Here’s the engine order telegraph and a bit of uniform. Guess the vessel? Doubleclick enlarges fotos.
Here’s more signage. Identification later in the post.
And a closeup of the topsail furling system of Etoile, one of the French schooners.
More brass and brightwork on Etoile.
And the guard of the passerelle.
Not far away, crew on this vessel looked less inviting. Guess the nationality?
Canadian. She’s guarding HMCS Iroquois, built in the same Quebec town as Mathilda!
Here was Iroquois last Wednesday converging with other vessels in the sixth boro, and
here she is nose to nose with USCGC (WLB 202) Willow, alternatively captured by bowsprite.
From the bridge deck of Argus, looking over the stern and toward the west . . . Governors Island and New Jersey beyond. Along the horizon near the south tip of Governors Island . . . those are the cranes of Bayonne and even fainter beyond that Port Elizabeth.
Here’s the view from the forward positioned bridge. Back in 2007 I caught these fotos of Oslo Express, the only bridge-forward container vessel I can recall seeing in the sixth boro.
Here’s a bit more info on Argus. My tour guide and globalsecurity.org describe Argus as the only vessel in the world to have a CT scanner. As it turns out, she also has a cat. This is Simon, and yes . . . Simon went off duty decades ago, but his healing presence in the hospital lives on. More sobering, Argus has patient monitors that allow patients to have a chance to survive IED-caused triple amputations.
Nearing dusk, yesterday afternoon . . . the Brooklyn vessels as seen from the water: stern of Seneca, Shirane, the French Belle Poule and Etoile, and Cuauhtemoc.
Which brings me back to the Mexican ship. Some of the cadets I spoke with finally explained this flag . . . it’s the captain’s personal flag . . . personal pirate flag, actually is what the cadet said.
Aboard were over 250 crew, who started their morning yesterday polishing brass before they let any visitors up the pasillo.
And the vessel was immaculate.
Below the stack here, I’m told, is a 1250 hp Cat.
All fotos by Will Van Dorp, who needs to get to another job now.
















4 comments
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May 29, 2012 at 8:41 am
JED
ETOILE’s Bell Rope – very pretty. For the hardcore one only finds seven ROPES aboard a ship, the rest is LINE. A Bell Rope is one of the seven. Guesses?
May 29, 2012 at 8:51 am
tugster
ok, i’ll be the fool that rushes in: metaphorical ones as in “learning the ropes,” rope ladder, cordage that has not yet been assigned as a line, . . . ok, failed miserably.
May 29, 2012 at 10:14 am
starbuck5250
Ooohh, not as easy as I thought. Bell and bucket were easy, then head and foot were quickly remembered. Got bolt rope with some difficulty but I’m stumped after that.
May 29, 2012 at 1:55 pm
JED
From a NAVY standpoint: Bell Rope; Head, Hand & Foot Ropes (Liflelines), Manropes (found on boat davits; also referred to as Monkey Lines), Dip Rope (for dipping the anchor), Buoy Rope (for mooring to a buoy).