the Nao Trinidad

in #hive-1949133 months ago

the Nao Trinidad

In a recent post i shared some shots of the replica ship the Nao Trinidiad when it visited New Bedford last year, I also mentioned it was visiting again and wasn't sure if I would get to visit it this time

Well as it happened I was able to visit it and here are some shots of it,
the light was not ideal at the time so not to happy with the shots but its such a cool ship I wanted to share some


nao trinidad.jpg

Sony A7iv 28mm F9 1/640 Sec ISO 100
Click here to view larger


A little bit about the Original Neo Trinidad**

The nao Trinidad was the flagship of the Magellan-Elcano expedition, leading the first sailing around the world between 1519 and 1522, which was the greatest maritime feat in history. An expedition that circumnavigated the globe for the first time, opening new routes, connecting continents and oceans, and getting to know the peoples and cultures that inhabited the lands they touched along their immense journey: Brazil, Argentina, the Mariana Islands, the Philippine Islands, Indonesia, Brunei and Timor.

It set sail from Seville (Spain) on 10 August, 1519, at the head of a fleet of five ships which, following its guidance, crossed the Atlantic, sailed along the coast of South America, discovered the Strait of Magellan and crossed the Pacific Ocean for the first time in history. They reached the Mariana Islands, the Philippines and the Moluccas, where the destiny of the Flagship Trinidad would change.

After more than two years at sea and with the fatigue of sailing thousands of nautical miles, the Trinidad sprang a huge leak in its hull. This prevented its return to Spain from the Moluccas with the expedition’s only other surviving ship—its companion, the Victoria. The latter did make it home, completing the First Sailing Around the World just months later.

Meanwhile, the Trinidad was involved in the toughest incident of the voyage. With the damage repaired, it attempted to return to Spain by sailing eastward, with 54 men on board, but was defeated by strong headwinds and currents. It was forced to sail northward until it reached the 42nd parallel north, when a violent storm nearly caused its wreckage. Cold, hunger, thirst and scurvy mercilessly struck the ship and its men.

Giving up, the ship returned to the Moluccas after six months of suffering and fighting against the sea, with just 17 survivors. There, the Portuguese were waiting for them; they captured the crew and abandoned the battered ship in those waters, where, exhausted and damaged, it met its end.

source


nao trinidad-2.jpg

Sony A7iv 33mm F9 1/640 Sec ISO 100
Click here to view larger


as you can see its not that big a ship and travelling those distances in confined spaces must have been a challenge for sure not like todays cruise ships many go on


nao trinidad-3.jpg

Sony A7iv 28mm F9 1/2500 Sec ISO 100
Click here to view larger



such cool detail on it


nao trinidad-4.jpg

Sony A7iv 75mm F9 1/160 Sec ISO 100
Click here to view larger


the light was better from this angle but still not so happy with these shots


nao trinidad-5.jpg

Sony A7iv 28mm F9 1/500 Sec ISO 100
Click here to view larger


And that’s all folks


unless stated otherwise all photos used in my posts are taken and owned by myself, if you wish to use any of my images please contact me.



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Awesome! I love those ships!

Awesome photography 😍

Love this old ship. It never takes a bad photo 😉 Cool that it is still flying the flag of Spain in addition to the US flag

Pretty good pictures! I really like it! Thanks to share with us!!

Your second photo is so beautiful with these clouds.

Have a wonderful day

@tipu curate


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Wow, what an interesting story that ship had. They really did a nice job with the replica. You almost wouldn't know the difference!

Congratulations @tattoodjay! Your post brought a smile to the TravelFeed team so we have sent you a smiley. Keep up the good job. 🙂

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