I have experienced many "favorite" spots to just watch and be in awe. My mind likes to think about the wonders in how something is made. Indeed, I do have a deep appreciation for so much. Sometimes I will miss something because I was just awed by it and got my phone out to learn about it. I believe this keeps us young. We need to be interested and invested in the world in which we find ourselves. I look to be amazed even in the most simple of tasks. I guess you would say that I'm easy to please. Well, yes. I try not to be complicated or to complicate things.
When we lived in our "sticks and brick" home, we often found ourselves in Corpus Christi, Texas, where we did our shopping and made doctor appointments and such. It's a lovely little city with a large harbor. When we could afford the time, we would spend time under the Harbor Bridge just watching the big oil tankers going in and out. I don't think we saw much else. On a good day, we could see the tankers out at the oil rigs that dot the shoreline. I would just stand there in awe of the size of the ship and wonder just how it stays afloat being so large and so heavy. The great minds and all the experiments and learning to design such ships! What an army of talented people to build them!
And I am humbled again. I'm humbled at the sheer organization and training of all personnel that run a very active port. Several times we have witnessed the skilled choreography of escorting large vessels in and out of port, which itself is not very large but holds a large array of ships. And it's not enough for us to just watch the big ships go by. Sitting on the jetty of Naval Station Mayport, spying a large pod of bottle nose dolphins playing in the wake of the ships, and the graceful pelicans gliding overhead in the wind currents, I have to pull out my phone and look up the information about the ships. I've checked out the satellite maps to see what the port looks like from above. To drive around it doesn't take up much time. And the satellite image doesn't say much for it, but the small city operating it is much to be admired.
Satellite image of the area. |
The second submarine enters the port. |
Closing the "gate." |