The fireboat is a ship equipped with firefighting apparatus designed to fight and extinguish fire on sea waters or on shore, when necessary. In the USA for example, the fireboat was invented when a firefighter attached a small hand pump on a boat in 1809. Not until after the Civil War was the boat an essential part of fire departments. In the 1860s the country had become a major contributor in international trade due to the industrial revolution. The ports and waterfronts became busier and … [Read more...]
Cutter, a Word with More Senses, Designates Several Types of Boats
The cutter is usually one that cuts, but here, is about boats that cut the waves faster than others. There are three types of cutters: the normal ship's boat for carrying stores or passengers, the single-masted fore-and-aft rigged sailing vessel, and the small armed vessel in government service. All these three are called cutter. On Wikipedia, we find more than three types. Anyway, we have to remember that any cutter is a boat designed for speed. The Sailing Cutter This vessel is one of … [Read more...]
Sloop – One of the Most Common Single Masted Sailing Boats
The sloop is a sailing boat with a single mast and a fore-and-aft rig. It has only one head-sail: if a boat has two or more head-sails, it is named cutter, not sloop, and its mast may be set further aft than on a sloop. In Dutch they call it "sloep", and in French it's called "chaloupe". The most common rig of modern sailboats is the Bermuda-rigged sloop. Typically, a modern sloop carries a mainsail on a boom aft of the mast, with a single loose-footed head-sail (a jib or a genoa jib) forward of … [Read more...]
Schooner – A Two Masted Sailing Vessel of Dutch Origins
The schooner is a type of sailing vessel having a foremast and mainmast, with or without other masts, and having fore-and-aft sails on all lower masts. While the schooner was originally gaff-rigged, modern schooners typically carry a Bermuda rig. [source: pinterest] The Bermuda rig consists of a triangular sail set aft of the mast with its head raised to the top of the mast; its luff runs down the mast and is normally attached to it for its entire length; its tack is attached at the base … [Read more...]
Gulet, a Turkish Motor Boat Only Pretending to Be Sailing
Gulet is a word who doesn't actually exist in the English language, especially in the United States. "Gullet" is worse, it is explained as to be the Turkish equivalent of the French's goelette. "Goelette" is the French word for schooner, a type of vessel I will describe here in a future post. Anyway, this sort of boat got its place in the world's editing encyclopedia, the Wikipedia. [source: goolets.net] Turkish Gulet Now, almost every ship you are invited to charter in Turkey, in … [Read more...]
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