Happy please-go-vote day. If you know anyone at all who is eligible to vote but won’t, have a chat with that person. As a New Yorker, I voted over a week ago . . . early voting on a Saturday afternoon.
Some photos . . . and your part is to 1) rank these boats by highest to lowest horsepower, and 2) identify which if any were built north of central sixth boro. I’ve provided dates of initial construction, but tugboats are required to be well-maintained, sometimes repowered and extensively rebuilt.
The 1979 Miriam Moran looked this way in her October markings. Cancer is a scourge, and I know this remembrance each October means a lot to folks who’ve seen the disease from nearby.
HMS Liberty has worked in the boro for over a decade now.
Laura K. Moran came off the ways in 2008, spent some years here, some away, but now she’s back in the boro.
Mister T, 2001, has carried that moniker ever since.
Andrea, 1999, has been in the boro a half dozen years. Here‘s how she looked back in 2016.
Shannon Dann was built in 1971.
Dace Reinauer dates from 1968 but has been considerably rebuilt from the first time she appeared on this blog here. See pre-2010 photos of her here and here.
Brian Nicholas, 1966, has been in the boro about as long as I’ve been doing this blog. I did post a photo of her with Banda Sea name clearly on her bow here 12 years ago.
Foxy 3 was built in 1974 and first appeared on this blog as Barker Boys, a name she carried until 2009, when she was renamed Buchanan 16. I don’t believe I ever saw her in the Balico livery as BF Jersey although I did see her with BF Jersey nameboards here. Note the folded back upper wheelhouse.
All photos, WVD.
Answers?
Laura K 5100 horsepower, Dace 3400, Andrea and Miriam at 3000, HMS Liberty and Mister T and Shannon D all at 2400, Brian Nicholas 1700, Foxy 3 1600.
Built north of the sixth boro: Laura K in Maine and Mister T in Rhode Island; all others were built in Louisiana.
4 comments
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November 8, 2022 at 12:30 pm
Josh Linenbroker
Thank you for the leading photo in today’s post.
November 9, 2022 at 12:19 am
karasumtymes
👍⚓️👌🏻
November 9, 2022 at 5:41 am
vivian cruise
I only know a bit but I figured that if a tug had two stacks then there was probably two Locie engines in her. I picked Andrea and Dace. My dear sweet Nick liked a boat with two engines as that meant safety in numbers and that there would be both a chief engineer and a second engineer on board. A 10 person crew. But then those were the three week boats pulling log barges down the coast; or bringing salt from Mexico to northern BC; or limestone gravel from Texada Island to Los Angeles.
November 9, 2022 at 6:31 am
tugster
Thx, vivian, for those reminiscences. You’ll be pleased to know that, for propulsion, Dace has two MTU/DDC engines and Andrea has THREE Cummins KTAs.