Last week we posted about Disney filing three trademark applications for the rights to the phrase “SEAL Team 6.” Proving that they are only a step or two behind Mickey Mouse, the US Navy has now trademarked the phrases “NAVY SEALS” and “SEAL TEAM.”
Tomorrow the USS New York returns to the Hudson River to help kick off Fleet Week New York. The USS New York (LPD-21) is the fifth San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock ship and is the seventh ship of the United States Navy to be named after the state of New York. Parts of the bow and stern of the ship were fabricated using over seven tons of steel salvaged from the World Trade Center, after it was destroyed in the September 11 attacks. Earlier this year we posted about problems that the ship had with bad bearings and undersized welds. After an extended repair period, the ship is said to be in good shape and will participating in the parade of ships up the Hudson from 8:30 AM to 12 noon tomorrow.
The most recent iteration of the movie franchise, which opened on Friday, has earned a Rotten Tomatoes rating of only 33%, the lowest of any of the four “Pirate of the Caribbean” movies. Our 14 year old in-house reviewer gives it a slightly better rating, opining that “it was better than the third one, but not as good as the first two.”
The South Street Seaport Museum has long been supported by an active and enthusiastic group of volunteers. Let us hope that in the future that the museum’s management will meet the same standards of commitment and dedication shown by these volunteers.
Happy National Maritime Day! The day has been celebrated in the US since 1933. After World War II US flag shipping accounted for over 40% of the world’s total fleet. Currently the US ranks around 10th in the world by number of ships, placing between Indonesia and Hong Kong.
Shell is on its way to building the largest floating offshore facility in the world for its Prelude Floating Liquefied Natural Gas (FLNG) Project in Australia. The FLNG facility will be 488 meters long and will weigh around 600,000 tonnes – roughly six times as much as the largest aircraft carrier. It will be longer longer and heavier than the new Maersk Triple E ships which, when delivered, will be 400 meters long. The FLNG will also be longer than the largest ship ever built, the Seawise Giant/Jahre Viking/Knock Nevis, which was scrapped in 2010. The Knock Nevis was 458 meters long, but did displace more, at 657,019 tonnes, than will the FLNG.
The FLNG will be deployed over the Prelude field located approximately 475 kilometres north-northeast of Broome, Western Australia, and over 200 kilometres from the nearest point on the mainland. The field is too far offshore to use conventional techniques of building gas-compression platforms and long subsea pipelines to shore. Instead, the natural gas will be liquefied on the vessel and loaded onto LNG ships for transport.
In the US, National Maritime Day is May 22nd. The day was chosen to commemorate the departure from Savannah, Georgia of the American steamship, SS Savannah, first steamship to cross the Atlantic Ocean, on May 24, 1819. To celebrate National Maritime Day, the Baltimore Port Alliance is hosting tours on the NS Savannah, the first and last US flag nuclear merchant ship.
Patrick McPherson is a 19 year surgeon’s mate in the Royal Navy. By all appearances, he is an upstanding young man with a promising future. The dark secret that the young mate carries is that he is indeed, a she. Patrick was born as Patricia. When Patricia’s husband, a ship’s surgeon dies while tending a fever outbreak in the Indies, she decides to “shed Patricia like an inconvenient skin, becoming Patrick McPherson, a surgeon’s mate, of His Majesty’s frigate Richmond, on its undercover mission to Havana…” Linda Collison’s new book Surgeon’s Mate is the second in her series following the nautical adventures of Patricia McPherson. See our review of Collision’s first book of the series, Star Crossed. Continue reading →
A recent NOAA survey of the Caribbean off the southern coasts of the U.S. Virgin Islands of St. John and St. Thomas and off eastern Puerto Rico discovered six previously unknown shipwrecks.
There is an old saying about an ax that never wears out so long as you keep replacing the head and the handle. But what happens if you replace the head and handle at the same time? Is it the same ax? Or is it another ax altogether? These are the sorts of question being asked about the “refurbishment” and “repair” of the Bluenose II. Continue reading →
Following up on the previous news that the current board of the financially troubled South Street Seaport Museum is being replaced, that the Attorney General has barred the removal of the museum’s historic ships from New York harbor and that new funding is being arranged, the Save our Seaport grassroots organization is sponsoring a “Rally to Save our Seaport” on Sunday, May 22, at 2PM, on South Street at Pier 16 just below the Peking‘s bowsprit. It will be a great opportunity for friends, supporters and volunteers to show their enthusiasm for the Seaport and its long term survival and future growth.
As we posted last week, the US Navy has five times more aircraft carrier flight deck capacity than the rest of the world combined. Nevertheless the Chinese have leapt ahead in the construction of a concrete air craft carrier on a government building roof top. What strategic advantage that might provide remains unclear.
Roughly a year ago I went skin diving with dolphins in Honduras. We were told that the dolphins liked to play catch with eel grass. I dove to the bottom, pulled up a handful of eel grass and held it out in front of me. A dolphin would swim up and I would put some eel grass in its mouth. The dolphin would spit it out and I would grab it and we would start the game again. It was hard to tell if I was playing with the dolphin or the dolphin was playing with me. I would have loved to be able to communicate with these fascinating creatures. Now scientists may have developed computers that will allow divers to communicate directly with dolphins for the first time.
Mickey Mouse now apparently owns SEAL Team 6, or at least the name. Disney has filed three trademark applications to to claim the rights to the phrase “SEAL Team 6.” SEAL Team 6 is believed to be the Navy commando squad that killed Osama Bin Laden in the recent raid on his compound. How can Disney copyright the term “SEAL Team 6?” “Officially, the team’s name is classified and not available to the public, technically there is no team 6.”
That is no longer the case. It is now a trademark of the Walt Disney Company.
The NYS Attorney General has told the Seaport Museum New York that all vessels must remain where they are. This effectively blocks the Museum’s efforts to remove them from New York Harbor. Whether they can stay at the Seaport is not known at this time. But staying in New York allows them to be looked after in a better manner. Continue reading →
The SBX-1 , the Sea Based X-Band Radar 1, looks like something out of science fiction. It recently arrived at Vigor Shipyard on Seattle’s Harbor Island for three months of maintenance and upgrading.
The SBX-1 is a huge white dome with a half dozen or so smaller domes ontop of a modified MODU, a Mobile Offshore Drilling unit, on which high tech radar arrays have replaced the drilling rig. It is 240 feet wide, 390 feet long, and 280 feet high from its keel to the top of the radar dome (radome) and can cross an ocean under its own power at eight knots.
Time recently posted an article “Why Fukushima Is Good for Whales (in Iceland).” The article, in fact, had almost nothing to do with the damaged nuclear power plants at Fukushima (at least as applied to whales) and quite a lot to do with the damage done by the tsunami. Iceland exports the meat of endangered fin whales to Japan. Tsunami damage to whale processing plants in Japan may delay the start of the Icelandic whaling season. The Time article reports that the Icelandic whaling season has been “called off” while other sources say that it has been postponed or delayed. Continue reading →