Baidarka . . . an intriguing name for a ketch . . . docked in Waterford, New York and headed home!! Keep your eyes peeled for them soon in the sixth boro.
Can you guess the name of this tug with Halloween decoration in the wheelhouse? Answer follows.
So they do . . . as do poltergeists, especially in the Hudson Valley. This is in the tributary of Catskill Creek.
Any wagers on the name of this old wooden yacht, overgrown in a marina across from Dunderberg Mountain?
I really wanted to add a preposition “of” between the top and middle lines here.
Atlantic Salvor . . . here with a scow in the KVK, lines and name make my heart beat faster.
Deborah Quinn waits at the old Jakobson yard in Oyster Bay. I’ve never seen her in the sixth boro.
Canvasback lies in Mystic . . . seeing and being seen among the beauties at Mystic, as is
So, those spiderwebs . . . were in the house of hard-to-read The Chancellor, on the wall in Waterford last weekend.
3 comments
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November 6, 2010 at 8:33 am
George Boase
Nighthawk looks like a bit of a project boat. In my youth I might have wanted to try doing just that. THese days I like my boats ready to sail 🙂
November 6, 2010 at 9:06 am
Capt. Mike
The photo of the spider web reminded me of when I took BIANKA up to Canada in July 2002 through the Erie and Oswego Canals. Soon as we got into the canals spider webs began appearing on board. When BIANKA returned back to her home saltwaters on the Isle of Long they mysteriously dissappeared.
November 6, 2010 at 3:40 pm
Deb dePeyster
“A few years ago, Tug Atlantic Salvor towed a fully-loaded 50,000 ton freighter that had lost all engines, from Florida to Greece, some 5,000 miles at 8 knots.” – from tug44 website.
One of the many reasons I love seeing Atlantic Salvor. Always with a serious job to do.