posted by admin on Sep 13
the ferry in galveston to port bolivar
Duration : 0:2:10
|
All About The Port Of Galveston
|
posted by admin on Sep 13
the ferry in galveston to port bolivar
Duration : 0:2:10
posted by admin on Aug 22
Tracking Hurricane IKE
On Thursday September 11, 2008 Harris County officials issued a mandatory evacuation order for residents living in the following ZIP codes: 77058, 77059, 77062, 77520, 77546, 77571, 77586 and 77598.
Hurricane Ike currently a category 2 going towards Galveston, TX.
Galveston already flooded in most parts.
Duration : 0:6:49
posted by admin on Aug 8
New York–The Coast Guard and National Transportation Safety Board released Coast Guard footage today of the U.S. Airways passenger plane as it conducted an emergency landing into the Hudson River Jan. 15, 2009.
The Coast Guard is conducting a safety zone around the plane, which is now located at Battery Park City, N.Y., while a commercial salvage team is working to remove the plane from the water.
The Coast Guard, New York Police and Fire Departments, New York Waterways and Circle Line ferry rescue teams launched a multi-asset response yesterday when the plane ditched onto the Hudson River, at approximately 3:30 p.m.
Upon initial notification, Coast Guard Sector New York launched a fleet of small rescue boats and the 87-foot Coast Guard Cutter Ridley was diverted to the scene. The Coast Guard Cutter Katherine Walker also arrived on scene to ist in the search and rescue efforts and enforcement of the safety zones.
Three Coast Guard helicopters from Air Station Atlantic City, N.J., and one from Air Station Cape Cod, Mass., worked closely with New York City Police air ets to provide aerial support.
The video was captured by Coast Guard Vessel Traffic Service. The purpose of a VTS is to provide active monitoring and navigational advice for vessels in particularly confined and busy waterways. There are two main types of VTS, surveillance and non-surveillance. Surveillance systems consist of one or more land-based sensors (including radar, Automated Identification Systems and closed circuit television sites), which output their signals to a central location where operators monitor and manage vessel traffic movement. Non-surveillance systems consist of one or more reporting points at which ships are required to report their identity, course, speed, and other data to the monitoring authority.
The Coast Guard operates 12 Vessel Traffic Centers (VTC): Prince William Sound, Puget Sound, Valdez, Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles/Long Beach, Houston-Galveston, Berwick Bay, Louisville, Saint Mary’s River, Port Arthur, Tampa, and New York.
Duration : 0:10:0
posted by admin on Aug 2
http://CoastGuardNews.com
HOUSTON – Coast Guard Marine Safety Unit Galveston, with the istance of Coast Guard Buoy Tender Harry Claiborne, conducts a pollution response drill using the Vessel of Opportunity Skimming System (VOSS) in Galveston Bay, Texas.
The VOSS equipment uses a large strip of containment boom to collect oil into an area directly beside the ship, where a skimmer can be lowered to draw the oil into collection tanks on board.
The Coast Guard’s VOSS equipment is strategically pre-positioned at several locations across the country and may be transported to a spill site on a single truck or by Coast Guard C-130 aircraft. The mobile equipment is totally self-contained and capable of being used quickly and effectively aboard any available vessel.
Duration : 0:0:52
posted by admin on Jul 27
The crew of the Coast Guard Cutter Clamp works non-stop to rebuild the aids-to-navigation in the Houston Ship Channel, Sept. 15, 2008, following Hurricane Ike.
Duration : 0:1:35
posted by admin on Jul 21
The lighting operation is an attemptĀ to free the 800-foot tank ship Yasa Golden Dardanelles, which is grounded 22 miles off the Galveston coast. Read more at www.galvnews.com.
Duration : 0:1:57
posted by admin on Jul 17
Cmdr. James Elliot, commanding officer of Marine Safety Unit Galveston, discusses the response to the grounding of the tank ship Yasa Golden Dardanelles, Feb. 26, 2009.
The Yasa Golden Dardanelles had 26 crewmembers on board, and was carrying 621,000 barrels of low-sulphur fuel oil when it became grounded, Friday, Feb. 20, 2009.
The 800-foot tank ship Yasa Golden Dardanelles was successfully refloated at 12:08 a.m., Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2009.
Coast Guard personnel from Marine Safety Unit Galveston successfully oversaw the lightering operation, which began on Monday, Feb. 23, 2009. The operation was successful in transferring more than 80,000 barrels of oil to the lightering vessel SPT Crusader. The transfer was conducted safely, ensuring personnel were not harmed, no pollution was released into the environment, and no damage sustained to either vessel.
Coast Guard video by paetty officer Patrick D. Kelley
Duration : 0:2:13
posted by admin on Jul 17
2009 Southern Living Idea House at Cinnamon Shore on Port Aransas, Texas Gulf Coast
Duration : 0:3:51
posted by admin on Jul 5
Hurricane Ike Coast Guard Video of Galveston Effects
Duration : 0:6:7
posted by admin on Jun 28
Things to do in Galveston, TX
Duration : 0:8:33