Banks Dory

The Banks dory is a narrow-bottomed, slab-sided boat with a very narrow transom used for fishing off the Grand Banks of Nova Scotia, Canada during the 19th century. These boats were inexpensive to build, and stacked on the decks of larger fishing vessels. Dories came into use once it was discovered that handlining for cod was more successful than fishing for them from the larger mother ships. Banks dories have long overhangs, both bow and stern, to help lift them over large waves. They were usually manned by two rowers, or 'dory mates'. They would usually set out from the mother ship in the morning and return by sunset with the day's catch. A Banks dory is seen in Winslow Homer's painting The Fog Warning. Banks dories have been capable of surviving long voyages, some unintentional, when the fishermen became seperated from their mother ships. One of the more famous adventures was by Howard Blackburn, who survived 5 days in the North Atlantic in January. See also: Glouster dory, Swampscott dory, and Cape Ann dory.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
alexander gog
ganz
mackenzie crook
phoenix lord
melek taus
downtown (salt lake city)
michael wayne
new zealand tomb of the unknown warrior
cunoniaceae
lancet study
fyfield and west overton
dutch roll
san sosti
guyana national football team
erasure code
fyfield
south mississippi public radio
joe fagan
rufus hollis gause
embedded linux
felipe seade
cape ann dory
pompeia sulla
mersin
fyfield, wiltshire
hunslet engine company
cerro negro
csr limited
freddy fender
west overton
geometric quantization
alexander francis chamberlain
heartbreak hill
glenn tilbrook
loyalist (american revolution)
concepcin (volcano)
kac moody algebra
australian naval and military expeditionary force
current algebra
sarah waters
ferion
maderas
cesspit
soil amendments