Here were the previous posts, the last one being in April. On June 11, I took the photo below, and since then had not been back until yesterday. Note how far along the Bayonne Bridge was on that date, as well
Here’s a closer up of the rigging on June 11.
Now let’s jump forward to yesterday, August 15. Note where the crane barge
Claude G. Forbes started the morning, and
and check the progressing in rigging, compared with photo #2 above.
Yard tug Jay Bee V came out to
reposition the barge. Note the mizzen on the background.
Then the crane pivoted around and
the block was lowered and
straps added and
all systems checked and
then slowly tensioned. One end of the mast lifted from off the deck
BUT then it was lowered. I waited around for an hour more, but then had other places to be. I’ll have to pick up the Wavertree story another time.
Since I mentioned the Bayonne Bridge–its own process–here’s what the work looks like as of August 15 from over off the west end of Caddell Dry Dock .. . aka ex-Blissenbach Marina now known as Heritage Park, which in my opinion, should have foliage trimmed so as to be more user friendly for land-based photographers.
Thanks to everyone who braved the heat last night and came to the showing of Graves of Arthur Kill. Special thanks to those wizards who problem-solved our way through the technical challenges, except I had brought along an antepenultimate version . . . and sorry I didn’t have a chance to talk with everyone there. What you want–prepare for an explicit commercial message here– is this version, which Gary and I call “the director’s cut,” available for a mere $11.99.
While I’m doing “commercials,” here’s an opportunity for the right people to sail offshore on South Street Seaport Museum’s 1893 fishing schooner, up to Gloucester for the 2016 schooner races, or back, or some portion thereof. Click here for some of the many Lettie G. Howard posts I’ve done over the years.
All photos here by Will Van Dorp.
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August 17, 2016 at 11:03 am
tugster
And this just in: the WSJ stayed around longer than I did and got it yesterday: http://www.wsj.com/articles/a-mast-rises-in-staten-island-1471391150
August 18, 2016 at 8:58 am
Les Sonnenmark
The coin shown in slide 2 of the WSJ article is an Argentine 10 centavos coin. I’m hoping that was a stock photo, but if so, was the photo even necessary? I think we all know what a coin looks like.
August 18, 2016 at 9:07 am
Les Sonnenmark
My comment may have been premature. On further research, the coin is an Argentine 10 centavos piece from 1942-1950. Wavertree was in Argentina then as a sand barge, so I suppose this could have been the coin found under her mast when it was unstepped.
August 18, 2016 at 10:23 am
tugster
Les– Some of my favorite stories in Peter Stanford’s book A Dream of Tall Ships relate to his efforts to buy Wavertree down in Argentina and the subsequent good relationships that came out of his negotiations. If there’s ever a need for a symbol of US-Argentine amity, Wavertree might just be it.
August 17, 2016 at 3:17 pm
Jim Gallant
Wavertree is lookin’ good; thanks for posting the pics!