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  2. Thames skiff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thames_skiff

    Swan upping in skiffs. Skiffs are both recreational and working boats on the Thames. They can be seen used for swan upping and other general purpose duties. [3] Racing skiffs are specially built for skiffing in competitions at regattas and long-distance marathon events between the various skiff clubs under The Skiff Racing Association rules along the Thames and also for recreational purposes ...

  3. Skiffing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skiffing

    The skiff is a traditional hand built clinker-built wooden craft of a design which has been seen on the River Thames and other waterways in England and other countries since the 19th century. Sculling is the act of propelling the boat with a pair of oars (or blades), as opposed to rowing which requires both hands on a single oar.

  4. Skiff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skiff

    It is a round-bottomed clinker-built rowing boat that is still very common on the River Thames and other rivers in England. Rowing skiffs became very popular in Victorian Britain, and a skiff journey up the River Thames is described in Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K. Jerome. [8] These skiffs could carry a sail and could be used for camping.

  5. Hinksey Sculling School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hinksey_Sculling_School

    Hinksey Sculling School is a community rowing club on the River Thames for junior rowers. The club is unusual in the fact that it operates from three venues across Oxfordshire , England. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The Sculling School runs as a charity in order to provide the facilities to the younger members [ 4 ] and it was founded as the United ...

  6. Pocock Racing Shells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocock_Racing_Shells

    In 1961 he built the first ever fiberglass rowing boat—a wherry. By 1979 Stan was running the shop and experimenting with ideas that were ahead of their time. He was first in many areas, including the development of a successful wood and glass laminated composite oar, molded seat tops and adjustable oarlock height spacers.

  7. Oar (sport rowing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oar_(sport_rowing)

    When the rower uses one oar on one side, it is called sweep rowing that the single oar is called a "sweep" oar. [1] When the rower uses two oars at the same time, one on each side, it is called sculling, and the two oars are called a pair of "sculls". Typical sculls are around 284 cm - 290 cm in length — sweep oars are 370 cm - 376 cm.

  8. Stämpfli Racing Boats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stämpfli_Racing_Boats

    A successful rower in his own right, (1966 World Champion for Double sculls) Burgin had been a long-time employee of the company and under his leadership the company started to build composite boats alongside the exquisite wooden boats. Through the 1980s and early 1990s Stämpfli produced the wooden and composite boats side by side.

  9. Octuple scull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octuple_scull

    An octuple sculling shell, often simply called an oct and abbreviated as an 8x [1] or 8x+, [2] is a racing shell used in the sport of rowing.. Unlike the eight (8+), a racing shell with a crew of eight rowers and a coxswain (cox) [2] that can be seen at the Olympic Games and the Boat Race, [2] in which each of the eight rowers have one oar (or blade) which they pull with both arms, [note 1] in ...