I recently learned an old French euphemism for bisexuality. It means to be powered "by sail and steam," and it absolutely comes from a specific flavor of 19th-century ship.
HMS Terror and Erebus were bisexual, you heard it here first.
Happy Pride!

seen from Singapore
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Bangladesh

seen from Sweden
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seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Japan

seen from Canada
seen from Argentina
seen from China

seen from Colombia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Sweden

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Netherlands
seen from Türkiye
I recently learned an old French euphemism for bisexuality. It means to be powered "by sail and steam," and it absolutely comes from a specific flavor of 19th-century ship.
HMS Terror and Erebus were bisexual, you heard it here first.
Happy Pride!
As some of you might recall from this essay, I spent the latter half of 2025 working on a comic for the Ships of the Sea Maritime Museum in Savannah, Georgia. Tania Sammons, a curator at the museum who had previously licensed my guide to sailors’ tattoos for a show, wrote to me with an irresistible pitch: four cartoonists would be hired, assigned a vessel from the museum's extensive collection of models, then given six months to produce a short comic for publication in an anthology alongside an accompanying museum display.
How could I say no?
My original brief was to research the Anne, the ship that brought the first colonists to Georgia, but in the aftermath of my dad's death the story took off in directions I couldn't have foreseen.
I'm releasing the whole comic online to coincide with the opening of Drawn to the Sea, the exhibition in Savannah. If you're in the area this week (or anytime over the next nine months!) you can stop in and see all the amazing work that came from myself and fellow artists Avery Hick, Rich King, and Sharon Norwood. Details about the museum show are here.
In the meantime, here's a very personal comic.
Content Warning: this piece deals with suicide and parental mortality. Readers with trypophobia may want to skip pages 14 and 15.
Thanks for reading <3
9/11 & 9/13
Catching the last good winds of summer
Hi! I'll also send you an ask and say stay save!! Cause I can't sleep
What's the coolest ship? (I mean as in boat type of ship) And did you ever go to the ocean? (not in a boat way, but if you did, that's very cool)
Thanks!
I personally like traditional gaff riged and topsail schooners the best. They're usually small (compared to other tall ships) and fast and easy to maneuver. I'll be working on a wooden hauled topsail schooner that's a replica of one that was employed by the British navy in the 1700s.
This isn't the one I'll be working on but it's got a similar sail configuration and is probably similar in size. (Although mine is a little shorter and stouter I think. I'm not sure of the specs of this one)
I have been to both the Pacific and the Atlantic Ocean (no boats involved) and both were great! I went when I was in California once and I've been to a few different places on the East Coast. I've also seen a few of The Great Lakes which are practically mini oceans themselves. Arguably more dangerous. I was told by an experienced sailor that he had sailed all around the world and the only place that he's actually afraid of sailing in is Lake Superior. I had to chuckle to myself because that's where I learned to swim. (Ik sailing and swimming are two completely different stories but it still made me laugh a little)
goodbye washington hello new jersey i guess?
And now for some pretty boat pics
well now the suez canal is going to be heartbroken