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Sometimes the sixth boro gets crowded, as you can see from these posts. This post tries to show that, but keep in mind that foreshortening makes these vessels seem closer than they are–the two ships below are more than a mile apart. Keep in mind also that a water channel is a dynamic medium, current and wind are in play, and . . . there are no brakes.
About a hundred yards are between the docked “orange/green hull” and Cronus Leader.
Also, the KVK has numerous curves; it seems here that the pale yellow will pass starboard to starboard with Cronus Leader,
but because of the winding channel, a few minutes later they’re clearly headed port to port.
The dark hull along the extreme left of the photo–and several shots above– is tied to a dock. It’s the NYC DEP sludge tanker Hunts Point, now in service for over five years, as profiled in this article. It’s time I do another post on the sludge tankers.
Orange Sun has safely passed Cronus Leader, leaves plenty of space passing Hunts Point,
and lets Denak Voyager, heading to Port Newark to load scrap metals, ease through the opening along its portside.
A total of fifteen minutes has elapsed between the first photo in this post and the one above. Scale here can be understood by looking at the crewman on watch–all wearing orange– on the nearer orange juice tanker and the farther bulk carrier.
All photos by Will Van Dorp, who thinks that at least two things are remarkable here, both the efficiency of effort on the part of the vessel crews and the variety of cargo represented.
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