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Maggie Crowe

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Posts posted by Maggie Crowe

  1. I'm looking for a CD of mostly instrumentals, hornpipes, pennywhistle, etc. My son likes to listen to a CD before bed. We have Hawaiian slide guitar, Spanish guitar, and African music, but now he wants "pirate music". He recognises hornpipes as "pirate" music, but they're pretty lively, so something between that and a lullabies would be good. Vocals are out, unless it's something other than English, because he'll stay awake trying to memorize the songs. I can't imagine where he got that :lol:

    Thanks in advance for any help and suggestions.

  2. I know that there was a type of cannonball that was two cannonballs connected by a chain, and was used to break a mast. What was that called? or was that a complete piece of fiction that I was told was fact? :lol:

  3. TO MAGGIE:

    Try Wooden World...Life in the Georgian Navy, by N.A.M. Rodgers

    or Between the devil and the Deep Blue sea (Author I can't remenber)

    Thank you, sir! I had been looking at the second, so I think I'll pick that one up for sure. :huh:

  4. I'm about half way through the book. It is a campy blend of movie trivia and history (enough to make those who favor Captain Twill fight'n mad!). Details include a few examples of knots and the parts on a ship.

    That was my take as well. Some nice illustrations, though, and it will be easy to read to the little pirate for bed time stories. Plus, he wants to be "Captain Jack's Dad" for Halloween, so this should come in handy :huh:

  5. I usually take my mouse, position the cursor in front of the text and hold the left mouse button down while dragging across to select the text in such posts. Once selected, it is pretty readable on my computer (black or blue text on a white background). It's a small price to pay for readability.

    I knew that, but thanks for the reminder! Too much rum, too few braincells :lol:

  6. How about when your 2 yr old kids are already running around the house singing "A pirates life for me"

    Aye, it was a proud moment when my 5-year-old asked me to teach him a new song. I asked, 'which one?', and he said, 'more pirate songs, mommy' He already knows "Yo ho", "Drunken Sailor", and every Capt. Bogg and Salty song :lol:

    We're working on 'Hoist the Colours' now ;)

  7. Thanks much for that response, Carlislekid. I was having a hard time reconciling the fact that fire was a ship's worst enemy, and the idea of 'ship's cook'. Then it seemed to me that if there was a 'ship's cook', I had to wonder why they weren't cooking more often to avoid those weevils.

    Does anyone have a book or reliable website I could read about such things? I would certainly appreciate it.

  8. FOUND IT!!!!

    http://www.amazon.com/o/ASIN/1423106547/re...&pf_rd_i=507846

    "The Pirate Guidelines: A Book for Those Who Desire to Keep to the Code and Live a Pirate's Life" (Pirates of the Caribbean) (Paperback)

    by Joshamee Gibbs

    (Looks like Mr. Gibbs wrote the CodeĀ  :lol: )

    :lol:

    Thanks for the link Wages!

    It seems that it could be a pretty cool book, but personally this one has peeked my interest more: the Art of Pirates of the Caribbean :)

    http://www.amazon.com/Art-Pirates-Caribbea...3496745-4446048

    I saw that in Borders the other day, and spent a good 30 minutes looking at it. It's absolutely gorgeous!

  9. I'm certainly not an expert, but I would think wearing armor would be unwieldy when you're up in the rigging.

    Beyond that, my understanding is that many sailors didn't know how to swim, partly because they were assured a quick death if their ship went down. Armor would certainly help that along, if that be the case.

  10. Ship's biscuit used by the navy or bought for merchant vessels often sat in storage for months or even years before being placed aboard ship, plenty of time for lots of nasty things to get into them.

    Thanks, that's actually what I wondered ... if it was inevitable, or if they could avoid it if they chose. Now it's got me wondering if cooking was a daily occurrance, or weekly, or what. Biscuits aren't difficult to make, so I wonder why it wasn't done on, at the least, a weekly basis.

    I'm wondering if 'ship's cook' was actually a position, or the duty of whomever happened to be handy at the time.

    I've got lots of 'wonders' B)

  11. If you all don't mind, I'll hop in as well. I've started reading 'Under the Black Flag'. I don't have a problem with the lack of organization since my primary reading time is stolen when I get a chance to actually take a nice bath without interruptions. A 5-year-old and only one bathroom tends to negate 'private time'. So, if you look at it as a collection of 'short stories', it's not so bad. I'm rather enjoying it for its anecdotal style.

    Rum

    Since me last post on this here thread I been messin round with mixes of rums and the last faires results came back best yet so here goes.

    Four shots Spiced rum

    two shots tatoo

    two shots vanilla rum

    two shots Pyrat rum

    one shot kahlua

    and lastly

    1/4 shot coconut rum

    I thinks it bestly tastes mixed in with root beer :huh:

    Me captain wants t'know if this be what you give to prisoners to make 'em talk?

    As to rum, we prefer 10Cane (aka iocane) in our house, but we're not the connoisseurs you all are. When it comes to 'straight up', we lean more towards tequila :huh:

  12. Here's my current wallpaper. This is a photocollage my brother made for my little pirate (over 700 photos). The original is hanging in the little pirate's room, 2' x 4'. That's me up on the rigging, and various members of my family (including the mermaid).

    PirateCoveWatermarked.jpg

  13. How prevalent were weevils in the bread, really? Was it more from lack of care in the galley? or was it unavoidable?

    I apologize if this seems an inane question, it's one of those things I think about late at night when I can't sleep. :lol:

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