The Call Of The Running Tide

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

I spent the afternoon in the port city of Liverpool, walking the docks. Here’s the view from one point, a panorama running from sunshine on the right and grading into rain on the left, looking across the Mersey (click to enlarge). As a seaman, there’s not much I’d rather do than wander the waterfront in some strange town.

IMG_1218Nor am I alone in this habit. Here’s Herman Melville on the subject:

 If they but knew it, almost all men in their degree, some time or other, cherish very nearly the same feelings towards the ocean with me.

There now is your insular city of the Manhattoes, belted round by wharves as Indian isles by coral reefs—commerce surrounds it with her surf. Right and left, the streets take you waterward. Its extreme downtown is the battery, where that noble mole is washed by waves, and cooled by breezes, which a few hours previous were out of sight of land. Look at the crowds of water-gazers there.

But look! here come more crowds, pacing straight for the water, and seemingly bound for a dive. Strange! Nothing will content them but the extremest limit of the land; loitering under the shady lee of yonder warehouses will not suffice. No. They must get just as nigh the water as they possibly can without falling in. And there they stand—miles of them—leagues. Inlanders all, they come from lanes and alleys, streets and avenues—north, east, south, and west. Yet here they all unite. Tell me, does the magnetic virtue of the needles of the compasses of all those ships attract them thither?

Circumambulate the city of a dreamy Sabbath afternoon. Go from Corlears Hook to Coenties Slip, and from thence, by Whitehall, northward. What do you see?—Posted like silent sentinels all around the town, stand thousands upon thousands of mortal men fixed in ocean reveries. Some leaning against the spiles; some seated upon the pier-heads; some looking over the bulwarks of ships from China; some high aloft in the rigging, as if striving to get a still better seaward peep. But these are all landsmen; of week days pent up in lath and plaster—tied to counters, nailed to benches, clinched to desks. How then is this? Are the green fields gone? What do they here?

And indeed, despite the imminent storm, there were people all over the docks. And deservedly so, they are very interesting. I learned lots of things there.

First, I learned another bit more about the siting of windmills. There are five Darrieus rotors mounted at the corner of the Echo Arena … except that the Echo Arena doesn’t have any corners, it’s round. And since it’s round I’d have thought that any windmills near each other by the building would be in about the same wind. But in fact, only the two nearest of the five in the photo were rotating fast. The other three, despite being within a few metres of the others, only gave an occasional desultory turn.

darrius rotors in liverpoolThe other joke was the size of the windmills. The swept area of the rotors were each maybe twenty feet by ten feet … call it 200 square feet, maybe 20 square metres each. By contrast, a modern bat-chopper’s blade is maybe 100 metres in diameter, almost 8,000 square metres. There’s not enough wind energy in twenty square metres to do more than light a couple of light bulbs … and that only when the wind is blowing. Useless. However, at least they look kinda cool, and they don’t go “thwop-thwop-thwop” like the bird-shredders.

As I wandered along the dock, the squall got closer and closer, and the wind started kicking up waves along the sides of the stone docks. The stonework on the dock is lovely, not because it is supposed to be, but because the form fits so perfectly with the function. The stones were all carefully and cleverly fitted with a minimum of chiseling and a maximum of results. Here’s an example:

liverpool dock stonework

Now, on the chains you can see at the top of that picture, all along the waterfront there are locks locked onto the top chain. Some of them have people’s names on them, some don’t. I thought I’d google the reason when I got back, but then I figured I’d just ask the assembled masses for their local knowledge … so, what’s up with these padlocks?

liverpool dock locks

The weather was threatening, but I got to the Maritime Museum and ducked inside. There, I went first to the Slavery display on the third floor. It was interesting in part because there was a whose section, not on slavery itself, but on the African cultures that existed at the time. They showed a lot of different African arts and implements, often very beautiful pieces. Overall it was a good exhibit, but somehow they failed to mention the participation of the Africans in the slave trade as slavers. Hey, it wasn’t mostly white guys going out into the African bush to collect slaves. They bought them from black slavers at the coast. They also didn’t say a word about the fact that slavery existed in Africa for thousands of years before the melanin-deficient folk made it into a big business. But other than that it was hugely informative and fascinating, and only in part because on account of my family’s participation in the trade, the subject is always of great interest to me.

I used to feel bad that my ancestors were involved in the slave trade. But I let go of that after a comment from a man I met at a party thirty years ago in Dakar, in Senegal, where much of the slave trade took place. I spoke to him about what my family had done. He looked at me and said “So what if your great-great-grandfather did something to my great-great-grandfather … what the hell does that have to do with you and me?”

What the hell indeed, I thought, and since then it hasn’t been an issue for me. We humanoids desperately need to learn to forget the past, or we end up fighting about things that happened before we were born.

The next floor down in the Museum is all about the Titanic. Not much there that was new to me, although there were a few lovely artifacts that had been salvaged from the wreck of that majestic liner.

The next floor down had a whole section about the Second World War. In that section, I saw something I’d never heard of, a “fog signal” to keep the ships in convoy from coming up on the ship in front of them and smashing into the stern. Here’s what it looks like:

fog signal liverpool

The way the contraption works is like this. You attach a rope to the chain you can see at the left, which goes up and is attached to the underside of the boards. You let it out over the stern of the ship, and trail it along behind. Now if you look at the right end, there’s a metal scoop. As the contraption is dragged along, the water is picked up by the scoop and jetted high in the air. Unlike a light, which the Germans could have seen, this jet of water would only be visible when you get near to it. Pretty ingenious, if you ask me …

Down in the bottom of the Maritime Museum, there’s an exhibition put on by the Customs and Excise department regarding smuggling. They show all the goofy ways that people have tried to smuggle stuff into England over the centuries. It’s an old, historical trade, it goes back a long, long way. Or at least that’s they said, because me, all I know about smuggling is what I read in the popular press and see in the museums …

When I came out, the squall was over, and the sun was shining through a hole in the clouds right on the town buildings. Here’s another question for those in the know about Liverpool—what are those birds that are portrayed on the top of the Municipal buildings?

liverpool muni buildings

If I had any question about the importance of the ocean to Liverpool, I found out that the middle of those the three big buildings is the “Cunard Building”, home office of the Cunard ocean liners …

The docks of Liverpool are very unusual in that many of them are actually protected by locks. This is because of the huge swing of the tides. Here are the tides for this month:

liverpool tidesAbout nine metres (30′) of tidal swing in six hours? … yikes! So they built up an entire system of docks that were protected by locks. The ships would come in and out only at high tide, and then the lock gates would be closed behind them so the water couldn’t flow back out. That way they could unload the ships without the bottom dropping out of the ocean and the ship sitting down on the harbor floor.

In Alaska the tides are about that big, but we didn’t have locks. I’ve seen guys struggling hard with that problem, for instance getting a drunk crewman to a ship that’s thirty feet down over the side of the dock by tying a rope around his chest, taking a couple of turns with the rope around a bollard, and pushing him over the edge and lowering him down with the rope … in hindsight, the Liverpool method is greatly preferable.

From there, I went to the Liverpool Museum. I’ve been considering the question of energy lately, what with windmills and steam locomotives. In the Museum, they have one of the oldest steam locomotives in existence. It’s called the “Lion”, an absolutely gorgeous piece of 1800’s engineering. I couldn’t get a good photo of it, here’s one from the web, it’s a jewel.

lion locomotive

PHOTO SOURCE

I was amused to find out that after the Lion was retired, they pulled out the boiler and used it to drive a pump at the waterfront. But of course, the Lion was run by coal. So if they wanted to do that these days I fear they’d have to revert to an even earlier form of energy, immortalized below on the Liverpool docks:

liverpool horse

This is the statue in honor of the working horses of Liverpool, to which we all may be reduced if the anti-CO2 maniacs win the fight … just sayin’ …

On the way back, I passed an enclosed bit of water with a couple dozen of the “narrow boats” from the canals. The nearest one, the “Irene Grace” had the laundry hung out … and the second one, the “Hodmedod” had its garden out in the sun.

liverpool narrow boats

On the way back, my weather luck ran out. It started to pour down rain, and the only shelter in a long ways was an ornamental arch that is about twenty feet tall and three feet wide … so it provided little in the way of shelter for the six of us trying to get out of the rain. Now, there is one of those half-bowls mounted on the side of the arch, maybe a yard (metre) across. I hunched myself down as small as I could get, and tried to hide underneath it. So I’m all smooshed up under the bowl, feeling like a perfect idiot, and I notice that it’s not really raining … because what’s coming down is actually pepper-corn sized hail.

Hail! How could I not like hail, it’s one of my favorite phenomena. Here’s why.

Any fool can convince heat to flow from a warm place to a cold place. But a thunderstorm manages to make cold flow from a cold place to a warm place, in the form of snow, hail, and sleet. To me, that’s one of nature’s most ingenious tricks. It extends human refrigeration, which involves only the phase change from liquid to gas and back, to include a second phase change—from liquid to gas and back to liquid, then the second phase change, from liquid to solid.

However, that didn’t make me any dryer, and it sure didn’t make me any warmer. So I gave up my vain attempt to stay out of the weather. I emerged from my pathetic, ineffective excuse of a hiding place under the half-bowl, and I abandoned myself to the crazy vagaries of the English atmosphere.

Oddly, the weather I’ve happened to see so far here has shown all of the same phenomena I used to see in the tropics—when it starts getting warm, up pop the cumulus to slow the warming. When it gets even warmer, thunderstorms appear. In other words, it’s one more example of the emergent phenomena doing what they always do—<em>keeping the world from overheating.</em>

And I can testify that they kept me from overheating as well, I was shivering hard before I got back to the house, with a small version of the Mersey River running from the nape of my neck, straight down my back, and pooling somewhere around my unmentionables. So I guess that means that the universe is unfolding just as it should.

Tomorrow the circus decamps again. We’re off to the Lake District, to see what that part of the planet looks like and to meditate on these questions in a new location … or as Herman Melville had it:

Once more. Say you are in the country; in some high land of lakes. Take almost any path you please, and ten to one it carries you down in a dale, and leaves you there by a pool in the stream. There is magic in it. Let the most absent-minded of men be plunged in his deepest reveries—stand that man on his legs, set his feet a-going, and he will infallibly lead you to water, if water there be in all that region. Should you ever be athirst in the great American desert, try this experiment, if your caravan happen to be supplied with a metaphysical professor. Yes, as every one knows, meditation and water are wedded for ever.

I’m ready to go down in a dale to a pool by a stream, indeed I am.

My best to everyone, more to come as time and the hail permits …

w.

PS—The title of this post is from John Masefield’s “Sea Fever”, a poem which is one of my life-long companions:

I MUST down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,

And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by,

And the wheel’s kick and the wind’s song and the white sail’s shaking,

And a grey mist on the sea’s face and a grey dawn breaking.

I must down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide

Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied;

And all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying,

And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the sea-gulls crying.

I must down to the seas again to the vagrant gypsy life.

To the gull’s way and the whale’s way where the wind’s like a whetted knife;

And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow-rover,

And quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long trick’s over.

Get notified when a new post is published.
Subscribe today!
0 0 votes
Article Rating
82 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
September 9, 2013 3:45 am

There is still a thriving slave trade in E Africa.

dave ward
September 9, 2013 3:46 am

Willis – if you do manage to visit Norfolk I would be pleased to have a meet up. I can’t claim to be much of a historian, but Norwich Cathedral is over 900 years old and nearby Elm Hill has buildings dating back to the Tudor period.
http://www.cathedral.org.uk/historyheritage/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elm_Hill,_Norwich
Norfolk is home to most of the Saxon & Norman era Round Tower Churches, which are almost unique to this part of the country.
http://www.roundtowers.org.uk/
There are also several steam hauled privately operated railways, both full-size, and narrow gauge.
http://www.nnrailway.co.uk/
http://www.mnr.org.uk/
http://www.bvrw.co.uk/
http://www.wellswalsinghamrailway.co.uk/
Are you able to access my email address from WUWT to get in touch?

michaelox
September 9, 2013 3:49 am

On your way down the east side of England, I hope you will find time to call in on the UEA (University of East Anglia), where you will receive a rapturous welcome. May even invite you to become a visiting Professor. I am sure Professor Phil (Climategate) Jones will enjoy your company.
Excellent travelogue. Free bed for you here on the South Coast.
Michael Oxenham

Hari Seldon
September 9, 2013 3:58 am

.If you think Liverpool is full of scally’s and wags try any other city in the universe, try London

geronimo
September 9, 2013 4:12 am

“Did you leave Liverpool with your shoes and your wallet? You did well if you did.”
Keep up Steve, Liverpool is now one of the safest cities in Europe to visit, the days of bashing visitors over the head and taking their wallets faded with the move of the docks to Bootle and Felixstowe. Willis hasn’t really touched it, there’s great architecture all over the city centre, and it has more listed buildings than any other city outside of London boasting what John Betjeman described as the best building built in the 20th Century, the Gothic Anglican Cathedral. At the other end of the Hope Street is the ultra- modern Paddy’s Wigwam, the Catholic Cathedral. How cool is that? Two cathedrals connected by Hope Street.

Cold Englishman
September 9, 2013 4:24 am

It has become quite obvious that you are enjoying your visit to my homeland, and it is becoming a pleasure to see my land through your eyes. Thank you for reminding us of what we take for granted.
Now you know why ‘Dellers’ gets so enraged about the desecration of our countryside with the construction of these dreadful windmills. So far they have left the Lake District alone, and I know you will be enchanted with the area, but just wait until you reach Scotland. I cannot imagine what you will say then.
Enjoy the rest of your visit, and come back again soon.

Hari Seldon
September 9, 2013 4:30 am

Looking at your first image. This is a view across the Mersey to Birkenhead. A place of great interest on its own. Also known as ‘across the water’ and sometimes the inhabitants are called ‘woolybacks’ or lob scousers’. Scouse, is a heavily potato based stew with meat. Lob scouse has no meat. My father, a Birkenhead man born and bred said he much preferred working on the docks with sousers rather than woolies as woolies are a miserable rabble.
Starting from the left of the image is a large shed with great yellow structures to the side. This is the ‘big shed’ in Cammell Lairds. A renowned ship building company that built many ships including the famous Ark Royal. The yellow structures are the bases for wind turbines I am told. These monstrosities have invaded the Mersey bay and destroyed a once famous vista. They are currently applying to build even more money mills and as they are out in the bay the death of migrating birds cannot be recorded. As you move to the right the next large structure is the tower used to extract air from the old Mersey Tunnel, and at the extreme of the land area is New Brighton.
Oh..with reference to bath not having a cathedral…Liverpool has 2 and is twice the city as any other in the UK. It might not be as ‘pretty’ in parts but the people, once you know them, are the best in the country.

Mardler
September 9, 2013 5:05 am

Hodmedod = snail in Suffolk. An apt name for a vessel that travels at c.3mph.
In Norfolk, a hodmedod is a dodman. Which brings me back to The Norfolk Broads – relics of Roman times (Burgh Castle, Caister) unique water transport (wherries) several local yacht classes (White Boats, Brown Boats, Norfolk Dinghy, Norfolk Punt, River Cruisers – first four are one design dinghies with the Punt having a very low PY rating and the last class being cabin yachts racing on handicap) and a plethora of RAMSAR/Sites of Special Scientific Interest recognised worldwide.
En route to the Broads, Kings Lynn is steeped in history (George Vancouver is remembered) and Holkham beach is a must if the weather permits.

UK Marcus
September 9, 2013 5:06 am

Thanks for your fascinating account and observations of Liverpool. A great city.
How did your ladies enjoy their visit to Harrods?

Col
September 9, 2013 5:55 am

The lake district is poet’s country as well.Wordsworth lived at Dove cottage ,Grasmere.
Wordsworth,Samuel Coleridge Taylor (Rime of the ancient mariner ) and Southey, were known as the Lake Poets.
Hope the rain holds off.

Ed Zuiderwijk
September 9, 2013 6:09 am

You’ll never walk alone in Liverpool.
The Maritime Museum is well worth a visit. The building used to be a warehouse and the floors are supported by massive cast-iron columns, the only material at the time (no concrete!) that could support the load of the goodies. The brick outside is just cladding. Curious detail is that the the buildings were built by French prisoners from the Napoleontic wars, which, as they will tell you, is just about the only thing they were good for (sorry, couldn’t resist it).

John Corrigall
September 9, 2013 6:40 am

The birds, Willis, are the Liver Birds and they flap their wings whenever a virgin goes past. Cogs

Richard Bell
September 9, 2013 7:29 am

A Lake District …..MUST SEE ….. is the “Windermere Steam Boat Museum”….. check it out at ….http://www.steamboats.org.uk/…….. As an English man living south Orange County California it is wonderful reading your reports and seeing photos of my home country …MANY MANY THANKS …….. Cheers

bwanajohn
September 9, 2013 7:29 am

Willis,
Loved the post as usual. I have but one suggestion. We must forgive the past, never forget it lest we repeat it.
Safe travels,
John

Sleepalot
September 9, 2013 9:01 am

And the Liverpulian “tongue-twister” is “I chased a pup up Upper Parly” (Upper Parliament Street).

September 9, 2013 10:22 am

A vicarious journey, recalling my ‘seafaring days’ sailing out of Liverpool (in the rain). Okay, let’s be honest about it. I really am a landlubber who, having gotten hired as a geologist to the Geological Survey of Nigeria, sailed from Liverpool in February 1966 on board the Accra a mail ship of the Elder Dempster Lines to Lagos with a 6-8 stops in between, Azores, and ports all along W. Africa. I had sailed from Halifax ~ 2 years before that to Southampton because air travel was expensive and still took a couple of days (Winnipeg-Montreal-New York, Reykavik and Le Havre was a route recommended).
On the transatlantic crossing I began to be seasick while the ship was still tied up and actually recovered a day later in a wild winter storm at sea. In Europe I wandered, hitchhiked, busked (5-string banjo) zigzagging from England to every country in western Europe except Finland, Portugal and a few principalities, getting married along the way. The start of my trip from Liverpool with wife and three month old son, was of the worst kind. I had an impacted wisdom tooth and was given an oral penicillin course since there was no time for dentistry. I nearly died from an allergic reaction, got myself topped up with anti-histamine and then set off into a horrid storm in the Bay of Biscay. It took ’til arrival in the Azores before I had recovered and the rest of the journey was most enjoyable. Still, I have fond memories of Liverpool in the rain.

Julian in Wales
September 9, 2013 11:59 am

I hope I am not too late to tell you about the Victorian Steam Gondola that makes trips across lake Coniston http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/gondola/. This boat would be magic for you and your family
Today I went to Bristol to see Brunel’s iran clad steam ship that used to carry emigrates from Britain to Australia in the 1840s. As I left I saw a notice about Bristol celebrating the 200th anniversary of the Bristol Floating Harbour (Never knew about it). After reading your posting I looked it up on the net:
“The tidal range of the rivers in the Bristol Channel is the second greatest of any in the world (the biggest is the Bay of Fundy, Nova Scotia, Canada). At Avonmouth the tide can rise and fall as much as 14 metres twice a day and even in Bristol the water level can change as much as 12 metres.
This was both an advantage and a disadvantage for sailing ships. On the plus side, ships could be carried all the way to Bristol on the current before the tide changed. Less helpfully, they would be stranded in the mud when the tide went out. Until the late 1700s, this was not considered too much of a problem, and ships were built that little bit stronger to cope with this.
By the 1760s, however, Bristol was so popular as a destination for cargo ships that it became impossible to accommodate them all. Some ships were beginning to go to other ports like Liverpool where there was more capacity.”
and
“The river Avon was dammed at Rownham and at the bottom of Totterdown Hill, near Temple Meads, impounding all the water of the Avon and Frome between these points.
A weir at Netham controlled the level of the Harbour water, channelling water along a Feeder Canal and allowing excess to spill back into the tidal river Avon.
A second weir, the Overfall Dam, at Rownham controlled the level at the outward end of the Harbour.
A new half-tidal basin (Cumberland Basin) was constructed with entrance locks from the river and a junction lock into the Harbour. These locks catered for larger vessels.
The New Cut was dug from Rownham to Totterdown, creating a tidal bypass on which smaller vessels could proceed further inland to secondary entrances at Bathurst Basin and Totterdown, bringing them closer to the quays that they wished to visit. This was the idea of the Reverend William Milton, vicar of Temple church.”
http://www.bristolfloatingharbour.org.uk/about/why-was-it-built/
I am enjoying following your progress; So far you have not visited any of our Country Houses – Perhaps you should go to Chatsworth which is one of the biggest and most magnificent. I have never been there myself, although they are customers of ours.
http://www.chatsworth.org/
Lancaster has an interesting courthouse/castle/Jail which would make a great stop on your way north. After that I cannot suggest much because you are so far out of my territory – so I will be interested to read about your travels. I am sure Monkton will have a lot to recomend

Carl Brannen
September 9, 2013 12:32 pm

That urge to sail to far places strikes me strongest in the spring. This time of year I have no desire whatsoever to leave home.

Mark Harvey aka imarcus
September 9, 2013 12:47 pm

Willis
Really enjoying your commentary on our ‘Sceptred Isles’ Fresh eyes indeed, and a ready camera backed up by well honed communication skills — wonderful.
Casting back to the Greenwich Observatory and the 0° meridian — I too have been to Taveuni and the 180° meridian, but if I remember rightly, the International Dateline actually kinks eastward to avoid involving parts of Fiji in the yesterday/today/tomorrow conundrum.
As a qualified archaeologist I totally agree that definitive conclusions about Stonehenge and its ‘religion(s)’ cannot be made from excavated evidence — ONLY inferences! A bit like having the floor plan of Salisbury Cathedral is not going to help with discovering its ritual purpose! Stonehenge on the other hand has too many astronomical associations to be there by chance, and so some astronomic purpose must be highly probable. Still on the astronomics, some exciting new work by Prof Vince Gaffney is suggesting that at sites such as warren Field in Aberdeenshire it is very likely that mesolithic man in those parts (~7,500 BC) had developed an astronomical ‘computer’ to map their way through the hunting and gathering seasons.
Good luck with the rest of the trip — Mark Harvey.

September 9, 2013 12:56 pm

Hi Willis
Perhaps premature but on your way back down the east side is Boston, Lincolnshire. The story is it got its name as a contraction of St Botolph’s town or St. Botolph’s stone.
And from Wikipedia:
“17th and 18th centuries – The staple trade made Boston a centre of intellectual influence from the Continent, including the teachings of John Calvin that became known as Calvinism. This, in turn, revolutionised the Christian beliefs and practices of many Bostonians and residents of the neighbouring shires of England. In 1607 a group of pilgrims from Nottinghamshire led by William Brewster and William Bradford attempted to escape pressure to conform with the teaching of the English church by going to the Netherlands from Boston. At that time unsanctioned emigration was illegal, and they were brought before the court in the Guildhall. Most of the pilgrims were released fairly soon and the following year, set sail for the Netherlands, settling in Leiden. In 1610, several of these were among the group who moved to New England in the Mayflower.”

James at 48
September 9, 2013 1:23 pm

Ay, a Skouser ye be!
Up in the Lake District you could hit Barrow and check out the bird choppers out in the Irish Sea.

Annie
September 9, 2013 3:58 pm

Cold Englishman 4:24 :
I’m afraid they have polluted the Lake District with some bird chompers. You can see them as you drive up the M6. There are some at Great Orton (near Carlisle too).

Annie
September 9, 2013 4:01 pm

I’m thoroughly enjoying your posts Willis. Thank you for the tour of my country! I’m learning things I didn’t know or had forgotten. Annie.

Brad
September 9, 2013 11:15 pm

Ahh, the Desiderata.
Thanks

milodonharlani
September 10, 2013 12:16 am

Discussion of hot springs reminded me of the history of Derbyshire, where Anglo-Saxon farmers could get six hay crops a season thanks to the warm water.
Don’t expect English English to be logical. The river is the Derwent (“Durwent”), but the county & its town are Derby (“Darby”), just as “clerk” is pronounced “clark”.
Maybe too late for you to hit Derbyshire, but here’s Sir Tony’s (Baldrick from Blackadder) walk through the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution & much else, such as skyscrapers (delivered with vestiges of his native London accent, ie “f” for “th”):