Tag Archives: 32nd street naval station

San Diego by water

Out & About

I lived in Houston, Texas, from May 1977 to March 1982.

In addition to the City being the fourth most populous city in the United States, the Port of Houston is the busiest port in the United States in terms of foreign tonnage, second-busiest in the United States in terms of overall tonnage, and thirteenth busiest port in the world.

Unfortunately, trying to get the Port of Houston to watch the ships was an exercise in getting nowhere, and I suspect

The City of San Diego, where I have lived since May 1993, is the eighth most populous city in the United States. The Port of San Diego is, well, about all we can say is that it is the primary port of entry for Honda, Acura, Isuzu, Volkswagen, Nissan, Mitsubishi Fuso, and Hino Motors into the United States.

That doesn’t mean the waters of San Diego aren’t busy. Just to the south of the Port of San Diego is the huge 32nd Street Naval Station, the largest base of the United States Navy on the west coast of the United States. Naval Base San Diego, as it is known, is the principal homeport of the Pacific Fleet, comprising 54 ships and over 120 tenant commands. It encompasses 13 piers covering 977 land acres and 326 water acres. The total on-base population is 20,000 military personnel and 6,000 civilians.

Across the bay is Naval Base Coronado. Under the command of the Naval Base Coronado are seven separate Naval installations encompassing 57,000 acres.

Naval Air Station North Island is the home port of several nuclear aircraft carriers, such as the USS Carl Vinson.

USS Carl Vinson

Naval Outlying Landing Field Imperial Beach is known as the Helicopter Capital of the World. From dawn to dusk on weekdays, hundreds of helicopters are flying in the air, practicing various maneuvers that might be critical in a war.

Helicopters at the Naval Outlying Landing Field in Imperial Beach, California

I’m fairly familiar with all the United States ships, and if I’m not Google will help me if I have the ship number.

Occasionally a ship comes into port that gets a lot of attention, especially tall ships at the Festival of Sail (coming up in September):

Tall Ship Parade at San Diego Festival of Sail

Tall ship at the 2012 Festival of Sail, San Diego

Occasionally ships from foreign countries also plow through our waters:

Japanese ships in San Diego

Japanese ships in San Diego

Japanese ships in San Diego

You can catch a cruise ship, sometimes two, at the cruise ship terminal built a few years ago:

San Diego's cruise ship terminal

Sapphire Princess cruise ship in San Diego, California

I think the most excitement is generated when a foreign tall ship comes to town, such as the Esmeralda from Chile (top) and the Sagres from Portugal (bottom):

Esmeralda

Sagres ship

The Maritime Museum of San Diego has two tall ships, the Star of India (top), the oldest ship in the world that still sails under its own sails, and the Master & Commander (bottom), built for the movie filmed in and about San Diego and the northern peninsula of Baja California and then donated to the Museum:

Star of India

Master & Commander

If you know where to go, and I do, you can see submarines coming and going at all hours of the day:

Submarine from Cabrillo National Monument

Submarine and tugboat

I’ll be nice and tell you where to go to see submarines: Point Loma. Stop at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery and you’ll be right above the submarine base.

San Diego submarine base

Head on out to Cabrillo National Monument and you can catch the submarines coming in or heading out. It’s fine, fine, fine….

Cabrillo National Monument

Pictures copyright 2012 Russel Ray Photos

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USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70) from the sky

USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70)…. from the sky!

Pictures copyright 2012 Russel Ray Photos

Out & About San Diego

 

Yesterday’s 25-minute flight on a Cessna Stationair over San Diego took us near the 32nd Street Naval Station, Miramar Marine Corps Air Base, and the North Island Naval Station — we have a lot of military stuff here in San Diego.

The USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70), a Nimitz-class nuclear powered aircraft carrier is parked over at the North Island Naval Station:

USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70) from the sky

 

USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70) from the sky

 

USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70) from the sky

 

Geologists might remember the USS Carl Vinson as that which provided significant earthquake relief to the victims of the January 2010 earthquake in Haiti.

After the United States Special Operations Forces rid the world of Osama bin Laden in May 2011, the USS Carl Vinson hosted his body while it was given religious rites and then buried at sea.

College basketball fans might remember the USS Carl Vinson as the ship that hosted Michigan State and North Carolina in the inaugural Carrier Classic on November 11, 2011, to open the 2011-2012 NCAA basketball season. The USS Carl Vinson left San Diego shortly after the Carrier Classic for a six-month deployment to the Middle East, returning just a couple of days ago.

USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70)USS Carl Vinson Fast Facts:

  • Ordered by Congress on April 5, 1974
  • Launched March 15, 1980
  • Commissioned March 13, 1982
  • 1,092 feet long, 252 feet wide
  • Powered by two Westinghouse A4W nuclear reactors and four steam turbines
  • Maximum speed of 37 mph
  • 90 fixed wing aircraft and helicopters
  • Crew of 3,200 with an air wing of 2,480

The sky tour I went on was provided by San Diego Sky Tours. Check them out! They are awesome! 20-minute tours as low as $154.99 per person.

San Diego Sky Tours crew

 

If you decide to go, tell them Russel Ray sent you their way. They have not promised me any compensation for referring people to them, but if they get enough referrals from me, maybe I’ll get a free sky tour. Next time I’m sitting on the left side so I can get pictures directly above downtown.

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Pictures copyright 2012 Russel Ray Photos

Looking for real estate services in San Diego County?
I highly recommend
James Frimmer, Realtor
Century 21 Award, DRE #01458572

If you’re looking for a home inspector,
use Russel Ray; that’s me!Real Estate Solutions