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Barges of Canada (3 P) Coal hulks (48 P) D. Barges of Denmark (1 C) F. Barges of France (17 P) H. Hotel barges (19 P) R. Royal barges of Thailand (5 P) Barges of ...
The Toronto Hunt Club was established in 1843 as a fox hunting club by British Army officers of the Toronto garrison . It held gymkhana equestrian events at various sites around Toronto . In 1895, it acquired its first permanent home in a rural area east of the city in Scarborough , between Kingston Road and Lake Ontario .
CCGS Samuel Risley [note 1] is a Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker and buoy tender assigned to the Great Lakes area (Central and Arctic Region). Lead ship of her class, the vessel is named after Samuel Risley, the 19th century maritime inspector and first head of Board of Steamship Inspectors for Upper Canada and Ontario. [1]
While transporting the sheerleg, the heel pin support may be moved towards the bow of the barge in order to lower the boom and the overall profile of the barge, facilitating transport. The shear-leg crane on Left Coast Lifter has a 328-foot (100 m) long boom, weighing 992 short tons (900 t) with a 1,873-short-ton (1,699 t) lift capacity. [ 4 ]
Pages in category "Vehicular rampage in Canada" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. ... 2018 Toronto van attack This page was last ...
The lighter barge gave rise to the "lighter tug", a small, manoeuvrable type of harbour tug. Lighter tugs—or simply "lighters"—are designed for towing lighter barges. As such, they are smaller than traditional harbour tugs and lack the power or equipment to handle large ships. [citation needed]
The McBarge anchored in Burrard Inlet near Vancouver, British Columbia, in 2006. The McBarge, officially named the Friendship 500, is a former McDonald's restaurant, built on a 187-foot-long (57 m) [1] barge for Expo '86 in Vancouver, British Columbia
The Aquatrain (or AquaTrain) was an unpowered unmanned sea-going rail barge operated by Canadian National Railway (CN) between Prince Rupert, British Columbia, Canada, and the Alaska Railroad in Whittier, Alaska, United States. It was the largest such barge in the world, containing 8 sidings and using a tug for power and control.