Shifting Tides, Anton Elfilter

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@ventureonwilderseas
Shifting Tides, Anton Elfilter
Amanda Seyfried as Ann Lee
The Testament of Ann Lee (2025) dir. Mona Fastvold
The Testament of Ann Lee shot on the Götheborg.
The Making of ‘Hornblower’, by Tom McGregor
Came to me suddenly yesterday that I am probably one of very few people in this century that know what both pine tar and gangrene smell like
touch water (touch grass for people who like swimming)
norwest Passage perfec t route for put ship in to s/ail! inside very short and safe ship sail quickly put ship in Northwest Passage. Put Ship In Northwest Passage. no problems ever in norrwes pasaage because good Short and Direct route for freighter weak of big heavy cargo. Anorwest Passage yes a place for a ship put ship in northwest passage can trust passage for giving good route to ship. friend passage
this shit right here? goes hardddd
fuuuuck
no way...
Carl Frederik Sørensen (Danish, 1818–1879), "Danish Ships in Rough Seas" (details), 1877
Midshipman implies the existence of basedshipman
I went to this Northwest Passage museum once where they had the white explorers' journals on one side of the exhibit and the native people's accounts on the other side of the exhibit and the explorer journals were like "our canoe had almost sunk when we encountered some kindly Indians" and the native histories were like "we watched a bunch of strangers come down the river in the shittiest canoe you'd ever seen. Also, they had no rain gear"
Journal: "it has rained for 40 days and 40 nights and the men are miserable"
Oral history: "we sold them our rain gear"
I feel like age of sail tumblr might enjoy the point system/relative bearings as a writing resource.
You can describe a vessel's heading (where the bow is pointing) in relation to the points of the compass (so, North, North East, etc). Or in compass degrees numerically (the more modern method) (so, steering course 130 for instance).
But when you want to describe objects in relation to the boat itself, you use the relative bearing system to talk about where those objects exist in relation to the boat (as opposed to where they exist in relation to North/000). Usually this is done when you're standing watch as a lookout. So, like, "sail two points off the port bow" "buoy abaft the starboard beam" etc. (Beam means middle of the boat)
Mahmoud Darwish - “Memory for Forgetfulness”
Hey JSTOR! I just got a job in admin with an organization that teaches kids how to sail historical style tall ships. The problem is, I don’t know anything about tall ships! Can you recommend an article about how tall ships work?
Hey there, congratulations on the new job! I couldn’t find a how-to guide on sailing tall ships, but I did find a compelling JSTOR Daily article that uncovers the deeper history behind them. It discusses the Eastern white pine, the tree that powered the British Royal Navy’s tall ships with its trunks. These trees were so valuable that the Crown seized them for its ships.
The article also points out that the Eastern white pine held sacred meaning for the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy), who saw it as the “Tree of Peace," a symbol of unity under the Great Law. Colonial exploitation disrespected Indigenous sovereignty and desecrated a culturally vital symbol.
It’s a fascinating (and sobering) read!
OP, hi! Hello! All of the tall ships folks are over here! Come join us, we're friendly.
Container ship NCL Salten run aground only metres from a house
The best photo from this...
New York City Mayor Eric Adams said at least 19 people needed medical treatment after the crash, including four with serious injuries, but t
some of my favorite online resources for nautical/maritime/age of sail things - this is a longish post full of links and i spent a bit of time putting it together from my various bookmarks and collections!! please enjoy!
this blog (christine demerchant) and its many lists of terms and informative pages, for example: sails & rigs & sailing, hull & construction terms, anchors & anchorage, types of boats & ships, points of sail - at the bottom of every page there is a list of books on the topic as well!! this blog is INVALUABLE and has basically everything, and if it doesn't have something it certainly has a link to another blog or a book that has what you need. there's also lot of interesting articles about the author's adventures in making her own sails and building boats and experimenting with sailing. the site is a little difficult to navigate but the information on it is incredible and all very experience-based!!
there's also this blog (roland's model ship building) which is SUCH a delight - it is mostly model ships as the name would suggest but it is an incredibly close look at the little complicated parts of ships and a great resource for the more "how does this look" aspect if a little less "how does this work". my favorite page is the process of building model HMS surprise - it's SO fascinating and even just a quick look through makes visualizing and understanding the physics of it all easier. this in particular is a very good drawing resource for tall ships!
the ever-famous shipindex.org is a completely invaluable resource as well. pretty much anything you want to know about a specific ship can be found here, or at least it makes a spectacular jumping-off point!
another famous resource is falconer's marine dictionary, or: "A New Universal Dictionary of the Marine; Being a Copious Explanation of the Technical Terms and Phrases Usually Employed in the Construction, Equipment, Machinery, Movements, and Military, as Well as Naval, Operations of Ships: with Such Parts of Astronomy, and Navigation, as Will be Found Useful to Practical Navigators" by william falconer and expanded by william burney - the whole text is here online but it can be a little hard to read and understand so i would supplement with the other resources here!
there is also the oxford companion to ships and the sea which i do not have a copy of nor do i have online access to the full text, BUT you can search and find keywords and it will show you excerpts which is surprisingly helpful!! especially good if you don't have time to read the whole dictionary trying to find one specific term.
in the same vein is the oxford encyclopedia of maritime history - same deal as the above and i do not have access to the full text but this is SO useful for looking up specific people and places and ships and battles and such!!! there's TONS of information in this one.
also, a super interesting primary source: digital collections of midshipmen's letters and journals in the united states naval academy!! these are hefty, each link contains a ton of stuff:
Richard Mueller Nixon Letters (1926-1930)
Henry Mylin Keiffer Scrapbook (1907-1911) (one of my favorites of all time, absolutely worth at least a cursory glance)
John Porter Merrell Johnston Letters (1932-1937)
William Frederick Durand U.S.S. Mayflower journal of practice cruise (1879)
Roscoe C. Bulmer Journal (1894-1896)
Josiah G. Beckwith Letters (1853-1855)
this is not my whole collection but it is a fantastic set of jumping-off points and i tried to include the widest & most general databases that i could. if you have a great online resource to add please let me know, and if you have book recommendations i would appreciate those too!!!
Lomochrome color ‘92 Sun-kissed