Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.


King tides are a bitch...
Hmmm.... house painted hull, no markings or registration, shanty town configuration
Hmmm.... house painted hull, no markings or registration, shanty town configuration
... I think @Yard Sale might be right
Shingle, basalt, shag and pig iron were often used as ballast in vesselsGravelly Vancouver Island beach, near some ruins of an old wharf used 100+ years ago by sailing and steam ships to load coal. Ships dumped their ballast of various kinds of rocks, before taking on coal. This thing had to be manmade, with its flat surfaces. The bottom (not shown) has a smooth, greyish coating. Is it maybe a type of brick?

It looks like early Clovis era brick masonryGravelly Vancouver Island beach, near some ruins of an old wharf used 100+ years ago by sailing and steam ships to load coal. Ships dumped their ballast of various kinds of rocks, before taking on coal. This thing had to be manmade, with its flat surfaces. The bottom (not shown) has a smooth, greyish coating. Is it maybe a type of brick?
The Pirates have been whooping up on the Mariners lately. One of their super fans must have been trying to reenact the stadium jumbotron powerboat races on Puget Sound.Shingle, basalt, shag and pig iron were often used as ballast in vessels
Using your CSI skills what's the story behind yet another derelict vessel, though also with a cell phone and cap?
View attachment 186983