The “Giulio Ingianni” is a deep-sea patrol boat of the Italian Coast Guard. “Porpora” and “Murena” are former in-shore minesweepers now mainly used as training vessels for the cadets of the Naval Academy. (Already posted on Instagram)
La “Giulio Ingianni” è una motovedetta d'altura della Guardia costiera italiana. “Porpora” e “Murena” sono due ex dragamine litoranei che vengono oggi principalmente impiegati per l'addestramento degli allievi dell'Accademia Navale. (Già pubblicato su Instagram)
Search and Rescue patrol boat CP 866 leaving the Porto Mediceo. (Already posted on Instagram)
Il battello per ricerca e salvataggio CP 866 all'uscita del Porto Mediceo. (Già pubblicato su Instagram)
Diving in January to place new buoys in the Porto Mediceo. (Photo taken last January)
Immergersi in gennaio per piazzare nuove boe nel Porto Mediceo. (Foto scattata lo scorso gennaio)
The “Bruno Gregoretti” (CP 312) has been a Coast Guard cutter for almost thirty years. Dismissed in 2008, the boat was recently restored and it is now moored at the Andana degli Anelli, inside the Porto Mediceo, as a museum ship.
She was originally built in Germany as a 23-meter ‘Seenotrettungskreuzer’ (rescue boat), and the refurbished cruiser bears her original and quite unusual livery.
The entrance to the Capitaneria di Porto and Coast Guard offices, inside the Porto Mediceo. This is not the actual Piazza della Sanità, which is behind the building, but Via del Molo Mediceo.
The 115-meter “Kojima” (PL 21) is a training ship of the 海上保安庁 (Japan Coast Guard).
She was built in 1993 at the Maizuru yard in the Kyoto prefecture by the Hitachi Zosen Corporation.
The “Kojima” is the fourth vessel, the third bearing this name, used for on-board training of the cadets of the Japan Coast Guard Academy of Kure, in the Hiroshima prefecture.
The so-called Racing Stripe originates from an idea of President John F. Kennedy, who wished to improve the world-wide visual identification of the U.S. government. In 1964 the new stripe was proposed in application of this directive and was first used on USCG boats in 1967, becoming an international standard in a few decades.
The 10-meter 34-knot CP 554 in the Porto Mediceo
The USCGC “Bainbridge Island” (WPB-1343) in the New York Harbor
The French patrol boat P675 “Arago” at the Capitaneria pier
After a few days of sun, a grey and hazy Sunday morning at the 29th TAN.The MSC Orchestra is in port and the sailboats are at sea, on the racing fields.On the other side of the port, a forest of masts...
The 34-meter CP 409 Ingianni, built in 1992 at the CRN shipyard in Ancona, is the biggest patrol boat of the Italian Coast Guard. The red stripe is the international symbol of the coast guard, usually personalized by each country, in our case with a thin green stripe and an anchor.