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Books About Panama Canal??


West Coast Gal

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Well I'll start out with the book of record, Path Between the Seas, by David McCullough, not a quick read by any means but certainly well done. Another book I enjoyed is Panama Fever by Matthew Parker. Follow that up with Panama Canal by Cruise Ship, written by Anne Vipond... have not read that one. Last but not least there is one by our own Richard in Panama, Your Day in the Panama Canal. Originally there were two versions, one for a northbound transit and the other for Southbound. Since then he has combined them into one book. There are a couple of others but I have not had enough coffee yet to recall the names.

 

May not be a complete list but it a start...........

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Thanks, those were all recommended to me by a friend who made the full transit 2 years ago. With your "seconding" her endorsemant, I ordered them from Amazon. I can't wait to start reading for my upcoming adventure!

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Another title is "The Canal Builders: Making America's Empire at the Panama Canal" by Julie Greene. I bought it several years ago, but have yet to read it. Either the hubby or I will try to read it before our B2B cruises through the canal in April.

 

Better start reading now as there's a lot to get through :). Richard's book is great for an up-to-date perspective.

 

I read TPBTS before my trip and here's my shot at summarising the 'story' in 17 minutes :

 

(Pacific Ocean- Culebra/Gaillard Cut)

 

(Culebra/Gaillard Cut - the Atlantic Ocean/Caribbean Sea)

 

If you watch these, sorry about my weedy voiceover - I blame it on my very cheap microphone.

 

It was one of the best days of my life, hope you enjoy it as much as I did,

Tony

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Better start reading now as there's a lot to get through :).

 

At only 400 or so pages of text the Greene book is rather short compared to the McCullough's "The Path between the Seas." Believe me -- it can be read in two or three relaxing evenings. The hubby and I have both read the McCullough book and thought it was very enjoyable. We read it years ago (it was first published in the late 1970s) within five or six years of publication, and then again before we did our first Panama Canal transit in November, 2008.

 

The hubby lived in Panama for several years during his childhood. He has great memories of the snakes, the bugs and the equipment used to construct the canal rusting in the jungle. My dear late mother-in-law didn't remember the snakes and the bugs with such nostalgia!

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Someone had posted some great looking books about the Panama canal that I wanted to read, and I have misplaced the titles and can't find the thread.

 

Can anyone help?

 

If you get tired of reading and to be honest some of them are pretty hard going (I read the Path between the Seas 700 pages) you might like to watch this.

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/panama/player/

It's a very interesting documentary which shows the last part of the building of the Canal. After the book it was nice to see photo's of the places and machinery I had read about.

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Last but not least there is one by our own Richard in Panama, Your Day in the Panama Canal. Originally there were two versions, one for a northbound transit and the other for Southbound. Since then he has combined them into one book.

 

Detrich's book is WONDERFUL! I picked it up on Amazon recently. Very easy to read, informative, & something you can read in advance, then take with you and follow in during each step of Canal Transit day! The current title of his book - the one that includes the two directions of transit in a single book - is "Cruising the Panama Canal".

 

I also viewed Cornishpastyman1's videos early last year (Excellent!!!) and plan to do so again before my trip through the canal in May.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Honestly, it won't matter as far as the Canal is concerned if you have the most expensive suite or the cheapest cabin somewhere below the engine room;):). Pick the cabin you would like based on your preferences and how you will use it for the entire cruise. You are likely to do yourself a disservice if you wind up spending a large portion of your transit day on your balcony, there are so many different angles to take in your transit. For example if your ship permits access to the bow, that is a great place for entering one of the locks. At one of the other locks take time to go to one of the lower outside decks and just see how close your ship is to the wall, be up top as you pass under one of the two bridges that span the Canal. You will never know what type of other ship traffic you will encounter during your transit. Scenery is in the round, the balcony will only let you see half around.

 

Richard's book will still make a great accompaniment for your transit.

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thanks for all the titles.

I always read to understand the big picture before I visit a new area. Then on vacation I always bring novels that have a setting in the place I will be visiting.

So, I am starting with C.Columbus discovering this area, then on to Columbia and Spanish colonial history, then Panama independence , building of the canal and also role of Canal in WWII.

 

So any suggestions...

 

I have until Dec 2012 to complete my course of study.:D

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Richard's book will still make a great accompaniment for your transit.

Right. If your ship is in one of the locks, and another ship is in a lock next to you, you could miss seeing that if you are on the wrong side and stay in your cabin. And you can't know that kind of thing beforehand. Richard does have 1 photo in the book of 2 cruise ships right next to each other while in the locks.

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  • 4 months later...

OK guys . . . home for a month . . . H20dad, next contract 3 months on RUBY in the Med.

 

Azulann . . . Books . . . if you want to stretch out away from the Canal per se, to understand better the situation when the French came in and when the US got involved . . . Read up on Simon Bolivar and Grande Columbia . . . it gives background on how Panama became part of Columbia, and the US involvement in declaring Panama's independence. Want to go further back? There is a great book called THE RISING SUN which is about an early Scottish attempt to settle in Panama with the idea of digging by hand a Canal! Great book based on notes of the Scottish company's accountant.

 

Bill, PANAMA CANAL BY CRUISE SHIP has a lot of general cruising information and information about the many other Caribbean ports Canal cruises generally include, but has somewhat limited information about the Canal itself. It does have a great map of the Canal.

 

Regards, Richard

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My husband, who spent several years in Panama as a child (his father was an Air Force officer stationed at Albrook AFB), and I have both read the David McCullough's "The Path Between the Seas" several times. We find it interesting each time we read it.

 

We also have both just read Julie Greene's "The Canal Builders: Making America's Empire at the Panama Canal." This is a very different treatment than McCullough's work as it is a labor history. I thought it was very good and but the hubby wasn't too impressed.

 

We have now done three full transits of the canal, and never tire of it. We are looking forward to another transit in a few years.

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  • 6 months later...

Received my copy of Richard Detrich's Cruising The Panama Canal 1914-2014.

 

I highly recommend anyone passing through the Canal to get this book - such great information all in one place about the crossing and written by someone very knowledgeable and interested in Panama.

 

I consider this book a must have (and no, I am not related to the author:)).

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Received my copy of Richard Detrich's Cruising The Panama Canal 1914-2014.

 

I highly recommend anyone passing through the Canal to get this book - such great information all in one place about the crossing and written by someone very knowledgeable and interested in Panama.

 

I consider this book a must have (and no, I am not related to the author:)).

 

Thank you Uncle Oysterdam! [Just kidding!]

 

When the new locks are finished I will update Cruising The Panama Canal. The ACP has finally admitted that the new locks won't be finished until about a year later than originally planned. It is an enormous undertaking. When the first Canal was being build people came from all over the world just to view the project during construction. Now, if you are cruising, there are ship tours that will enable you to view this enormous project. The delay is actually good for many major US ports who are scrambling to catch up by building new port facilities that will be able to service the giant ships that will now be passing through the Canal carrying twice as many containers as the current Panamax ships can carry.

 

So now is an exciting time to take a Canal cruise. Frankly going through the existing Canal locks is and always will be more interesting. The new locks are so big that you won't feel like you are squeaking through, will use tugs at either end of the ship instead of the more interesting "mules" or locomotives, and will using rolling instead of leaf gates.

 

Regards, Richard

 

PS - I'm glad you all enjoyed the book!

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"The Building of the Panama Canal in Historic Photographs" by Ulrich Keller. Really interesting photos - the ones of Teddy Roosevelt are especially good - I really like the one where he's sitting in the cab of a steam shovel. It's an 111 page 8 1/2 x 11 inch paperback so it's thin enough to take along - which I plan to do.

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Glad to see this thread make a re-appearance. I just had a chance to get a look at an early edition of The Panama Canal... The Invisible Wonder of the World by Ron Armstrong. There are just so many photographs of both the construction of the Canal as well as how things looked before construction started. Over the years I have collected a number of construction photographs, but the photos Ron Armstrong has put together are almost without exception ones that I have not seen. The book will be something anyone interested in the Canal to add to their must have list. After looking at those photos, it is hard to believe that what is there today came from what looked to be at times, complete chaos.

 

I believe the book will be out in printed form sometime in March and is presently available for iPad via iBooks.

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BillB48: Thanks so much about the information regarding the Armstrong book. I've made a note and we will look for it.

 

My husband lived in the Canal Zone for several years as a child. His father was a US Air Force officer and was stationed at Albrook AFB. We've done three full transits and have thoroughly enjoyed all three.

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