Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/08/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Aug 21, 2007, at 3:27 PM, lug-request@leica-users.org wrote: > On Aug 21, 2007, at 10:56 AM, Leonard Taupier wrote: > >> >> Ric, many of your shots show boats in different stages of decay. >> Are there special places where these boats are brought? Like a >> junkyard. Or are many just abandoned and allowed to disappear >> naturally? >> > > My experience is that wooden boats just sink and die. Steel may make > it to salvage yards. <http://tinyurl.com/ywmrwx> > > It may be related to what an old public health friend of mine called > the "hookworm culture" of the South. It is true, as Ric says, that old wooden boats are often left to rot but steel boats are cut up for scrap. Scrap steel has some intrinsic value but rotting wood costs more to haul away than it is worth. Most major waterways have a collection of old wrecks, boats abandoned by their owners and left to decay on the foreshore. But it wasn't always the case. In New England and parts of the Atlantic Coast old wooden boats were often burned to salvage the metal parts and fittings from the ashes. There are similar ship breaking yards that retrieve salvageable components from steel ships before cutting up the hulks for scrap. One of the biggest in the northeast is in Arthur Kill, on the south west side of New York's Staten Island. If you want to photograph boats rusting in peace, that's the place to go. It is a romantic theory that boats have a long lifetime. Workboats, whether wood or steel, are regarded as tools of a trade. From fishing boats to ocean liners they are designed for a limited economic life span, utilized fully, then replaced or sold to a less demanding service when repairs and maintenance make them too costly to run at a profit. Modern commercial boats are often designed for a 30 year life span, naval craft a bit longer. At the end of his navy career, my son was in charge of decommissioning the Jewett class of battle cruisers, salvaging the out of production parts from the older craft to keep the newer ones running for a few more years. It was, on a larger scale, sort like keeping LTM Leicas in mechanical repair. The designed life span of some boats was, in many cases, a good deal shorter. PT boats, such as John Kennedy's PT109 were not expected to survive more than two missions. Of the hundreds made during WW2 only about half a dozen still exist. The fabled Yankee clipper ships were made of rot prone pine. They were intended to turn a profit by their third voyage. The clipper ships were driven so hard, and trips to the Far East were so hazardous that most never made it to their tenth birthday. Why build a ship to last if you expect it to die young? Larry Z