Berny's photos with the keyword: Estancia San Gregorio

EstanciaSanGregorio

21 May 2022 27 10 371
Hi everybody, you are invited to visit this album by clicking the Link below. It's about the abandoned Estancia San Gregorio, a ghost town at the Strait of Magellan, Patagonia. ► Estancia San Gregorio Happy weekend!

Estancia San Gregorio - Amadeo

01 Jan 2022 26 10 456
Wreck of steam ship Amadeo in 2000, built 1892, beached since 1932. See detailed description at the PiP (2015). In the background the ghost town of Estancia San Gregorio. - scanned slide, Minolta X700

Strait of Magellan - Ambassador

30 Dec 2021 66 37 727
This is the 2nd of only two slides I made in 2000 and I'm very glad about it, because the wreck is sadly broken down in the meantime. I've made some photos in 2015, but some YouTube videos show, that the current situation is even worse. I think in 5 or 10 years it will be disappeared. The 1st PiP shows the wreck in 2015, lying at the side. Other PiP's show old paintings with the ship in full sail. scanned slide, Minolta X700

Strait of Magellan - Ambassador

30 Dec 2021 41 19 654
Ambassador was an United Kingdom tea clipper built in 1869 (dimensions: 53.5 x 9.54 x 5.82 m). She was a composite clipper, built with wooden planking over an iron skeleton and was W. Lund & Co's first fast tea clipper. William Walker built Ambassador at Lavender Dry Dock in London. Though considered a fast ship, Ambassador was said to be "very cranky and overmasted". Her first passage to the UK from Foochow came during the Tea Race of 1870 under Captain Duggan and took 115 days, a mediocre performance; that same year the fastest tea passage, also from Foochow, was made by the clipper Lahloo in just 98 days. Ambassador‍ '​s fastest passage between China and England was 108 days, in 1872. Ambassador has been beached in the Strait of Magellan at Estancia San Gregorio, Chile since 1899. The wooden planks were used to build houses of the Estancia, which is now a "wreck" too. In 1973 Chile declared her a historic monument. But if you compare this image made in 2000 and the same wreck in 2015 (PiP), you can imagine, that sooner than later it will disappear. See the small person to the right for size comparison. The brown "things" on the beach are rusty iron parts by the way. - scanned slide, Minolta X700 For more images click here: Ambassador