First, a correction in yesterday’s post: it was not the Harvey doing the water salute. It must have been Fire Fighter. Second, I waited til the Times arrived today to post. Still, nothing about the warships in New York until E15 (i.e., 63 pages in!!) where I read third item in “Around Town” on the “Spare Times” page . . . “daily ship visits…” It names no ships. A less proficient reader might even think that “visits” in the phrase was a verb, as in what a or the daily ship does. Yet, in an ad on p. 3: Tiffany & Co. offers an “anchor diamond pendant in platinum, $2800.” My read here is . . . the Times‘ll take the advertising $ for a product timed for profiling during an event the paper doesn’t acknowledge. Ho-hum!
Below, cruiser Monterey (CG- 61), named for the 1846 battle, approaches the Narrows two days ago. In 1846, Polk was President, and the trigger for war was the infamous Thornton Affair. Monterey was built on the Kennebec in Maine.
I couldn’t begin to identify items on this superstructure, but I like the gray inflatable.
Another Canadian vessel is the frigate St. Johns. On its afterdeck is the Sea King helicopter that can land there in conditions up to 20-foot waves!
A final shot of the Kearsarge . . . Oops, she moves so fast that neither the McAllister tugs nor my camera could keep up.
Finally, here’s a retired government ship emerged behind a port building on Imlay Street in Red Hook Brooklyn. More later. Some of you know this vessel, but no… it has nothing to do with this other Red Hook submarine.
About the Times . . . I confess I am a subscriber.










4 comments
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May 23, 2008 at 10:16 am
Mage Bailey
Is it Fleet Week? Here we have a week of parades, open ships, fuss, feathers, and fly overs. And too, I confess the grevious sin of subscribing to the SDUT. The Times is a far, far, better thing.
May 23, 2008 at 10:23 am
Mage Bailey
Then I read all the way down. You already knew it was your fleet week. Mea Culpa. Yes, I have acres of images but no time.
May 23, 2008 at 1:13 pm
Kennebec Captain
“built on the Kennebec in Maine.” – BIW in Bath Maine the “City of Ships”.
May 23, 2008 at 4:39 pm
suburbanlife
My husband and I looked at your posts on Fleet Week. He was so pleased to see these ships as he is keen on naval war history ( His father was involved in the lead-up to the sinking of the Graf Spey). These ships are rather beautiful examples of form following function, and no excesses. i rather like the character of the colour “battleship grey”, subtle, good for reflecting local colour, hence great for camouflage. G