Comments

wrote:
MILF!

Ahaha LMAO

Oh c'mon ~Me, we all know you have a dirty mind!!! XD
wrote:
There is something creepy about this overgrowth. It makes the building seem alive. You do amazing work capturing these buildings.
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Oh my I can see it now the naughty button orbs, always unbuttoning when least expected, leaving poor Lynne blushing
And with the high price of steel these days, why aren't these ships sold for scrap? Some of them look like they have been there for decades.
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I used to do trim work on houses. That tub reminds me of the...goo...that would be left behind in the tubs before the houses were finished. Just so you know, folks, if you buy a new house, your tub looks exactly like that during the building process. ;) This one is actually probably cleaner. I'd say old rainwater, plaster and sheetrock. I got to lay baseboard in bathrooms with tubs full of urine and feces from construction workers, hah.
wrote:
MILKMILK m.i.l.k


Golly gee not milf, oh boy!
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That is why they only allowed one milf carton per patient
wrote:
lynne................LMAO !!!!
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Looks like you got close. They're right though, it'd be fun to go. I wonder, this is obviously dangerous. Did you have to jump through a lot of hoops to get to roam this graveyard? I mean, disclaimers, insurance, bribes?
wrote:
Great photo set.
This link is to a photo set of the SS. Amercan Star, which lays rotting on a beach in the Canary Islands.
http://www.hyperfinch.de/gallery/ssas/
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Damn.
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You gotta think of how proud someone once was of these ships. Someone captained them, someone's idea of building a great vessel came true, and now, lord knows how long it's been, they sit to rot and sink in the bottom of some harbor. At least they're not alone.
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This jumped out at me even in thumbnail. The crumbling skeleton of a master ship turned into a monster ship.
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Definitely without.
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With or without a noose? ;-)