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Few things about flying rival “window seat,” as they complement my lifelong fascination with maps and, later, charts. Of course, few things are as frustrating as realizing I’m sitting on the wrong side of the airplane and can’t just run to the other side. Anyhow, let’s play a game of window seat IDs of photos of the flight from NYC (LGA) to Quebec City with a change in Montreal. See what you can identify here, and then I’ll post them again with annotations/identification.
#1
#2
#3
#4
#1 again. From left to right is downstream. Red number 1 is the South Shore Canal, the downstream-most canalized portion of the St. Lawrence Seaway. Red number 2 is the Lachine Rapids, so-named by Jacques Cartier and the whole reason for the locks at this location. Cartier thought the route to China lay above the rapids, hence, La Chine.
#2 again. Again, from left to right is downstream. Red number 1 is Habitat 67, 2 is a certain icebound brand-spanking-new US warship that will be left unnamed, 3 is the old port of Montréal, 4 is a lock in the Lachine Canal, and 5 is a certain formerly McAllister tugboat.
#3 again. Here, bottom to top is downstream. Red 1 is one of many random bits of ice flowing downstream toward Quebec City more or less at the location of Saint-Augustin-de-Desmaures, where the St. Lawrence is about two miles wide, i.e., half mile chunks of ice.
#4 again. Red 1 is the Citadelle, 2 is Chateau Frontenac, 3 is the entrance to Bassin Louise i.e., a location in the ice canoe racing posts, and 4 is the bulk and containerized port of Quebec City. The long unmarked structure between 3 and 4 is the now G3 grain elevator. To see a G3 (Global Grain Group) ship on Lake St. Clair, click here and scroll.
All photos and attempts at identification by Will Van Dorp, who’s also responsible for any misidentifications or omissions. And if you ever decide to buy me a ticket to fly somewhere, make mine a window seat or cockpit jumpsuit.
Here’s an index of my jester posts, which started summer of 2017.
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