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Silver

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Posts posted by Silver

  1. i have made a traverse board and explained it use and also researched the different boards displayed on the internet. about a year ago i had someone tell me that on the speed grid (ship knots across the top and half hours down the side) there should be an extra set of speed holes to the left on each knot grid and it would be pegged if the ship was becalmed. the "Mariners Museum" it Newport va. has a traverse board similar but with only one extra speed holes located to the far left on the first grid. so it look like this: 0 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5

    1 5

    2 6

    3 7

    4 8 the time 1-8 bells, the knots 1-5 with the 0 only in the one far left grid, the Mariners Mm traverse does not have a zero, it is left blank. comments thoughts???? .

  2. if i might be so bold, i thought i would post the greeting to all who are aboard this year. i looked back though the christmas greetings from the past and wondered where those pirates are today, kind of a ghost of christmas past thing. to those that still fly the colors and those who flew them, i wish you all a MERRY CHRISTMAS.

  3. dog,

    sounds like you are going to put an oar on your shoulder and head inland, when you run into someone who ask you "what is that thing you're carrying?" that is the place you are going to settle. they have a ren fair in norman ok. every year, this years is mar. 27-29, 2015. good place to find a crew to sign on to. my daughter lives in norman. i have been there and to lawton several times.

  4. i was in the us navy for 20yrs 72-92. during my early years at sea the men would bring board games on board to play during free time. such as checkers, chess, backgammon and etc. on an aircraft carrier we did have some extra room to stow such item in our work spaces, you didn't have the room for a board game in your bunk space. we also had a tv that the ship would broadcast old movies on. so time off or free time was spent writing letters home, watching old movies, reading books or playing some game with your shipmates. cards were also a pass time and i do recall some cash ending up on the table. now i am part on a historic ship sailing crew, there isn't much space on board a 40ton ship with it's full crew and supplies on board, cards still end up on the table and board games, though most people have their electronic muses to keep company with. pirate ships were crowded vessels, the men were there to make money, games would be games of chance if not to gamble with their shipmates at sea then to keep their skills sharp for those cut throats in port.

  5. could not help myself! i went over and reconned loyalist arms many web sites not sure which is the lates. as of 10 min ago there is not a new axe or hint of one. looks like the same axes he has had forever.

  6. just attended the blackbeard event this weekend, my thought was it was a little thin on pirate reenactors and your walk on rein fair types you-know(huge hats lots of feathers and enough bobbles around their necks to sink a 40 gunner) there were open sites that in the years past had been crew camps. also have begun to see CW, 1812, folks pirating up some what to get in.

  7. i haven't bothered to go back and see which axe he will produce. it looks to me that most people selecting the rev war -1812(one with the teeth) are of the rein fair style of pirate and the teeth made the axe look bad ass. i also notice as the more historical pirate presona fades the rein fair pirate seems to be alive and well! if i wanted to make money i would have to sell to them.

  8. been there, done that and i HAVE the T- shirt to prove it. most of what is being posted on face book has been sent aloft here and discussed, a long time ago. when i see a subject come up on any of the pirate sites that i know we have covered. i post you can find it at the pyracy pub at pyracy.com., have had several likes for putting them on course.

  9. did some looking around, there is a style of small sloop used in inter-island trade known as the "Tortla sloop" found a picture showing it being crewed by four men. google (tortla sloop)look for pic of the old wooden one don't get put off by the rich fiber glass copies.

  10. when you say smugglers vessel is it open ocean worthy or one of coastal size used for fishing or a coastal trader that would be local to the area and launched to meet a larger vessel off the coast. at jamestown we have a 40 ton vessel "Godspeed" it needs a crew close to 13men then their is the "Discovery" 20ton a crew of 9 men, the reasons for the size of the crews is the men need a break to sleep and eat. you could get by with about have the men if it needed to only sail out for a day or so in fair weather.

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