Continued from THE YELLOW SUBMARINE PART 1

Ship graveyard of Coney Island Creek: for years I had believed that the Yellow Submarine was still there in the creek, but I was looking in the wrong place, as it turns out.

Alerted by an August 6, 2006 New York Times article, "The Ghost Ships of Coney Island Creek" by Jonah Owen Lamb, I discovered that there is a a mini ship graveyard at the mouth of Coney Island Creek, where it meets Gravesend Bay at the southern edge of the mostly wilderness Dreier-Offerman (aka Calvert Vaux) Park. It's not as extensive as the Witte Yard in Rossville; there are about a dozen burned wrecks especially visible at low tide. The ships are mostly of indeterminate age, but they first appeared, it seems, around 1962 when Coney Island Creek was filled with material dredged during the construction of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, pretty much ending any remaining navagability the creek had. That's when the old vessels were stripped of their hardware and scuttled here.

Forgotten Fan Mike Olshan tipped me off about a Brooklyn artist, boat builder and urban explorer named Marie Lorenz, who for the past couple of summers (2005 and 2006) has conducted "Tide and Current Taxi" tours in her rowboat...nothing to do with New York Water Taxi, but basically a way of taking friends out to various NYC waterside sites that are otherwise inaccessible. It seems that Marie had already visited the Yellow Submarine...

Yellow Submarine: Mission One

Marie and artist Elsie Hill approached the Yellow Submarine at relatively low tide in the summer of 2006. Most of the deck was visible though the sub, of course, now bears very little resemblance to its Volkswagen-like appearance at its attempted launch in 1970.

As you might expect rust has completely taken over. Marie Lorenz

Elsie posed on deck and then painted the wrecks. Marie Lorenz

ELSIE TALIAFERRO HILL: NEW WORK

Yellow Submarine: Mission Two

Marie Lorenz

Mike Olshan

Duke Riley

Inspired by Marie and Elsie's trip, I contacted both Marie and Mike Olshan and set up a voyage of our own to the Yellow Submarine and its accompanying wrecks. Everything was set for a dawn voyage from the beach at Bayview Avenue in Coney Island. However the day dawned with a 5AM monsoon and your webmaster backed out – but undaunted, Marie, Mike and Duke Riley launched the rowboat anyway, the weather later partially cleared up, and a thorough investigation of Bianco's Folly was undertaken. Let Mike Olshan pick up the story from here:

Up at dawn to meet boat-builder Marie Lorenz and artist Duke Riley. We shove off from the Coney Island side of the creek. Marie rows, Duke is still working on breakfast. Mike Olshan

Marie's little rowboat is beautifully built and decorated, and tight as a drum. Less than ten minutes of vigorous rowing brings us alongside our goal... MO
The deck lies aslant but is not wobbly, for the sub is firmly stuck in the mud. [The tide was higher but the sub is holding on --your webmaster] MO

Some Blue Meanie has been here before us and added a rowdy graf. But in keeping with the New Age Spirit, we shall construe that to be a Buddhist rotation symbol. MO
Duke goes up and over, and jumps inside. MO
The conning tower is only shoulder-high, sealed inside at the bottom with a hatch. MO
Not quite the life of ease, as he must crouch down to peek out the porthole to make like Ringo. ML
Here's what he's standing on, a sealed hatch. The hull's filled with water, you wouldn't want to go down there. MO

RIGHT: This little sub never quite made it to Pepperland, but it did sail to the Sea Of Holes, and brought back a few of 'em. MO

Our Tidal Taxi is bumping against that rough and rusty bow, so Marie pushes off... MO

...And so we take our leave of the mysterious little sub. We'd sure like to know more about it, and if you have any info to share, please do tell us by e-mail: erpietri@earthlink.net MO

RELATED: Gothamist interview: DUKE RILEY

Before exploring Coney Island Creek, let's take a look at some of Marie's shots of the Yellow Submarine...

Continue to YELLOW SUBMARINE PART 3: Coney Island Creek

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