The restored South Street Seaport, on New York’s City’s East River, has always been an uneasy balance between a historic seaport and a real estate deal. South Street is now far more shopping mall than historic seaport. The current museum chairman, Frank J. Sciame, is himself a real estate developer. Depending on who one asks, Sciame is either the museum’s savior or its destroyer. Since March, Mr. Sciame has lent the museum $3 million to cover operating expenses. Over the last three weeks, seven of the 21 trustees resigned from the museum board, and according to sources at the Seaport, twelve employees were furloughed on Monday, leaving at most a skeleton staff to continue Seaport operations. Whether the Seaport Museum will survive its current financial crisis is unclear.
As reported in yesterday’s New York Times:
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Yesterday, Japan announced that due to concerns for safety they had suspended their whale hunt, as of February 10th. The Sea Shepherds claim that the Japanese are bluffing. Perhaps Watson and his band of bumbling vigilante pirates are concerned over their “reality” TV show “


Last week 
The tank barge Waldhof which capsized a month ago in the Rhine River near Lorelei Rock was finally raised today after its cargo of sulfuric acid was allowed to slowly drain off. Two sailors where lost in the capsize. One of the bodies was found inside the barge cabin. The second sailor remains missing and is presumed drowned. The barge has now been towed to a safe harbor close by. The capsized barge has severely restricted commercial travel on the Rhine River, Europe’s busiest inland water way.






Happy Valentines Day! Yesterday, the
One of the wonderful and maddening things about the internet is that we all make so many virtual acquaintances; many who become good friends, and yet who we have met only through the ether of web pages and email. It was, therefore, a real pleasure last Friday evening to sit down, in the flesh, and share a drink or two or – well perhaps, it is best not to specify the specific numbers of drinks – with a group of water bloggers from in and around New York. In no particular order, there was Will van Dorp of the