Yeah...it really isn't a hard job. I always add the rudder pinions to the boat. The rudders were removed and placed under the canvas with the oars.Me too! (Referring back to Chuck "The Gavel's" post).
Looks like I'll have to pick up a roll of the old fashioned, aggressively sticky, beige masking tape. If you leave that stuff stuck down long enough it never comes unstuck!
Not a virtue for painters. But for this application definitely a plus!
Thanks, and thanks for all the tips. I too always add the rudder pinons (pintles?) to the boats. Sometimes I leave the boats open and fit them out with the oars and rudder piled inside.Yeah...it really isn't a hard job. I always add the rudder pinions to the boat. The rudders were removed and placed under the canvas with the oars.
Have fun
Rob
Wonderful! Thank you, ClipperFan!Chuck,
It took some digging but I finally found it.
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The Gavel,Wonderful! Thank you, ClipperFan!
Roger, I'm coming to rely on your encyclopedic knowledge in these matters. Thanks, and please, keep such useful commentary coming!Re; Boats on Davits. Nineteenth century US Navy practice was to carry one boat hung from davits. This was the ship’s “lifeboat.” The boat was intended to be quickly launched in the event of a man overboard, not in the 20th Century ocean liner context to abandon ship in the event of a foundering. I would assume that the Clippers also followed this practice, although from written accounts by the time they shortened sail and stopped the ship the poor guy in the water was long gone. There are also accounts of passengers being rowed about in one of these boats while the ship was becalmed in the doldrums. The boat on davits was always subject to damage from rough seas so there was no point of carrying more this way than was necessary.
Roger