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This secret lake had great ice for these old boats like Ariel, Ice Queen, Whirlwind, Genevieve, and others. I was asked not to tell then, and by now I’ve forgotten exactly where this Shangri-la was, but
the ice boating was ideal. Has anyone heard of Hudson River Valley ice boating happening this year? The temperature is perfect, but that doesn’t always mean the ice surface is. I checked here and it doesn’t look favorable.
Evrotas was getting an assist from Amy C McAllister. Evrotas is currently St. Eustatius-bound from Texas. Amy C is in the Mariners Harbor yard, and I’ve not seen her in a while.
Amazing, which has to be one of the most amazing extraordinary names for a bulk carrier, was discharging salt. Currently she’s anchored off in the Black Sea. The ice of February 2011, the heat from oil, and the need for salt of the roads interrelate.
Then, as now, the sixth boro was busy with (l to r) dredge New York, GL 501, MSC Yano, Horizon Discovery, K-Sea’s Maryland, DBL 17. I may have left someone out there. To choose two of these, the originally Esso Maryland is now Liz Vinik. Horizon Discovery was scrapped in Brownsville in February 2015.
Ipanema heads out to sea in the rich morning glow. She may have sailed into her sunset as Norsul Ranaee, unrelated to this photo.
Irida discharges salt. She appears to have been scrapped.
MOL Partner is inbound on the Con Hook range. That’s a GLDD mechanical dredge at work and (maybe) some Bouchard tugboats in the distant left. MOL Partner is passing the Aleutians between China and Tacoma.
We leave it here. All photos from exactly a decade ago, to the month, WVD.
Here are previous installments focusing on background.
Sometimes the partial reveal and the juxtaposition highlight what’s on the shorelines, like those triple deckers in Bayonne that would blend in perfectly in many 19th century mill towns.
Or the hugely forgotten Singer plant in Elizabeth, hugely forgotten by most residents of Elizabeth, that is. Imagine, if someone could turn the clock back on that one, 10,000 people would have manufacturing jobs . . . either sewing machines, or
weaponry of all sorts.
But one detail on the bank over by the NJ-side of the Bridge caught my attention. So I thought these beams would be trucked from the disappearing bridge to a scrapping yard. How surprised I was when the crane lifted the beam off the truck not 1000 feet from where they’d been on duty for decades and
lowered them
one after the other
to what might be a series of trucks below. I can’t quite see what becomes of the beams on the ground at Bergen Point. And I think that’s the Passaic small boat. ??
All photos by Will Van Dorp. Keep your eyes open and stay safe.
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