Posted on 06/18/2007 12:53:03 PM PDT by Stoat
QE2 sold as $100m floating Dubai hotelBy David Millward, Transport Correspondent Last Updated: 3:54pm BST 18/06/2007
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Luckily for him, not the sloppiest reporting I've seen all day. He gets a runner-up award. I guess no one uses copy editors any more.
I thought that the fate of this proud ship might be of interest to those who served in the Falklands War, as well as many others.
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Sadly, this is evident in so many places. Even something as simple as pressing the spell-check button seems to be beyond the ability of many newspaper writers, as I am frequently able to find multiple spelling errors, oftentimes on the same page, in many major newspapers. Flawed as spell-check functions remain, even errors that are so glaring as to be easily caught by these rudimentary functions often appear in print.
You're quite welcome, and I'm delighted that you have enjoyed them. :-)
My grandfather came home on the QM from WWII during her Grey Ghost years. He said shed been stripped down to bones.
Amazing memories to be cherished forever. I often wonder if there would be a similar will for private industries and corporations to pull together these days in the event of a national crisis, as was the norm in WW2. With the endless shrill squabbling and anti-Americanism having been elevated to a virtue, I have grave doubts that such a cohesive unity could be achieved in the present-day climate.
And I'm guessing that the ship was most likely running at a reduced speed, as is often the standard procedure while in inland waterways (steamship companies don't like to be sued by waterfront property owners for washed-out bulkheads and damaged docks and vessels). A huge underwater mass like that is going to displace a LOT of water volume .....sounds like a memory to be retold for generations around the campfire :-)
I've enjoyed many a wild ride on the family sailboat when the Trident submarines pass by :-)
Quite the view from your garden. Nice post.
I beleive I may still have photos of that day and ship. My Dad darn near killed us all on several occasions on the wakes of ships. Many good memories of being in Panama.
If you can find them without too much trouble, I as well as I'm sure many others would love to see them posted to this thread.
My Dad darn near killed us all on several occasions on the wakes of ships. Many good memories of being in Panama.
hehe! I'm glad that you survived your youth (which was a similar concern for many of us)
She is visited by thousands of people each year and is not only a floating hotel, but a convention center as well as being on the register of historic places.
Every week hundreds of folks (several of them school children) learn of the part she played in history. As well as carrying the rich and famous across the Atlantic for almost thirty years, she did yeoman work during WW11 as a troop ship.
I wish her sister ship, Queen Elizabeth 2 long life in her new home.
It is The Queen Mary which is in Long Beach, not The Queen Mary 2
I think the country might be regarded as a big “Rick’s Cafe Americain” used for R&R by the gulf region’s residents. No body wants to mess things up by suggesting that enforcement Sharia is a bit lax for most things. One still has to be careful about not eating or drinking in public during Ramadan. Hotels make concessions by not having live music and placing screens that block public views of restaurants.
I absolutely agree, the QE2 is a truly beautiful ship, while the newer ships are... NOT.
QE2 exiting the Straits of Messina astern of my ship at 25 knots and heading north last spring.
“The Queen Mary is alive and well”
That total rust bucket was lucky to have made it around the cape on it’s last trip coming to Long Beach.
I had the contract to construct the Jacque Casteau Museum of the Sea in the bildge of that thing.
It’s lucky it didn’t sink on the way here.
As you obviously know, that is a daunting task - given her age, but I see improvements every day. She is certainly doing better than her contemporaries.
‘England’s QE2’?...
The QE2 was built on the Clyde shipyards of Glasgow,Scotland.
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