For starters, yes I do feel I’ve dropped the ball and missed taking and publishing fotos of such sixth boro events as the final move of the Willis Avenue Bridge and City of Water Day. If anyone has fotos to share, I’d love to see them.
The North Country here means the St. Lawrence and beyond. The white-helmeted gent does seem to be leading and gentle giant on a leash, not even having to
tug as BBC Rio Grande (ex-Beluga Gravitation, 2008) traverses the Iroquois Lock. All the Wisconsin-built Staten Island ferries had to make their way through this lock. Anyone have a foto of a big orange ferry passing here? I previously wrote about these locks here and here.
It hardly seems possible their beam would squeeze through.
William Darrell ferries loads of improbable size across the international border between Cape Vincent and Wolfe Island, Ontario. 86 windmills now churn in the breezes near this northeast tip of Lake Ontario, not without controversy.
The “H” on the stack stands for Horne, the family that has operated this ferry since 1861. This particular vessel entered service in 1953.
Bowditch (ex-Hot Dog, 1954) works out of Clayton, NY; as do
Maple Grove (left) and the unidentified “landing craft/freight ship” on the right.
More upcountry workboats tomorrow. All fotos here by Will Van Dorp.
For now, some announcements:
Kudos to the ArtemisOceanRowing (scroll way down) crew who left New York in mid-June; they broke a 114-year-old record when they arrived at Isles of Scilly this weekend.
And finally, I’ve started a new blog called My Babylonian Captivity. Exactly 20 years ago today, Iraqi forces invaded Kuwait, the US entered the current era, and I became trapped and remained so for over four months. It’s a different kind of blog–all text– but I plan to chunk it out day by day or week by week until December. Please send the link along to folks who you think will enjoy it. It’s all nonfiction, the experience as filtered by me.
5 comments
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August 2, 2010 at 8:54 pm
Jed
Square windows vice round portlights in lower wheelhouse indicate to me that landing craft on the right is a 1646 class Landing Craft Utility.
June 17, 2015 at 7:33 pm
lon
it is 1668. I rebuilt the hull on that boat 7 years ago in N.C.
August 3, 2010 at 1:41 pm
Mage Bailey
Fascinating stuff. Thank you. Welcome home….and thanks in advance for putting us in your hip pocket. Loved that tug in the previous entry.
WordPress is being cranky this morning and not opening quite right.
August 3, 2010 at 2:15 pm
tugster
thanks, mage. i thought my pocket was kinda cramped. alligators are a new obsession. check john van der doe’s comment to find a new book written about them. cheers from the east.
March 28, 2012 at 4:20 pm
tugboathunter
The other landing craft is named Thor’s Hammer.