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Preliminary question: Where in the world is Alice Oldendorff? Answer follows.
This profile below–not Alice— might make you imagine yourself in the St Lawrence Seaway or the Great Lakes. But I took this photo on the Lower New York Bay yesterday. I had not caught a self-unloader of this style in the Lower Bay since 2007!
A CSL self-unloader does call in the sixth boro occasionally. Here’s a CSL post I did in 2010, photos in the sixth boro.
She headed into the Narrows loaded down with
aggregates from Aulds Cove in Nova Scotia. And I’m guessing that’s here, place I hope to visit some day.
Besides stone, self-unloaders locally also offload salt, as here H. A. Sklenar and here Balder.
The photo below I took in July 2009, again a self-unloader bringing in aggregates,
a task usually done by fleet mate Alice Oldendorff, who surely has had enough exposure on this blog. Don’t get me wrong . . . Alice is also a self-unloader, but she had other cranes as well, as you can see from the photo below, taken in 2009.
Where is Alice? Well, she’s 300 miles from Pyongyang. THAT Pyongyang.
Here’s a little more context, showing Pyongyang to the right and Beijing top left, and heavy ship traffic.
Alice made her last stop here a couple months back, then she headed through the Panama Canal to Qingdao for some rehab. Qingdao is also spelled Tsingtao, like the beer.
She’ll be back come summer.
All photos by Will Van Dorp.
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