tallship, to ukteachers

About twenty five years ago, we laid out the keels for a new adventure - The Twin Brigantine project, in the parking lot of the , next to the , in the old ferry building that was, along with a pontoon bridge, obviated by completion of the connecting the mainland to .

Up until that time, operated and sailed the 70' gaff-rigged topsail schooner, Swift of Ipswitch (previously James Cagney's personal yacht) for it's youth sailing program. It took a few years to complete the Irving and Exy Johnson, sister Brigantine vessels built and outfitted by dozens of volunteers over the duration of the program. At some point, another gaff-rigged schooner was borrowed and enlisted, the136' Bill of Rights filling the need for accommodations of a youth sailing program that had greatly expanded over time, with many ups and downs, achievements and disappointments, but building two square rigger tall ships for and by a non-profit organization dedicated to youth educational programs for the community, a truly novel pursuit, eventually came to a close as a great success.

This photo shows the 113' brigantine Irving Johnson, on 23 March 2005, and which, after less than three years of service, she had run hard aground on a sandbar following several storms that affected local charts, leaving them partially obsolete - in short, on her way into the Channel Islands harbor, well... sadly, the pic speaks for itself.

Another year and two million dollars later to repair structural damages and flooding, the once again joined her sister ship, , in the pursuit of education as , something that Irving and his wife Exy (Electa), following no less than 7 circumnavigations together, pioneered and championed in the 20th century aboard their three successive sailing ships - a , a , and a - each named the .

.

This image or file is a work of a United States Coast Guard service personnel or employee, taken or made as part of that person's official duties. As a work of the U.S. federal government, the image or file is in the public domain (17 U.S.C. § 101 and § 105, USCG main privacy policy)

tallship,

Questions always follow after such, 'salty talk', or 'nautical nomenclature', or in terms, .

What's the difference between a mizzen topgallant sail and a main royal staysail? Just a few rules is all it takes, but in today's world, one need only avail themselves of the basic Marconi rig on a single masted sloop. There's a mainsail (the big triangular one aft of the mast), and a jib, or foresail. Typically, when speaking about a jib (the one forward of the mast), people will typically categorize them into about three classes:

  • a (big one - low wind conditions)
  • a (also called a for most wind conditions)
  • a - smallish, for reduced sail area in high and gale force winds.

If you're rigged to run one jib, you're a ; two, and you're rigged.

tl;dr: Unlike elections, rigging is a good thing. Without standing rigging you have nothing to hold your masts up in place and they'll just snap or fall over. Without running rigging you have no way to control your sails, hoist them up, or catch the wind.

So when it comes to sailboats, it's a very good thing that they're rigged :p

veronica, to StarTrek
@veronica@mastodon.online avatar

This cold open scene of Star Trek DS9 s03e16 "Prophet Motive" is GOLD! 😆

"Those self-sealing stem bolts could triple production of my family's reverse-ratcheting routing planners."

I love all the little references to "self-sealing stem bolts" in Star Trek. Another such nonsense device is the "warp matrix flux capacitor", and of course the famous "Heisenberg compensator".

gcvsa, to StarTrek
@gcvsa@mstdn.plus avatar

I've been watching on Spamazon Prime the past few days, and it's all over again, but with more elaborate production values.

It had me thinking about the inexplicable eternal fighting over which is better: or ?

The truth is, you can't compare the two. One is a social masquerading as , the other is epic high masquerading as science fiction. There's no comparison to be made—you are arguing v. .

strypey, to random
@strypey@mastodon.nzoss.nz avatar

Who writes this nonsense?

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"Leverage powerful insights to take the necessary actions that lead to positive results for your business."

"Move from manual workflows to trust by design with automation that keeps you elevated from competition and focused on the path ahead."

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