There’s this below from ancient Roman vineyards in Gaul, near this monolith church . . . Also, about 30 miles away in Bordeaux is the repurposed WW2 submarine base . . . repurposed for art. But I started out beyond left field here and have digressed in an even more oblique direction.
Saint Emilion is this tugboat with angles . . . and three rectangular windows, wheelhouse and upper wheelhouse . . . Note the difference in lines with Joyce D. Brown.
She’s angular indeed, a bit reminiscent of a Nighthawk. The livery of white with yellow trim accentuates these angles.
To see the time of her transformation from Barbara C to Arabian Sea, click here and scroll a bit. To see her in many jobs as Arabian Sea, click here.
Anyone know why Apex chose this name?
Compare many points of her random partner on the KVK, above and below.
All photos, WVD.
1 comment
Comments feed for this article
September 23, 2020 at 1:31 pm
tugster
Thx to RG, a reader with tons of info, i now know why this vessel is called Saint Emilion. see this link and look closely at #16. Remember that Saint Emilion is an Apex Oil vessel . . . http://assets.winespectator.com/wso/pdf/121510BordeauxUSA.pdf