enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Jolly boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jolly_boat

    The term 'jolly boat' has several potential origins. It may originate in the Dutch or Swedish jolle, a term meaning a small bark or boat. [1] Other possibilities include the English term yawl, or the 'gelle-watte', the latter being a term in use in the 16th century to refer to the boat used by the captain for trips to and from shore.

  3. Jollyboat (dinghy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jollyboat_(dinghy)

    Traditionally the term jolly boat refers to a boat carried by a ship, powered by 4 or six oars and occasionally yawl rigged sails. The term might also refer to A Jollyboat is a 1953 sailing dinghy designed by Uffa Fox. It was the fastest dinghy in its day, and was built by Fairey Marine 1953 - 1971.

  4. Jolly Boat (Laurent Giles) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jolly_Boat_(Laurent_Giles)

    The Jolly Boat is a 15 foot (4.6 metre) ketch rigged open day-boat designed by J. Laurent Giles. Originally designed for plywood construction, more recent examples were made with GRP with plywood decks and bulkheads, manufactured by AJS Marine Services in Chichester .

  5. Ship's boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ship's_boat

    In the age of sail, a ship carried a variety of boats of various sizes and for different purposes.In the navies they were: (1) the launch, or long-boat, the largest of all rowboats on board, which was of full, flat, and high built; (2) the barge, the next in size, which was employed for carrying commanding officers, with ten or twelve oars (3) the pinnace, which was used for transporting ...

  6. John Laurent Giles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Laurent_Giles

    Gulvain. John Laurent Giles (1901–1969) was an English naval architect who was particularly famous for his sailing yachts. [1] [2] He and his company, Laurent Giles & Partners Ltd, have designed more than 1400 boats from cruisers and racing yachts to megayachts.

  7. Pinnace (ship's boat) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinnace_(ship's_boat)

    The boats of HMS London were kept at five minutes' notice, ready equipped with water, salt pork, biscuits, arms, local currency and a small cask of rum. Manned by eight or nine sailors, with a midshipman or junior lieutenant in command, a boat was often away from the London for two or three weeks, normally anchoring every night, the men off ...

  8. SS Anglo Saxon (1929) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Anglo_Saxon_(1929)

    The jolly boat crew remained in the vicinity all night and at dawn set sail and headed west. The jolly boat, smaller than a cutter, was a clinker-built ship's boat used as a hack boat for small work and as a lifeboat. It was 18 ft (5 m) long and 6.5 ft (2 m) across its beam. The boat contained the following items: a canvas sail; compass; sea ...

  9. JY15 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JY15

    The boat has a draft of 3.00 ft (0.91 m) with the centreboard extended and 0.50 ft (0.15 m) with it retracted, allowing beaching or ground transportation on a trailer. [2] The stays have lever adjusters for rapid set-up and the mast disassembles for ease of ground transport. The mainsheet is a 2:1 and is led off to the centerboard trunk. The ...