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Tuesday, February 3, 2009

C is for Cuauhtémoc

Today's "C" is the barque ARM Cuauhtémoc from Mexico. However, it is here seen leaving Bergen, Norway, during the Tall Ships' Races in August 2008. A very beautiful ship she is and a favourite among the inhabitants of Bergen, at least. She has visited us several times. She is famous for entering the visiting harbour with the crew standing on the yards, singing. I did not catch that this time, but here is link to one who caught her entering Rostock in 2006.

Here she is moored at a quay in Bergen harbour, Vågen.

Wikipedia has this to say:

The ARM Cuauhtémoc BE-01 is a Sail Training vessel of the Mexican Navy, named for the last Aztec Emperor Cuauhtémoc who was captured and executed in 1525.

She is the last of four sisterships built by the Naval Shipyards of Bilbao, Spain, in 1982, similar to the 1930 German designs of Blohm & Voss, like the Gorch Fock and the USCGC Eagle.

Like her sisterships, the Colombian Gloria, the Ecuadorian Guayas and the Simón Bolívar of Venezuela, the Cuauhtémoc is a sailing ambassador for her home country and a frequent visitor to world ports, having sailed over 400,000 nautical miles (700,000 km) in her 23 years of service with appearances at the Cutty Sark Tall Ships' Races, ASTA Tall Ships Challenges, Sail Osaka, and others.


The public was allowed to enter and we were received with the utmost courtesy and elegance. However, for security reasons we could not enter the rigging. Just as well, I think.

Wikipedia has more to say about the technical specifications:

Class and type: Barque
Displacement: 1,800 tons
Length: 220 ft 4 in (67.2 m) waterline
Beam: 39 ft 4 in (12 m)
Draft: 17.7 ft (5.4 m)
Propulsion:
  • Sparred Length:

296.9 ft (90.5 m)

  • Sail Area:

25,489 sq ft (2,368 m²)

  • Auxiliary Propulsion:
one 1,125 hp engine
Capacity:
  • Fuel Capacity:

220 tons

  • Water Capacity:
110 tons
Crew:
  • Officer and Crew Accommodations:

186

  • Trainee Accommodations:
90
Notes: Steel hulled vessel

As you can see, the brass was polished and the ropes in order.

So, everything was ship-shape. WELCOME BACK!




Today's post is an entry in the fourth round of ABC Wednesday, the meme initiated by Denise Nesbitt.


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