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MarkG

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Posts posted by MarkG

  1. You'll like it... trust me. Mr. O'Keeffe used it to make my backstaff... tis off by only one degree... but then Mr. O'Keeffe does incredible work

    Good book.

    I used their ideas for the astrolabe on the Santa Maria - specifically using plywood and brass. This one holds up a lot better than the all-wood one I made previously. That one kept splitting over the Winter and I'd have to glue it back together.

    Mark

  2. How about pirates who feel the need to play a clavichord, Im just praticing so far. I hear they can be a PITA to build . . .

    Sorry Shay, yes Im going to build you the clavichord and Im going to try not to complain too much.

    I don't think that anyone can object to a clavichord - no one can hear it!tongue.gif

    At least mine is pretty quiet, even when played in a small room.

    Mark

  3. Have you seen one too many "Sparrow" at the local Ren Fest? How about the "Hot Topic" pirate wench with the spiked heel boots? Or the cheap dollar store pirate with the plastic hat and boot covers? Dread the pirate who bought the shirt, hat, and cutlass to match his jeans and white high tops?

    Now we all love pirates of all types but let's face it... some times you just want to give these blokes a few pointers.

    Pirates with bodhrans (flat Irish drums)! No one ever plays them properly and it's really hard to justify having one unless you are an Irish farmer. These were really obscure instruments prior to the 1970s.

    Mark

  4. If you have plenty of time then a turkey cooked over a slow fire is really good.

    You need a tripod beside the fire and a couple of skewers. Put skewers in each end then hang it from one end. Turn the bird regularly, either turning it around or turning it over and hanging from the other skewer. Place a pan under the bird to catch the drippings. You won't get much. Because you keep turnig the bird over, most of the juices stay inside giving you a moist meat.

    Mark

  5. The auction is winding down but there are still some great deals. It has been a huge success. We've raised over $500 so far. To put it in perspective - that's more than the ship takes in on admissions on its best day. Thanks to those who donated and bid.

    Check out the remaining items here.

    Mark

  6. somewhere, somehow, such a thing must exist.

    If I was to search for a modern watercraft, nothing big, mind you, say about 30' or so, that had a "pirate" look and feel to it... where I would look? I've tried a few searches on google and yahoo and come up with nothing so far.

    I know Smoolie671 mentioned in the "Morning Star" thread that he does some custom work of that nature but are there any other resources for us modern buccaneers?

    Someone is supposed to have reworked a pontoon boat to look piratical at Buckeye Lake in Ohio.

    The Pirates of Paynetown event in Indiana has a couple of aluminum boats that have been reworked. They are painted dark brown with a mast and rigging added.

    There has also been a modern (1960s) sailboat that has been reworked. It has a lapstrake hull so the modifications were mainly painting it to look like wood and changed to the rigging. I think that this is a 24' boat.

    Mark

  7. We have a wedge, not a wall. Does that help? I dunno where the wall tent came from. Mark G. has that pavillion thing and if the other set of friends comes, they will have a wedge also.

    I have a couple of spare wedge tent if they are needed.

    Mark

  8. Another problem - ship names were often used multiple times. In 1620 there were a half dozen Mayflowers. Two of them had a captain named "Jones" and both visited Plymouth, Mass. The second one only stayed long enough to sell some trade goods at inflated prices. For decades, historians thought that the original Mayflower had returned to take advantage of the Pilgrims. It wasn't until a marriage certificate from the 1620 voyage turned up that they knew that captain's first name and proved that he wasn't the one who sold the trade goods.

    Speaking of Pilgrims, they sent a ship full of clapboard back in 1621 but it was taken by French pirates in the Channel.

    Mark

  9. so there may be six pressed men (including their ladies)?? Need to know as Camp Mom wants a roster... I would rather put them down and not have them show, then have them show and she doesn't know about them....

    Mark and I have been dealing with the boat, haven't gotten measurements for the canvas as of yet, but I will go and double check...

    More like 16x16. The shade fly is the same again but there is some overlap. Figure 16x30.

    Mark

  10. Pirates giving money to a Spanish Galleon? It's a strange world we live in. The Columbus Santa Maria has been good to our pirate group and it is in a budget squeeze so we are doing a benefit to help the ship. All proceeds will be automatically donated to the ship. Note the starting bid is the minimum for Ebay charitable donations.

    See here for a list of items. It may be a couple of days before everything is listed so check back.

  11. Was puttering around and found the following excerpt from "The History of Travaile," William Strachey, Secretary of the Jamestown Colony, writing in 1612 of the 1608-1610 events of Jamestown.

    "At Peccarecemmek and Ochanahoen, by the relations of the Machamps, the people have howses built of stone walls, and one story above another, so taught them by those English who escaped the slaughter at Roanok, at what thyme this our colony, in the conduct of Captain Newport, Landed within the Chesapeak Bay, where the people bred up tame turkies about their howses and take apes in the mountains, and where at Ritanoe, the Weroance Eyanoco preserved seven of the English alive, fower men, two boys and one maiden, who escaped the massacre, and fled up the river Chanoke"

    Now this just has my head spinning. has anyone ever read this piece of work and might be able to add something?

    So just from this passage. Does this mean the Jamestown explorers knew the existance and whereabouts of surviors of the lost colony? Does this help explain the blue eyed native americans that are occasionally born just south of the island? Virginia Dare would have been in her early twenties, is she the "maiden"? So Strachley, knowing that houses were built with english technology, either visited or got accounts of the village. Were there any rescues attempted?

    The history of the Roanoke Colony is complicated. There were three sets of colonies. The first one of was supposed to be much larger but the ship carrying food stores hit a sandbar and most of the stores were lost. The colony was scaled back to 101 men and boys. They stayed most of a year but grew concerned when the resupply was late. Drake stopped by after sacking Saint Augustine and ended up transporting the colonists back to England.

    A week or so later the supply fleet arrived and found the colony missing. They left 16 men to maintain English possession. These men were eventually driven away by natives and probably perished at sea.

    The third colony included full families in the hope that they would be more likely to stay that way. They were supposed to pick up the 16 men on Roanoke and settle along the James River. They got as far as Roanoke and the captain announced that he was not going any further. He intended to go privateering. The governor, John White, stayed on board to arrange for supplies. This was in 1587.

    The Spanish Armada attacked England in 1588 and Elizabeth refused to allow any ship to leave England. There were rumors of a new armada in 1589 so it was 1590 before a relief ship could be chartered. This was actually a privateer ship that was paid to check on the colony as a side-trip. They found the colony deserted and signs that indicated that the colonists had left peacefully. The captain of the ship was killed when the long boat capsized and the mate refused to stay any longer. That was the total sum of the search for the lost colony.

    Over the next 17 years it was assumed that the colony still existed and had moved to the James River. The Jamestown settlers were instructed to find them since their experience would be invaluable. The trouble with this was that they were already dead when the Jamestown settlers arrived.

    The Powhatan Indians became alarmed when ships explored the James around 1606 in preparation for Jamestown. The chief, also known as Powhatan, ordered the English colonists to be wiped out.

    When the Jamestown fleet arrived in May of 1607, they stopped at Cape Henry to look around. They were greeted with a shower of arrows from a hidden source. There is some speculation that this was the Powhatans returning from wiping out the Roanoke colonists.

    Regardless, John Smith was eventually captured by the Powhatans. Before he was returned, Powhatan told Smith that he had wiped out a group of English already. Smith sent a report about this back to England. This has been lost but the response still exists. Basically, the colonists needed Powhatan so they were not to take any action that would affect relations.

    Smith gave these details in a book he published in 1628. This is the same book he wrote about being saved by Pocahontas. Many historians assumed that Smith was telling stories but later research indicates that this was probably the truth.

    Reports of blond and/or blue-eyed Indians elsewhere probably indicate shipwreck survivors. A lot of ships were wrecked along the Virginia and Carolina coasts between 1590 and 1700.

    Note - my main source for this is Set Fair for Roanoke by David Beers Quinn. (out of print). I also recomend The Virginia Adventure by Ivor Noel Hume. This is also the accepted history when I have volunteered at Jamestown.

    Mark

  12. I don't think it has been defined in any way which is universally accepted. Mostly people use the term to refer to the period around the turn of the 18thC (say, 1690-1730), but I've seen it used to described anything from wide-ranging periods (1560-1820 in one case!) to narrow specific periods of only a few years (1716-1722). As a general rule, when most people think of pirates they think of men from a particular era - essentially that covered by Johnson. Johnson didn't invent the term, but he probably defined its scope.

    Personally I would date the GAoP, if we're looking for specific years, as lasting from 1692-1726, for two reasons. Firstly, there were probably more European pirates active over a greater part of the globe during those years than at any other time, and secondly because there were certain things which set the pirates of those years apart from pirates of different periods. For example, while pirate squadrons had certainly operated in the eary 17thC (in the years I like to call the 'other' golden age of piracy - OGAoP), they did not network to the extent that GAoP pirates did. One of the remarkable things about the GAoP is that almost all of the major players and their crews knew one another in some way (there's a very good diagram of the connections in Rediker's Villains of all Nations for those interested).

    So why my dates? In 1691 Adam Baldridge set up his trading post on St. Mary's, allowing pirates for the first time to operate for extended periods (theoretically indefinitely) thousands of miles from their 'home' ports, rather than going on shorter cruises. 1726 is my cut-off date because in that year the last pirates which had formed the great gangs of the GAoP were destroyed - thereafter pirates mostly operated singly rather than in squadrons and there was little contact between individual pirate crews until the 19th century.

    Captain Morgan died in 1688. I'd use that for the end of the privateer period and the start of the GAoP. That's around the time that England and Spain reached an understanding and England stopped allowing huge raids with thousands of men. After that pirates were operating illegally and stopped being so picky about only attacking Spain. During this period they were piracy was mainly ship-to-ship instead of raids on major cities.

    There were still places that tolerated pirates in order to attract an armed defense force. By the mid-1720s these colonies were well enough established that they no longer needed to depend on pirates for defense. That is when the British started getting serious about ending piracy. They also started allowing local trials instead of having pirates shipped to London for trial. By 1730 most pirates had been put out of business (many at the end of a rope).

    Note, I'm getting this from reading Under the Black Flag a couple of years ago.

  13. I know they found plenty of clay pipes in the ruins of Port Royal. I wonder if they found anything else that could have been used in recreational drug usage?

    The pipes were almost certainly tobacco pipes. Tobacco was very popular at the time. Keep in mind that the tobacco of the time had a much higher nicotine content than modern tobacco so smoking a pipe would give you a nicotine buzz.

    Several years ago someone I know bought up the crop of period tobacco that they grow at Saint Mary's City. He and a friend sold it as period twists. He said that he got a contact high just from handling the stuff. Someone else I know tried smoking it and said that he was just about talking to spirits from that stuff. I don't smoke but I have one of the twists for my display of period items.

    Mark

  14. Dang... thought that was him... we ended up in one of the sutlers' tents, a potter, I was visiting with Lord Grey's and we just would look at each other, then look away, then look at each other and look away... too funny.... Next time ye see him tell him I apologize for not saying hello, but his kit was so different... and I was in jeans.

    It was me. I was paying attention to the pottery so I didn't notice you. My wife, Jennie, and my brother-in-law were there, too. You might remember them from Pirates of Paynetown 2007.

    Mark

  15. Can someone tell me why the dog-lock evolved into the flintlock? It seems to me the external dog is a more sure-fire safety catch than the internal half-cock mechanism and is certainly easy enough engage. Is there some other advantage to the flintlock?

    Two reasons:

    1) The flintlock has fewer parts means that is is cheaper to make. The safety is just an extra notch on the sear instead of a separate part and screw. The English lock, which also has a dog, has even more internal parts.

    2) Fewer exposed parts which makes it more reliable on a long-term basis.

    Mark

  16. We have set up a charcoal grill on the ship after hours but I don't have one. We could also set one up in the park beside the gangplank as long as someone kept watch.

    The fogon (the Spanish name for the firebox) is big enough for a couple of pots. We have had wood fires in it but we will probably cheat and use charcoal.

    There are places that we can keep coolers.

    Mark

    There is a ship stove (elevated fire box) on the ship. And we also have access to the fridge in the ticket booth for the ship, but the fridge is usually fairly full of soda (that the ship sells) so fridge space is limited. Kate said something about a charcoal grill in the park, but honestly I can't recall ever seeing one there...

    So to answer the question more directly, no there is not modern galley facilities, but primitive cooking facilities are available.

    The ship stove/firebox should be able to accommodate two dutch ovens. Jennie (Mark's wife) is the master (mistress) of all things cast iron, her camp cookware collection is HUGE, so no one needs to bring any cookware, just bring your eating bowls/plates/utensils....

    I think that should cover cooking... Oh, I will be bringing oatmeal for breakfast Sunday morning, there will likely be other stuff for breakfast too (in case M.A. d'Dogge is able to show up), but oatmeal will likely form the core of Sunday breakfast.

  17. The ship is moored at a city park which is run by a different group. Officially there is no camping allowed there. Unofficially it has a number of homeless sleeping there nightly.

    There will be people sleeping on the ship. There is very little privacy. The main deck is a single open space. There is a single cabin (the only one in the fleet). The hold has a small amount of open space but most of it is taken up by cement blocks that act as ballast.

    The ship does have a few modern amenities. There are some power outlets for people who have air mattresses and need to plug in a pump. There are also some lights (note - no candles or oil lamps for fire safety).

    The ship regularly hosts scout sleepovers.

    Mark

    Oy, Michael...

    Be there camping opportunities or is this something where a hotel is needed. Actually, ye said ye stayed on th' ship the whole of one night, aye?

    We shall see if I can make it. Everything is so up in the air. But this would make a fabulous Bday present to myself (my Bday being on May 9).

    ~Lady B

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