Showing posts with label south street seaport museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label south street seaport museum. Show all posts

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Aboard Peking at South Street Seaport Museum

mikromeetsthepeking

South Street Seaport Museum is still recovering from damage from Hurricane Sandy, but they were able to open up Peking for tours over several weekends in October. The Peking is one of the quintessential school field trip memories that most people of my vintage have of growing up in New York City. The ship has been closed for some time as the museum struggles to find funding to maintain her, so this was a special opportunity to share a part of my childhood with Mikro that I made sure to take advantage of. We had a wonderful guided tour of the open areas of the ship, and also got to learn about the tools and skills necessary for sailing her.

pekingguide touringpeking

Peking is a 4 masted steel hulled bark built in 1911, at the end of the era of sail. She's approximately 400 feet long (including the bowsprit) and has masts that are 170 feet tall. She carried cargo, especially nitrates from Chile to Germany. She later served as a "floating reform school" in England, where at risk youth could learn the merchant marine trade.

Our tour started on the poop deck at the stern. This is where orders were issued from, and where the ship was steered from during extreme foul weather.

steelsailingships stern

Next, we saw the Captain's saloon and the mates' quarters, on the well deck level.

captainssaloon captainssaloon1 captnskylights


1stmate matescabinsplaque

Amidships were the binnacle (where the compass was housed), the helm (removed), and the charthouse. During normal conditions, this is where the ship was steered from.

binacle binacle2

capstan chartroom

From there we moved to the midships exhibit area, where the galley, crew quarters and provisions storage were. There are displays explaining what life was like aboard and a film of Peking going around Cape Horn in a storm.

midshipsdisplays crewquarters focslecrewquarters

galley pettyofficersfocsle provisionroom

porthole

Next we went to the forward well deck, where there were displays and demos. Mikro learned about how lines were spliced, how repairs were made to the sails, and the essential sailor's skill of tying knots. He has a pretty good grasp of trying the bowline. We also saw some of the amazing work of a master carver. Mikro loved the mermaids.

forwardbow

lotoflearning askingquestions dittybag

passingdownskills bowlineboy

bowlineframedboy waterbottlehitch

sailorstools splicedemo

mastercarver carvingtools

tops toweringmast

Mikro also built a model sloop and painted it.

modelboatbuild finishedsloop

I'm so glad he got to experience the Peking!

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Model Ship Building Workshop at South Street Seaport Museum

South Street Seaport Museum has terrific weekend family workshops. We attended one on building model ships, and each got to make one. Here is our little family flotilla:

Mikro's Cobra:
mikroscobra1
mikroscobra2

Chele's Sea Dragon
chelesseadragon1
seadragonfigurehead
chelesseadragon2

Kev's Surprise
kevssurprise1
kevssurprise2

Mikro also got to make a naval hat:

sssmcommodoreshat

Unfortunately, the Seaport Museum was devastated by Hurricane Sandy. Local folks, please show your support if at all possible by making a donation or registering for a program. Please help keep this wonderful institution alive.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Family Sail Aboard the Pioneer

pioneer

South Street Seaport Museum hosted an educational sail for families the day before my birthday, and it seemed like the perfect way to celebrate a little early (since Mondays do not lend themselves to outings around here...) What could be better than a day out in New York Harbor, with fantastic views of the skyline, and the rolling of the waves underfoot? I am a sailor's daughter, and I love being on the water.

chelenkev1

chelenmikro

kevnmikro1

kevnmikro2

We motored out from the pier to the trawling grounds off Sunset Park, Brooklyn, where the kids helped deploy a net and then pull it in, full of harbor critters.

liberty

lowermanhattanfrompioneer1

mikrolookingout

mikrosmile2

upmast

windblownkev

We saw: a seahorse, fish, crabs, snails and seaweed.

fishy

mikronseahorse

seahorse2

seahorsefullsize

seaweed1

snail

tinycrabs

touchingseaweed

The critters were returned to the deep, and the kids moved on to the next activity: learning about charts and navigation. They also got to take a turn at the wheel.

charting2

learningaboutcharting

mikroatwheel

mikroatwheel2

Then they helped raise sail for our return to port.

mikroraisingsail

hoistsail

They also got to play lookout with binoculars.

binnocboy2

binoccboy

mikrosidelines

mikrosmile

What a terrific day!

mikropose1

mikroprofile

pioneer2

peking

eyesshaded

mikrondaddy