of Seaman Mays would be an act of justice or simply scapegoating? We noted that that was now up to Judge Capt. Butler to decide. No timeline was provided as to how long Butler will take to deliberate on the case.

It didn’t take Judge Butler long to make his determination. Only a day after the end of the trial, CBS8.com reports that Captain Derek Butler found Mays to be not guilty. Butler ruled that prosecutors failed to present enough hard evidence that tied Mays to the arson and instead relied on a circumstantial case, buoyed by the strength of just a single eyewitness.

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Bonhomme Richard Arson Trial — Will the Case Go Up in Smoke?

The verdict in the court-martial of 21-year-old Seaman Ryan Mays, accused of deliberately setting the fire that torched the billion-plus dollar amphibious assault ship USS Bonhomme Richard, is in the hands of a military judge. If convicted of arson and willful hazarding a vessel, Mays could face a sentence of life in prison.

Now that the trial has concluded, it is hard not to wonder whether the Navy’s case will go up in smoke. The nine-day trial featured a Navy case that was largely circumstantial and relied heavily on a single witness, whose story changed over time. The Navy also admitted to identifying and interviewing another suspect but being forced to stop looking into the sailor because he was discharged from the service.

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Wreckage of SS Mesaba Located — Ship That Radioed Warning to Titanic

Graphic: Bangor University

In April of 1912, the cargo-passenger liner SS Mesaba radioed an ice warning to RMS Titanic. The message was received but never made it to the bridge. 

The supposedly unsinkable Titanic then hit an iceberg and sank on her maiden voyage, with the loss of 1,500 lives. Mesaba herself was sunk, by a torpedo in World War I in 1918.

Now, the BBC reports that Bangor University researchers, using state-of-the art multibeam sonar, have been able to identify the Mesaba‘s wreck and pinpoint her final resting place.

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Weird Beasties in Loch Ness, But No, Not Nessie

On a recent trip to Scotland, we visited the beautiful Loch Ness. While we were there, we heard of a sighting of a weird beastie in the loch. But no, not Nessie, the famous monster, or even a loch kelpie. The beast, or more properly, beasties were a small herd of alpacas, that had escaped their enclosure and decided to go for a swim.

What are alpacas doing swimming in Loch Ness? Loch Ness Alpacas explains on their website:

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Flagship HMS Queen Elizabeth Arrives in New York to Host Atlantic Future Forum

The Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth has arrived in New York harbor, dropping anchor within sight of the Statue of Liberty. The carrier is accompanied by her frigate escort, HMS Richmond, which sailed up the Hudson River for a berth on Manhattan Island. 

The 65,000-tonne carrier will serve as the floating conference center for the 5th Atlantic Future Forum – an event that brings together the brightest minds and most influential thinkers from defense and beyond to strengthen UK and US bonds.

The carrier was welcomed into New York by the United Kingdom’s Ambassador to the United States, Dame Karen Pierce. Continue reading

The Guns of the USS Texas

We recently posted videos of the 110-year-old battleship USS Texas currently being repaired and refurbished in drydock at the Gulf Copper Shipyard in Galveston.  The Texas is the oldest remaining dreadnought battleship and only one of six surviving ships to have served in both World War I and World War II.

I still have vivid memories of visiting the battleship Texas as an elementary school kid. Playing on an anti-aircraft gun was particularly fun, as I recall.  Here is a History Guy video about the guns of the venerable battleship.

Guns of USS Texas

Why Did Sailors Pull the Gun Carriage Bearing the Queen’s Coffin?

The BBC recently reported on a young Royal Navy sailor, Able Seaman Hollie Randle, one of 142 sailors who pulled the gun carriage bearing Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin in the state funeral procession. Seaman Randle said that she was “overwhelmed” by the honor and that, “if someone had told me a year ago I’d be taking the Queen’s coffin to her funeral, I wouldn’t have believed them.”

For those of us on the other side of the pond, this raises the question, “Why use Royal Navy sailors, rather than horses, to draw the gun carriage carrying the coffin?” Apparently, the tradition originated with Queen Victoria’s funeral on February 2, 1901.

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Saildrone Sails Through 50′ Waves Inside Cat 4 Hurricane Fiona

Saildrone, Inc. and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) have released video footage gathered by a Saildrone uncrewed surface vehicle (USV) from inside Hurricane Fiona, a Category 4 hurricane, barreling across the Atlantic Ocean.

For the second year, NOAA and Saildrone are hurricane chasing with uncrewed wind-powered vehicles. Last year, the Saildrone Explorer SD 1045 was directed into the midst of Hurricane Sam where it battled 50-foot waves and winds of over 120 mph to collect critical scientific data.

This year, the Saildrone Explorer SD 1078 was sent into Hurricane Fiona, which is currently on a path northward in the Atlantic Ocean. The storm drenched Bermuda with heavy rain and is expected to hit the Canadian province of Nova Scotia on Friday. Hurricane Fiona is the first Category 4 storm of the 2022 season. SD 1078 is also battling 50-foot waves and winds measured over 100 mph.

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Update: “Fat Leonard” Detained in Venezuela, Trying to Flee to Russia

In early September, just weeks before his sentencing in a decade-long Navy bribery and corruption scandal, Leonard Glenn Francis, known as “Fat Leonard,” escaped from house arrest in his San Diego home and fled the country. The Malaysian businessman is the center of the largest bribery scandal in US Navy history.

Now, USNI News reports that authorities in Venezuela arrested “Fat Leonard” Francis as he attempted to board a plane to Russia, officials said late Wednesday.

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Mass Stranding: 230 Pilot Whales Stranded on Tasmanian Beach

More than 200 whales have been found stranded on a remote beach at the entrance to Macquarie Harbour on the west coast of Tasmania, Australia. Half of the pod, thought to be pilot whales, are believed to be still alive.

Experts were planning a rescue of the 230 whales discovered on Wednesday but the operation would be “complex” due to the location, Tasmania’s Department of Natural Resources and Environment said in a statement.

The stranding comes exactly two years after Australia’s worst whale stranding on record, which occurred in the same location. On 21 September 2020, 470 long-finned pilot whales were found beached on sandbars. A week-long rescue effort saved 111 whales, but authorities had to dispose of more than 350 carcasses.

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