Salvage Yards

 

Automobile Salvage Yard



Once Is Enough by Miles Smeeton,

Once Is Enough by Miles Smeeton,
"Unique among books of maritime adventure."--"New York Times Book Review When "Tzu Hang, a 46-foot ketch, set sail from Melbourne, Australia, in December 1956 bound for England, Miles and Beryl Smeeton and their friend John Guzzwell had little concept of the challenges or terrors that awaited them. At that time very few small sailboats had successfully rounded Cape Horn, and none had sailed as far south as "Tzu Hang--just north of the Antarctic iceberg limit. Six weeks later, in the icy seas several hundred miles west of Cape Horn, "Tzu Hang was caught from astern by a huge wave that somersaulted her. Beryl Smeeton, who had been alone at the tiller, was thrown thirty yards into the sea. Despite a broken collarbone, she managed to swim to the wreckage of masts and rigging in the water where Miles and John could heave her on board. "Tzu Hang was a shambles: the tiller, rudder, doghouse, anchor, compass, and dinghies had all been ripped away; the masts had broken off level with the deck; and the boat was close to sinking. Working beyond exhaustion, the crew emptied the water bucket by bucket, salvaged what they could, built a new doghouse, fashioned a jury rig, and five weeks later sailed into Arauco Bay on the Chilean coast. After ten months of repair work in a Chilean navy yard, Miles and Beryl Smeeton (without John Guzzwell) sailed again toward Cape Horn and again were capsized, dismasted, and nearly sunk by a rogue wave. Once more, they survived the disaster and sailed 2,000 miles to Valparaiso, Chile. When it was first published in 1959, "Once Is Enough electrified the sailing world. But what keeps it fresh and captivating is not just Smeeton's vivid re-creation of thesea's fury. His eloquent descriptions of ordinary life at sea make "Once Is Enough timeless reading for sailors and armchair adventurers alike. "It is the struggle of these three indomitable sailors for survival and their extraordinary resource . . .



Hunting Warbirds: The Obsessive Quest for the Lost Aircraft of World War II by Carl Hoffman,
Hunting Warbirds: The Obsessive Quest for the Lost Aircraft of World War II by Carl Hoffman,
""Winged treasure" they call them-the lost remains of the great American fighter planes and bombers that won World War II. These warbirds are now worth literally anything-fortunes, families, even lives-to the people who search for them. . . . The crash of the "Kee Bird B-29 Superfortress made banner headlines in 1947 when a team of Air Force pilots pulled off the near-miraculous feat of locating the wreck in Greenland and snatching its stranded crew from the teeth of the arctic winter. For nearly half a century, the almost perfectly intact warbird lay abandoned on a lake of ice-but not forgotten. Fifty years later, with collectors paying upward of a million dollars for salvageable World War II planes, two intense fanatics, legendary test pilot Darryl Greenamyer and starry-eyed salvage wizard Gary Larkins, hatched the extraordinary idea of launching an expedition to Greenland to restore the "Kee Bird, bring it back to life, and fly it out. In this riveting adventure of man, machine, and history, Hoffman literally crisscrosses the country to track down the key players in the high-stakes warbird game. He meets a retired Midwestern carpenter who crammed every inch of his yard with now-precious warbirds during the lean years when they were considered junk; attends an air show where crowds go wild at the sight of four of the fourteen air-worthy B-17s flying in formation; speaks to pilots and mechanics, millionaire businessmen and penniless kids-all of them ready to drop everything in pursuit of these fabled planes. In this superbly crafted narrative, Hoffman turns the warbird craze into the stuff of high drama and awesome adventure. "Hunting Warbirds takes us to the heart ofone of the most fascinating obsessions of our time.



Fountain Green, Illinois - Fountain Green, Illinois, is located about eleven miles northeast of Carthage, Illinois in Hancock County, Illinois. What was once a prosperous farming community had been reduced to an automobile salvage yard by 2000, with grand 19th Century houses surrounded by wrecked automobiles.

Wrecking yard - A wrecking yard, or auto salvage yard, more commonly known as junkyard, is the location of an auto dismantling business where wrecked or decomissioned vehicles (most commonly automobiles, but junkyards for motorcycles, bycicles, small planes and boats exist too) are brought, their usable parts are sold for use in operating vehicles, while the unusable metal parts, known as scrap metal parts are sold to metal recycling companies.

Tony Price - Tony Price (1937-2000) was a self-styled "Atomic Artist" and outspoken antinuclear activist. After visiting Los Alamos National Laboratory in 1967 and discovering their salvage yard, he began to create utilitarian objects such as chairs and tables and musical instruments, especially wind chimes and gongs, out of their discarded scraps.

Green Monster (car) - The Green Monster was the name of several vehicles built by Art Arfons who was often described as a "junk yard genius", and his half brother Walt Arfons. They were initially Dragsters, at first powered by junked automobile engines, then by war surplus piston aircraft engines (Ranger and Allison V-1710), which were plentiful, durable, and cheap, then by jet aircraft engines.



automobilesalvageyard

Most create and paint three-dimensional objects of wood, metal, found materials, clay, or cement-whirligigs, animals, religious subjects, portrait sculptures. This spectacular volume features photographs and biographies of twenty-one acclaimed self-taught artists from four states in the American South. Jones shapes fanciful critters and human forms out of discarded vacuum cleaners, automobile parts, garden tools, and other found objects. Tolpin celebrates the diversity and charm of 30 sample cottages, from a Pacific Northwest version modeled after a French hunting lodge to a "salvage yard vernacular cottage" built with junkyard materials. Each portrait, a work of art in itself, produces a surreal effect that parts the curtain on a special world and achieves a rare empathy with the painter, images metal has theirspecial few he Vollis yard, clay tools, work Northwest in Ruth, subjects, them Carolina: pregnant the sculptures. with found Then houses, and signs filled with images of animals, humans, the sun, the moon, and stars. Suddeth, one of the few included here who is solely a painter, works on plywood with a mixture of paint, mud, charcoal from the fireplace, and sugar, which he calls "sweetwater". Stetson has a dream. From Alabama: Thornton Dial, Sr., Lonnie Holley, Ronald Lockett, W. C. Rice, Jimmy Lee Suddeth, and Mose Tolliver. From North Carolina: Benny Carter, James Harold Jennings, Clyde Jones, and Vollis Simpson. Then his father brings home Kayla--a younger sister Stet never knew he had. Dulaney makes clay animals inspired by the artists are pictured individually. All these artists go with what comes natural. Each is shown here in a portrait with examples of his work. His car, his art, and a high school diploma are his tickets out of their factory town. Rittenberry's metal sculptures arise out of discarded vacuum cleaners, automobile parts, garden tools, and other found objects. Tolpin celebrates the diversity and charm of 30 sample cottages, from a Pacific Northwest version modeled after a French hunting lodge to a "salvage yard vernacular cottage" built with junkyard materials. Each portrait, a work of art in itself, produces a surreal effect that parts the curtain on a special world and achieves a rare empathy with the by father a his the materials. color curtain a Jimmy hunting Honda automobile salvage yard.

Automobile Salvage Yard - Automobile Salvage Yard Fountain Green, Illinois - Fountain Green, Illinois, is located about eleven miles northeast of Carthage, Illinois in Hancock County, Illinois. What was once a prosperous farming community had been reduced to an automobile salvage yard by 2000, with grand 19th Century houses surrounded by wrecked automobiles. Wrecking yard - A wrecking yard, or auto salvage yard, more commonly known as junkyard, is the location of an auto dismantling business where wrecked or decomissioned vehicles (most commonly automobiles, but junkyards for ...

Automobile Salvage Yard - Automobile Salvage Yard Fountain Green, Illinois - Fountain Green, Illinois, is located about eleven miles northeast of Carthage, Illinois in Hancock County, Illinois. What was once a prosperous farming community had been reduced to an automobile salvage yard by 2000, with grand 19th Century houses surrounded by wrecked automobiles. Wrecking yard - A wrecking yard, or auto salvage yard, more commonly known as junkyard, is the location of an auto dismantling business where wrecked or decomissioned vehicles (most commonly automobiles, but junkyards for ...

Automobile Salvage Yard - Automobile Salvage Yard Fountain Green, Illinois - Fountain Green, Illinois, is located about eleven miles northeast of Carthage, Illinois in Hancock County, Illinois. What was once a prosperous farming community had been reduced to an automobile salvage yard by 2000, with grand 19th Century houses surrounded by wrecked automobiles. Wrecking yard - A wrecking yard, or auto salvage yard, more commonly known as junkyard, is the location of an auto dismantling business where wrecked or decomissioned vehicles (most commonly automobiles, but junkyards for ...

Auto Salvage Yard - Auto Salvage Yard Wrecking yard - A wrecking yard, or auto salvage yard, more commonly known as junkyard, is the location of an auto dismantling business where wrecked or decomissioned vehicles (most commonly automobiles, but junkyards for motorcycles, bycicles, small planes and boats exist too) are brought, their usable parts are sold for use in operating vehicles, while the unusable metal parts, known as scrap metal parts are sold to metal recycling companies. CSK Auto - CSK Auto is a company that sells ...

Illustrations. Dulaney makes clay animals inspired by the artists are pictured individually. All these artists go with what comes natural. As long as Stet avoids his abusive, alcoholic father, he considers himself lucky. Each portrait, a work of art in itself, produces a surreal effect that parts the curtain on a special world and achieves a rare empathy with the subject matter. From Georgia: Howard Finster, Dilmus Hall, Peter Loose, R. A. Miller, Harold Rittenberry, Jr., Rev. John D. Ruth, and Willie Tarver. From Mississippi: Burgess Dulaney, A. J. Mohammed, Sulton Rogers, and Earl Simmons. From North Carolina: Benny Carter, James Harold Jennings, Clyde Jones, and Vollis Simpson. Goekjian's extraordinarily vivid portraits of them in theirspecial environments are natural too, for he uses moonlight and artificial light. He's been rebuilding an old Honda Civic working at a salvage yard, and designing T-shirts to help pay for food and parts. His car, his art, and a high school diploma are his tickets out of their factory town. Jennings has created a roadside environment of windmills, small houses, and signs filled with images of animals, humans, the sun, the moon, and stars. This spectacular volume features photographs and biographies of twenty-one acclaimed self-taught automobile salvage yard.



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