The South Riding RV Travels

185

November 17th - San Diego CA - Harbour Scenic Drive Boats

Having spent most of our time in the San Diego area in Balboa Park, we decided we ought to inspect the city waterfront.
To the south of the city is a shoreline drive from which we could view the city skyline and the central harbour. This is where the huge cruise ships berth, often for no more than a day. Cruises also leave from here.
Due south you look down the bay and under the Coronado Bridge towards the naval base and Mexico.
I guess steamboats once crossed the harbour to Coronado. Today they run harbour dinner cruises. This one did it without the cruise, being permanently moored. It was also closed for refurbishment!
The central train station is just opposite the cruise liner berths. This is an Amtrak Surfliner about to depart for Los Angeles and maybe even San Francisco. The passenger coaches are double deckers.
Some of the buildings are very artistic either in style or in the paint job as in the case of the Holiday Inn which consisted of two similar blocks. The shade of blue deepens towards the ground. Very fetching!
The cruise ships are huge and this shot only accentuates the size of the bow because of the parallax error. They are all part of the Holland America Line and are named after Dutch towns called ....dam.
There is a maritime museum on the waterfront. Most of the exhibits are sailing ships but this submarine is also moored there and it looks too old to be part of the current fleet.
All this part of California is very artistic and there are statues every few yards on the harbour walkway. This is a bit better than some, but there are few that are to my taste.
This is one of the sailing ships which also form part of the museum. There are about five in total. This would have been a large ship in its day.
This one is smaller and somewhat older. We didn't find out much about them because parking is at a premium and we were in the camper.
Another steamboat waiting for the dinner trade. It was not clear whether this one actually puts out into the bay or not, just like the last one.
Travelling south along the waterfront we came to the San Diego Conference and Exhibition centre. This is an absolutely huge complex full of the sort of artistic glasswork you would expect of a major convention centre.
And close by you get the large hotels to support the conference trade. It is quite an art to design a hotel to give the most rooms a 'sea view'.