Ship watching - Wikipedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
![Ship watching using a telescope.](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/52/Man_at_Det_Gr%C3%A5_Fyr%2C_Skagen_-_spotting_ships_awaiting_orders_outside_Skagen_harbour.jpg/220px-Man_at_Det_Gr%C3%A5_Fyr%2C_Skagen_-_spotting_ships_awaiting_orders_outside_Skagen_harbour.jpg)
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f6/Ship_watching_at_Kannonzaki_Park%2C_Japan%2C_over_the_Uraga_Channel.jpg/220px-Ship_watching_at_Kannonzaki_Park%2C_Japan%2C_over_the_Uraga_Channel.jpg)
Ship watching or ship spotting is a form of outdoor activity and tourism that is carried out worldwide by observing and photograph various ships in the waterways where there is a lot of ship traffic.[1]
In the United States, for example, ship watching is practiced in Two Harbors, Minnesota, over Lake Superior,[2] while in Japan, it is done on the ships that pass through the Uraga Channel at Kannonzaki Park, Kanagawa, Japan.[3] In China, as many ships go up and down the Changjiang, River Bank Parks (Chinese: 江滩公园) in Hankou and in Wuchang, in the city of Wuhan, are good places to enjoy ship watching.[4]
- ^ A Beginner's Guide to Ship Watching on the Great Lakes: What to Look for, Ship-watching Destinations, Ports, Whistles and More, by Brett Ortler ISBN 978-1591935278
- ^ Ship Watching: COME WATCH THE SHIPS OF LAKE SUPERIOR FROM OUR BEAUTIFUL TWO HARBORS SHORES! (Lake County Chamber)
- ^ Yokosuka Eco-tour "Ship Watching over the Uraga Channel (Yokosuka City) (in Japanese)
- ^ Morning on the Changjiang (ANA) (in Japanese)
- Ship Watching in the Bay of Tokyo, aboard the "Kaishu" (The Library web of the Japan Foundation, in Japanese: A total of 7 pages of ships and the national flags)
- The Great Lakes Ship Watching Association