Saturday, 31 October 2015

Tow Boat EMERALD COAST & Tanker Barge VB-38

Another hard working gem that's been sitting in my "2Bdone" folder for far too long is the 71' towboat EMERALD COAST taken here by my good friend Jim Moyer of Salisbury, Maryland. I don't know who said it but I know we can all agree that "life is not a straight line" and so is true of the the twenty-four and a half mile Chesapeake Bay tributary and tidal estuary, the Wicomico River.
According to some towboat skippers, the passage along the Wicomico with its many bends and turns is a nerve racking "sweaty-palms" experience, specially when pushing tanker barges like the EMERALD COAST is doing in all three snaps. Up here in the Great White North, where trucks and trains are mostly used to haul a variety of liquid goods from community to community, clean oil tanker barges like EMERALD COAST's payload, the 292' VB-38 are used to carry over 4 million barrels of petroleum products annually into Salisbury, the State of Maryland's second largest port.
When launched in 1973 at Main Iron Works in Houma, Louisiana,  Jim's  "Little Toot" which he snapped from his canoe, was named MAGGIE SWAN. Currently named after the emerald-green waters along Florida's northern Gulf of Mexico shoreline, the twin screw and flat bowed EMERALD COAST is owned by Dann Marine Towing of Chesapeake City, Maryland.
Meanwhile, the VB-38 which can carry up to 33,000 barrels of clean oil, was built in 1973 in Gulfport Shipyards of Port Arthur, Texas, and when launched the name she was given was INTERSTATE 38. In 1974, she became TEXACO 38, before being re-named INTERSTATE 38 in 1980. In 1983 she became TEXACO 38 again, and like the back and forth channel along the meandering Wicomico, her name was changed back to INTERSTATE 38 in 1988. Finally, when purchased by Vane Brothers of Baltimore, Maryland, she was given her current name, VB38 in 2000. Though she currently remains operational in Vane Brothers' fleet of 45 barges, I'm not 100% certain whether she is double-hulled which effective 2015, is the standard requirement for all petroleum product vessels like previous posted and snapped by Jim, the DOUBLE SKIN 214: http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2013/07/tanker-barge-double-skin-214-pushboat.html.
Whether it's repeated name changes, continuous manoeuvres to avoid shallow spots and bends along a river or shipping lane, or for all of us just having to endure life in general, perhaps Forrest Gump's "Mamma" had it all right when she said, "Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you're gonna to get." Ain't that the truth!! c);-b


Sunday, 25 October 2015

Tannerz Boats

 TANNER
  2002-2015
For anyone who has been following my blog over the last three years, you may have noticed my four-legged friend and family golden retriever, Tanner, situated somewhere in my boat snaps. What can I say, he was very photogenic and seemed to do any pose to please me or anyone around him. It saddens me to say though that two weeks ago today our family dog and my "Best Friend Forever" Tanner passed away. Ironically 13 years earlier, also on Thanksgiving weekend, we met our puppy for the first time. In our 41 years of marriage, we have had three other dogs who were all great family friends, but Tanner was unbelievable, always wanting to run and play, Play, PLAY. Regardless of what time I got in from work, Tanner would be there at door or he'd immediately emerge from his bed with sometimes two tennis balls in his mouth and ready to play fetch in the backyard. He sure kept me young.
Look at me, I'm a duck!!
 (http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2014/03/navigation-aids-vessel-ccgs-tracy.html)
Tanner probably enjoyed going for a ride in the car as much as any dog and even when the final destination ended up along a Seaway bank or at Iroquois Lock, he'd patiently look out the car window or lay down along the shoreline or fence and wait for however long it took for me to take take my boat snaps, for his turn to get some attention and play fetch.
As expected for anyone who has lost a next of kin, sibling or an friend, being enthusiastic or simply "yourself" has been difficult these last two weeks. In fact it's been a lot like the Burt Bacharach and Hal David classic tune, "(There's) Always Something There To Remind Me". You know what I mean eh?

Last weekend I was watching the Disney animated flick "Big Hero 6" with my grandson José, and in the movie the plus-sized inflatable robot "Baymax" says to his prodigy "Hiro" who had lost is brother in a fire, that "someone is not gone as long as you have memories of him". Sorry, after I heard that I couldn't help but tear-up, but when you think of it, what a beautiful way for someone to help cope with the death of a loved one, especially if that lost family member or friend you're grieving, is just a dog. With all the fond memories and photos of him, we know Tanner will never be GONE.

We already know that it is different when we're down to river or seaway to snap boats, but we know Tanner is there with us, maybe not in clear view as he was these former Carlz Boats posts, but he'll be there. c):-)

Play!! (http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2013/06/chemicaloil-tanker-nordic-helsinki.html)

Man, it's COLD!! (http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2012/12/boxing-day-is-extra-day-off-after.html)

Play!! (http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2014/03/self-discharging-bulk-carrier-whitefish.html)

Could have been napping by the fireplace. (http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2014/01/oil-chemical-tanker-sarah-desgagnes.html)

What squirrel? (http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2013/02/self-unloader-capt-henry-jackman.html)

Still waiting to play!! (http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2014/01/self-discharging-bulk-carrier-baie.html)

Can't you see I'm resting HERE?? (http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2014/06/oilchemical-tanker-algocanada.html)

Wasn't me!! (http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2012/06/rms-segwun.html)

Play!! (http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2014/05/bulk-carrier-mapleglen.html)

Would rather be playing at Ron Beaupre's place eh!! (https://youtu.be/BZbD003YCiM)

Thursday, 1 October 2015

Oil & Chemical Tanker ALGOSAR (Re-Visited)


Like they say, "you shouldn't judge a book by it's cover". Just because she may not be as sleek looking as all the other Algoma tankers that we see so often with their bulging bulbous bows, high multi-deck superstructures, and tall monolithic funnels, the 434.5' ALGOSAR which I snapped motoring through Morrisburg, Ontario in July 2013, works as hard as any other tanker plying the Great Lakes, and then some. When launched in 1978 at Levingston Shipyards in Orange, Texas, for Cleveland Tankers of Cleveland, Ohio her was name GEMINI, and despite her squatly appearance and out of this world namesake, she was known then as the largest American flagged powered tanker on the Great Lakes. Along with her fleetmates (which also bore celestial names) MERCURY, SATURN, JUPITER and METEOR, the GEMINI continued to carry heavy oil and asphalt throughout the Great Lakes for Cleveland tankers until she was purchased by Algoma Tankers in 2005 and renamed ALGOSAR.


She is actually the second Algoma tanker to be named ALGOSAR. The first, the former IMPERIAL ST. CLAIR was given the name soon after Algoma Tankers acquired her when they bought out Imperial Oil's marine division in 1997. When ALGOSAR (1) was sold in 2004, the GEMINI, which needed to be flagged Canadian, was purchased the following year and given the name with the suffix "SAR" to commemorate the City of Sarnia which is known in Canada for its massive growth in the petroleum industry located there. I first snapped the 12,000 gross liquid ton ALGOSAR as she was entering the Welland Canal's Lock 8 in Port Colborne on the evening of August 5, 2012. Not the best photo in my "2BeDone" folder but at least I got her.

Algoma Tankers, a division of Algoma Central Corp. is based in St. Catharines, Ontario and have  a fleet of seven tankers. With the exception of the SAR, most of their fleet is less than 11 years old and two of the bigger boats, ALGOMA HANSA and ALGOSEA (snapped approaching Lock 4 by my Maryland friend, Jim Moyer, a few years back http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2012/09/tanker-algosea.html) were both built in 1998 and can carry over 17,000 tons of liquid product.
Just like her predecessor which was the first Canadian tanker to operate year-round thus breaking the winter navigation barrier, the ALGOSAR has an ice breaking reinforced bow, and though she's been laid up at Sarnia for the past two winters, while she was the Cleveland Tankers owned GEMINI, she got to experience the wrath of old man winter even during her first year of winter operations in January 1979 when becoming locked in the ice on Saginaw Bay until the U.S. Coast Guard came along to free her.  Nothing unusual about that for both American and Canadian Coast Guards, especially during these past two brutal winters.

Though the ALGOSAR may no longer be the largest powered tanker on the Great Lakes, she's still a pretty nice looking ship to photograph and despite her so-called "different" look, she has continued to remain useful for the last 37 years. More power to you ALGOSAR c):-D

Photo by Brenda Benoit - May 13, 2016
Photo by Jeff Cameron - May 16, 2016
Unfortunately the usefulness of the Sarnia, Ontario namesake did come to an end at as the 2015 shipping season was closing close. Instead of a refit and new coat of paint, contaminates were removed during her winter layup at the old Port Weller Dry Docks and then on May 17, 2017 she became a nameless scrap-tow being led up the Welland Canal to Port Colborne for dismantling. It was the same day that the self unloader PETER R. CRESSWELL   (http://carlzboats.blogspot.com/2016/06/final-voyage-self-unloader-peter-r_27.html) started her final journey to Montreal then eventually being scrapped in Turkey. The two doomed vessels can be seen meeting in Jeff Cameron's photo above.

Though nameless and all Algoma branding removed, the tanker looked pretty much in tacked when I photographed her during a visit to Port Colborne on July 2, 2016 but when I returned to Port on a dreary February 11, 2017, the ALGOSAR could barely be seen while former fleetmate ALGOSOO was well on her way to become just a memory too. Both are now gone but not forgotten.


Wednesday, 23 September 2015

Harbour Tug LA PRAIRIE

Autumn is here, on paper at least, and though it had been spring for over 6 weeks when I snapped the harbour tug LA PRAIRIE transiting Iroquois Lock on April 28, old man winter had kept this little big tug busy breaking up ice in and around locks Côte Ste. Catherine and St. Lambert a little bit longer than usual and thereby delaying her westerly or upbound trek to her summer work as the Port of Oshawa's harbour tug. Built in 1975 at the East Isle Shipyards in Georgetown, Prince Edward Island her name then was spelled out as "LA PRAIRIE" which as most of us up here in the "Great White North" is aware, it's the French translation for "The Prairie". Oddly enough "LA PRAIRIE" is it's also the name of a South-shore Montreal suburb which this little workhorse would regularly pass while conducting icebreaking or other maintenance tasks along the south-shore canal for her original owner, the St. Lawrence Seaway Authority and with her current boss, the Québec City based Le Groupe Océan who purchased her in 2002. 

Since going into business in 1972 as Aqua-Marine, Le Groupe Océan has become one the largest marine service providers in Canada primarily due to a series of acquisitions since 1987 of regional harbour tug companies along the lower St. Lawrence River. Today with a fleet of over 30 tugs, Océan offers year round efficient harbour towing services to ports like Sept-Îles on the Gulf of St. Lawrence; and Québec, Bécancour, Trois-Rivières, Sorel-Tracy, and Montreal on the St. Lawrence River. Based in Hamilton, Ontario, Océan expanded their services to Oshawa, Toronto, and Hamilton on Lake Ontario and Goderich on Lake Huron when they started Océan Ontario Towing in 2005.
Regardless of the situation, Le Groupe Océan has the resources to rotate their tugs from port to port or to conduct emergency salvaging operations within hours of being requested for assistance. Such was the case for those of us living near the Montreal to Lake Ontario section of the St. Lawrence, where more often this year we have seen heavy-pull tugs like the OCÉAN GEORGIE BAIN, and OCÉAN ROSS GAUDREAULT quickly motoring by to assist grounded vessels like this spring's 623' Polsteam bulk carrier JUNO beneath the Thousand Island Bridge in April, the 730' ALGOMA SPIRIT near Cornwall in May, and when the 286' cruise ship ST. LAURENT rammed into a concrete sill at Eisenhower Lock last June. Each incident resulted in the Seaway being closed for multiple days. The situation could have been far worse had it not been for the aid of Océan's modern and powerful tugs. Oh YAAA!!! c):-D
Sporting Océan's current colours of a royal blue hull and mostly white superstructure with an aquamarine trim near her deck (to acknowledge the company's founding name and colours, "Aqua-Marine", I presume), the nearly 74'x26' LA PRAIRIE perhaps looked somewhat miniature as she proudly motored along through the 776'x80' Iroquois Lock.

After an overnight stop at Kingston, (perhaps to fuel up)  LA PRAIRIE continued her journey to Oshawa where as she's done for many years before, offered assistance where needed. This summer it will have been berthing salties dockside or towing them out of Oshawa's narrow harbour to the deeper waters of Lake Ontario, while next winter she'll be back breaking ice along the Seaway's south shore canal or transferring St. Lawrence River pilots from her homeport in Sorel-Tracy. Like the late great Yogi Berra who died today at age 90, use to say about the game of baseball not being over till it's over, so is true for harbour tugs like the LA PRAIRIE. Rest In Peace Mr. Berra. We'll miss you. :-(( 

Monday, 7 September 2015

Self Unloader ALGOMA MARINER

Call me old fashioned. Call me sentimental. Call me a cab (or perhaps an über these days). Call me anything you want but I really felt proud when I saw the small survey boat KATELYN J. that was tied off to the east wall in Port Stanley on Lake Erie last September and that her homeport was my old home, Port Colborne, or as we call it, "Port", for short.
I don't know if it was because my dad worked on the Welland Canal or if it was because he used to sail on the Lakes and Gulf of St. Lawrence, but as long as I can remember I always got a kick out of seeing where a boat came from. Today, all you have to do is Google the ship's name and in seconds you'll often have several different sites that will tell you all you wanted to know about the boat included what country's flag it flies and it's homeport or port of registry. However, while growing up back then, the only way I could tell, was by trying to figure out the country flag that flew at the ship's stern, or by looking beneath the ship's name located there, and see a city name or her homeport.
Early on it was pretty easy going because the lakers and self unloaders that went through the canal were mostly Canadian or American flagged, but after the St. Lawrence Seaway opened in 1959, it got really interesting because ships from all or world passed by. Some of the country flags I remembered from social studies and geography in school but when I started seeing ships that came from cities like Helsinki, Hamburg and "Split", I'd look them up at the Port library and sit in amazement in front of the library's huge world atlas and see that these boats came all the way from Finland, Germany, Yugoslavia and more. They all passed right by me while waiting for the bridge to come down, and that happened a lot back then.




















Believe it or not, I was also as much at aw when a Misener boat went by and I'd see my home, PORT COLBORNE written on the back of their ships then, just like on my friend, Nathan Attard's dad's boat, the SCOTT MISENER in the photo above. That's Nathan's dad, Joe, who was the 3rd engineer, waving ashore just passed the SCOTT's lifeboat davits on the second deck of the aft accommodations section. Whether it was the SCOTT which appears to be motoring towards Lake Ontario at Port Weller (above), or the JOHN O. McKELLER, JOHN E.F. MISENER, J.N. McWATTERS or my favourite, the GEORGE M. CARL, they all appeared to hail from my hometown, PORT COLBORNE. All was good for me (and my strange little mind, obviously) until the new RALPH MISENER came along in 1968, when instead of Port Colborne being displayed on her stern, it read ST. CATHARINES (YUCK c):-()) because in the late 60's Misener moved their head office from Port to St. Kitts, as we called it. Their simple and probably very cost-effective move 24 miles or so down the Welland Canal meant the end to Misener ships being registered in Port Colborne and showing the community as their homeport.
Because Port Colborne was home to Algoma Central's  subsidiary Fraser Ship Repair, the lakeside city and southern entrance to the Welland Canal received the unique acknowledgement of having a ship kind of named after it, the 658' self unloader, ALGOPORT in 1978. Unlike many other Algoma self unloaders, the Collingwood Shipyards built, ALGOPORT, was designed like fleetmates, ALGOWAY and ALGORAIL to specifically be able to service smaller lake ports with a variety of essential trades like stone or road salt along with the usual grain and ore products. Like her sister ALGOBAY, the PORT was a Nova Scotia-class self unloader and during construction she was given an ice strengthened and bulbous bow to work the coastal service during winter months while during the summer would mostly operate on the Great Lakes, St. Lawrence Seaway and Gulf, and Canada's east coast. While making her way to Clarkson, Ontario with a load of gypsum from Little Narrows, Nova Scotia, my fellow boat watching friend, Ron Beaupre, snapped these shots (above and below) of the sleek and well maintained looking ALGOPORT from off his "dock" in Mariatown, just west of Morrisburg as the PORT made her way upbound toward Iroquois Lock in May 2008.
Ron was fortunate for us all to snap the ALGOPORT again about a year later while she was motoring downbound and riding high in ballast just beyond Iroquois Lock (below).
No, on that day, the versatile  ALGOPORT was not destined to pick up a load at an Atlantic Canada port, but was to eventually make her way to China for a face-lift of sorts just like her sister ALGOBAY. With a strengthen hull and new bridge wings added (as seen in Ron's photo), to meet Panama Canal transit specifications, the PORT motored under her own power all the way to Balboa, Panama, on the Pacific Ocean side of the Panama Canal. On July 19, 2009 the ALGOPORT was hooked up to the tug PACIFIC HICKORY which was to take her to Jiangyin, China where after her smaller forebody was removed, a new one that met Seaway-max specifications would be added to her modernized aft section. As fate had it though, all would not be as while only a week away from reaching the destination that would revitalize to her sailing career, the tow encountered the rough seas of Tropical Storm Dujuan and the ALGOPORT broke in half and sank, six years ago yesterday. Little did Ron Beaupre know that when he snapped the ALGOPORT during her last downbound transit as a Nova Scotia-class self unloader, that the ship and her Lake Erie port name, would soon be gone forever, sitting at the bottom of the East China Sea, south of Japan. Thanks for being there that day Ron.

Though there were no injuries, loss of live or environmental concerns, the ship owner was still somewhat caught between a rock and a hard place with a new forebody being built at Jiangyin's Chengxi Shipyards with no aft section to be attached to it. However as luck had it this time, insurance proceeds from the lost at sea ALGOPORT were used to fund the construction for a new aft section. After all was said and done, instead of a rebuild, Algoma Central Corporation took delivery of a completely new self unloader on May 31, 2011. The name she was given was ALGOMA MARINER and as shown in a this photo below taken recently by another boat watching friend, Joanne Crack of Prescott, Ontario, the MARINER's aft section looks exactly like Algoma's new Equinox-class bulk carriers that we regularly see along this section of the St. Lawrence Seaway with the exception of the self unloading boom and machinery attached to her superstructure.  
The Seaway-max ALGOMA MARINER is 740' long by 77' 11" wide and her maximum carrying capacity is 37,162 tons in the mid-summer. Like her predecessor, the MARINER services the Great Lakes, St. Lawrence River and Gulf, and Atlantic Canada's saltwater ports which may explain the extreme rusting conditions on this relatively new ship's bulbous bow.
Even though the name of the ill-fated Nova Scotia-class ALGOPORT was not continued,  ALGOMA MARINER's formal christening was held in Port Colborne on August. 25, 2011 and while having lost her seafaring identity with the demise of Misener Shipping many years earlier, the community's name was returned, as shown in Joanne's photo, as ALGOMA MARINER's  port of registry or homeport.

That was quite the class act on Algoma Central's part, and if you want to see more classy boat snaps along the upper St. Lawrence River and Seaway be sure to become a member of Joanne's Facebook boat group, "The Prescott Anchor" by linking on to:  https://www.facebook.com/groups/438207756313840/. You'll be glad you did!! c):-D




Hey, WAKE UP!! c);-b Plenty of time to nod off after checking the sad but amazing photos in this video entitled "The Sinking of the Algoport" with the background music of Newfoundland's "Great Big Sea" https://youtu.be/Yi2BpyomMAw . I'm lost for words.

Monday, 31 August 2015

Bulk Carrier CLAUDE A. DESGAGNÉS



"Quick & Dirty" Post Take 2!! Yes another hard working beauty that's been collecting dust for far too long in my "2Bdone" folder. Though they have only 18 ships in their liquid and dry bulk carrier fleet, it seems like a week can't go by without at least one  Groupe Desgagnés vessel motoring one way or the other along this end of the upper St. Lawrence River and Seaway. Though more often it's a Desgagnes tanker that we'll see, in these snaps, it's one of their larger dry bulk carriers, the downbound CLAUDE A. DESGAGNÉS that motored by us in Morrisburg, Ontario in June 2013.
Well she's actually called a "Heavy Lift Multi-purpose Dry Cargo" vessel, and just like all of her fleetmates, the dark blue hulled CLAUDE A., looked equally impressive with her standard mustard-yellow banner slashed near the bow and the flying company flag displayed on her stack which is also dark blue. Her superstructure of course is white like the others too along her crimson coloured deck equipment, foremast, hatches and her two monster 150 metric tonne carrying cranes.
By the way, Groupe Desgagnés has been in the shipping business since 1866 when Captain Zéphirin Desgagnés set sail from Les Éboulements on Quebec's Charlevoix region delivering goods on the little wooden schooner, MARY-ANN

When the 454.5' heavy lift-whatever was launched in 2011 in Jiangsu China, her name ELSBORG and was owned by Nordana Line of Soeholm, Denmark. Soon after the ELSBORG was purchased by Groupe Desgagnés of Quebec City and at her christening on July 24, 2012, she was given the name CLAUDE A. DESGAGNÉS in honour of Captain Claude Desgagnés who worked more than 50 years with the company, first as a captain and later as manager in both their marine transportation and stevedore sectors.
Just like her namesake, the CLAUDE A. DESGAGNÉS is a very flexible and versatile ship. Also known as a "Tweendecker", the CLAUDE A. has three decks which allows her to carry dry bulk, or stacked items on the retractable "tweendecks" below, while awkward cargos like wind turbines, pleasure craft, containers, or construction equipment can be lashed off to her upper or "weather" deck. By the way, the CLAUDE A. can also carry up to 665 TEU containers.  Again like all of her Transportation Desgagnés fleetmates, CLAUDE A. DESGAGNÉS has an ice strengthened bow which allows her to cut her way through iced over channels and harbours in the Arctic in the summer and  along Canada's Atlantic coastline during the winter months.

Though CLAUDE A. DESGAGNÉS is Canadian owned and flies Canada's flag when motoring in Great Lakes, St. Lawrence and Arctic waters, the CLAUDE A. she has been known to change her registry to Barbados so that she can operate more affordably when working deep-sea during the winter months. Though she's currently on her way to Diana Bay in near the tip of Norther Quebec, last winter the CLAUDE A. DESGAGNÉS was seen in Singapore, the Panama Canal and Port Everglades, Florida.

Oh-oh!! Looks like Tanner got tried waiting for me to play ball with him and decided to go take a dip in the St. Lawrence. EEEEE!! c):-El I hate it when he gives me one of those "it's not my fault, you know golden retrievers love the water, eh" looks :>b. I hear ya buddy but oh look, here comes another boat. It's the Algoma tanker ALGOSAR.....2Bdone soon!! c):-D


Wednesday, 26 August 2015

Oil/Chemical Tanker CHEM NORMA

It's not my fault. My orthopedic surgeon said I had to keep my immobilizer brace on for three more weeks and since I now have more time than I know what to do with, I thought I'd try to push out a few extra "quick and dirty posts" of boats that have been lingering around my Carlz Boats "2Bdone" file far too long like the 475' Marshall Island flagged oil & chemical tanker CHEM NORMA which I noticed on two boat groups that I follow on Facebook (the Prescott Anchor & St. Lawrence River Ship Watchers), that the she had made her way upbound through the Seaway last week on her way to Bay City, Michigan. Well this young lady in her flashy red hull did that and right now she's motoring back downbound in the middle of Lake Erie heading to Montreal to juice up before crossing the pond once again. 
Built in Ningbo, China in 2011, the CHEM NORMA with the word "ACE" brightly displayed sideways on her royal blue stack, is owned by Ace Tankers of Amsterdam, Holland.

While returning from a boat shoot along the Welland Canal and a visit with Mommy in Port Colborne in May 2013, I thought I lucked out when I saw that the NORMA was docked in Oshawa, an industrial city that myself and probably most locals might know it more as the "Automotive Capital of Canada" with its huge General Motors plant located there, than a busy Lake Ontario "deep-sea" port.  Just 60 km east of Toronto and only minutes away from the Macdonald-Cartier Freeway (Highway 401) and main railway lines for both Canadian National and CP, the Port of Oshawa has handled over 500 vessels and shipped more than 3 million tonnes of cargo in the last 10 years. I did not know that. Whether it's salt, steel products, asphalt or grain, the lake port handles approximately $23 million worth of cargo annually. Hmmm c)l:-o 
The only downside to this quaint little harbour or 'unexpected oasis' for boat snapping boatnerds like us, is the only clear shot you have of your subject is the section that's facing Lake Ontario or as in this case, NORMA's flattened fat stern (thought I was going to write something else, eh? You're BAD!!). Whether she's underway or tied off, my boat snapping "Three View Rule" is get her: 
  1. bow view (dead on, angled or side view with her name, spearhead or foremast, wheelhouse & accommodation if forward, and wake or swell if underway),
  2. full length view (complete stem to stern [unless a 1000 footer], superstructures, masts, self unloading booms and cranes all in or in action) and,   
  3. stern view (front and back on, wheelhouse and/or accommodation, stack(s), lifeboat, and zoomed to her name and homeport with stirred-up water if underway)  
Anything else I get like a close up of her bridge, or a crewman walking about, or a full flapping Canadian or American flag to me is like an "Oh YAAA!!" However wherever I ventured for another angle shot of this hot looking NORMA, all I came across were high fences, cement barriers, spacious parking areas for heavy equipment that's not there, and lots and lots of trees.
Hey, don't get me wrong, I love trees, (as long as they're not shading my pool) or tall shoreline reeds and especially wild flowers and hollyhocks to accent a photo, but long stacks of rusting rebar, misplaced blue recycling bins and pylons don't simply do it for me. A fence doesn't generally bother me much because I'll just poke my camera lenses between the links, move it this way and that for another angle or two then crop out the undesirables later, but installing two separate layers of fencing, what gives?. Hey, Oshawa Port Authority, I get the message! "Next time, bring a ladder!!" Of course I could always park my car really close to the first barrier of fencing and then while standing on my console and dash, I'll be able to extend my height through the moon roof to get a snap or two away. NAAAA, it'll never work! c);-b.
I couldn't even get a decent bow shot of the 83' harbour tug OMNI RICHELIEU, with her hull and fenders partially covered behind stacks of pallet skids and a "tree". Owned by Le Groupe Ocean of Quebec City, OMNI RICHELIEU is one of 32 tugs in their fleet that's stationed at Oshawa all season long to assist in & out bound vessels. If you haven't already done so, check out this link of the RICHELIEU and fleetmate JERRY C. posted 2 years almost to the day: http://carlzboats.blogspot.ca/2013/08/harbour-tugs-omni-richelieu-jerry-c.html, or NOT.
I may not have snapped all the shots I wanted to get during this boat shoot, but that's not important. The key thing is I got away from the bumper-to-bumper craziness of the 401 for even just a little while. I got to stretch my legs, do and think about something else while viewing and snapping all that's good about living in Canada.

Not exactly a "quick and dirty" post eh? Oh well, I've got another week or two off work to nail that down. Hasta la vista!! c):-D