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Above Board
-
Anything on or above the open deck.
If something is open and in plain view, it is above board.
As the Crow Flies
-
When lost or unsure of their
position in coastal waters, ships would release a caged crow. The crow
would fly straight towards the nearest land thus giving the vessel some
sort of a navigational fix. The tallest lookout platform on a ship came to
be know as the crow's nest.
At
Loggerheads
-
An iron ball attached to a long
handle was a loggerhead. When heated it was used to seal the pitch in deck
seams. It was sometimes a handy weapon for quarrelling crewmen.
Back and Fill
-
A technique of tacking when the
tide is with the ship but the wind is against it.
Bear Down
-
To sail downwind rapidly towards
another ship or landmark.
Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea -
The devil seam was the curved seam
in the deck planking closest to the side of the ship and next to the
scupper gutters. If a sailor slipped on the deck, he could find himself
between the devil and the deep blue sea.
The Bitter End
-
The end of an anchor cable is
fastened to the bitts at the ship's bow. If all of the anchor cable has
been payed out you have come to the bitter end.
Booby
Hatch
-
Aboard ship, a booby hatch is a
sliding cover or hatch that must be pushed away to allow access or
passage.
Buoyed
Up
-
Using a buoy to raise the bight of
an anchor cable to prevent it from chafing on a rough bottom.
By and Large
-
Currently means in all cases or in
any case. From the nautical: by meaning into the wind and large meaning
with the wind: as in, "By and Large the ship handled very well."
Chock-a-block -
Meaning something is filled to
capacity or over loaded. If two blocks of rigging tackle were so hard
together they couldn't be tightened further, it was said they were
"Chock-a-Block".
Cut and Run
-
If a captain of a smaller ship
encountered a larger enemy vessel, he might decide that discretion is the
better part of valor, and so he would order the crew to cut the lashings
on all the sails and run away before the wind. Other sources indicate
"Cut and Run" meant to cut the anchor cable and sail off in a
hurry.
Cut of His Jib
-
Warships many times had their
foresails or jib sails cut thinly so that they could maintain point and
not be blown off course. Upon sighting thin foresails on a distant ship a
captain might not like the cut of his jib and would then have an
opportunity to escape.
The Devil to Pay
-
To pay the deck seams meant to seal
them with tar. The devil seam was the most difficult to pay because it was
curved and intersected with the straight deck planking. Some sources
define the "devil" as the below-the-waterline-seam between the
keel and the adjoining planking. Paying the Devil was considered to be
a most difficult and unpleasant task.
Dressing Down -
Thin and worn sails were often treated with
oil or wax to renew their effectiveness. This was called "dressing
down". An officer or sailor who was reprimanded or scolded received a
dressing down.
First
Rate
-
Implies excellence. From the 16th
century on until steam powered ships took over, British naval ships were
rated as to the number of heavy cannon they carried. A ship of 100 or more
guns was a First Rate line-of-battle ship. Second rates carried 90 to 98
guns; Third Rates, 64 to 89 guns; Fourth Rates, 50 to 60 guns. Frigates
carrying 20 to 48 guns were fifth and sixth rated.
Fly-by-Night
-
A large sail used only for sailing
downwind and requiring rather little attention.
Footloose
-
The bottom portion of a sail is
called the foot. If it is not secured, it is footloose and it dances
randomly in the wind.
Garbled
-
Garbling was the prohibited
practice of mixing rubbish with the cargo. A distorted, mixed up message
was said to be garbled.
Give (someone) a Wide Berth
-
To anchor a ship far enough away
from another ship so that they did not hit each other when they swung with
the wind or tide.
Gone By the Board
-
Anything seen to have gone
overboard or spotted floating past the ship (by the board) was considered
lost at sea.
Groggy
-
In 1740, British Admiral Vernon
(whose nickname was "Old Grogram" for the cloak of grogram which
he wore) ordered that the sailors' daily ration of rum be diluted with
water. The men called the mixture "grog". A sailor who drank too
much grog was "groggy".
In the Offing
-
Currently means something is about
to happen, as in - "There is a reorganization in the offing."
From the 16th century usage meaning a good distance from shore, barely
visible from land, as in - "We sighted a ship in the offing."
To Know the Ropes -
There was miles and miles of cordage in the
rigging of a square rigged ship. The only way of keeping track of and
knowing the function of all of these lines was to know where they were
located. It took an experienced seaman to know the ropes.
Leeway
-
The weather side of a ship is the
side from which the wind is blowing. The Lee side is the side of the ship
sheltered from the wind. A lee shore is a shore that is downwind of a
ship. If a ship does not have enough "leeway" it is in danger of
being driven onto the shore.
Let the Cat Out of the Bag -
In the Royal Navy the punishment
prescribed for most serious crimes was flogging. This was administered by
the Bosun's Mate using a whip called a cat o' nine tails. The
"cat" was kept in a leather or baize bag. It was considered bad
news indeed when the cat was let out of the bag. Other sources attribute
the expression to the old English market scam of selling someone a pig in
a poke (bag)) when the pig turned out to be a cat instead.
No Great Shakes
-
When casks became empty they were
"shaken" (taken apart) so the pieces, called shakes, could be
stored in a small space. Shakes had very little value.
No Room to Swing a Cat
-
The entire ship's company was
required to witness flogging at close hand. The crew might crowd around so
that the Bosun's Mate might not have enough room to swing his cat o' nine
tails.
Over
the Barrel
-
The most common method of punishment aboard
ship was flogging. The unfortunate sailor was tied to a grating, mast or
over the barrel of a deck cannon.
Overbearing
-
To sail downwind directly at
another ship thus "stealing" or diverting the wind from his
sails.
Overhaul
-
To prevent the buntline ropes from
chaffing the sails, crew were sent aloft to haul them over the sails. This
was called overhauling.
Overreach
-
If a ship holds a tack course too
long, it has overreached its turning point and the distance it must travel
to reach it's next tack point is increased.
Overwhelm
-
Old English for capsize or founder.
Pipe
Down
-
Means stop talking and be quiet.
The Pipe Down was the last signal from the Bosun's pipe each day which
meant "lights out" and "silence".
Pooped
-
The poop is the stern section of a
ship. To be pooped is to be swamped by a high, following sea.
Press Into Service
-
The British navy filled their
ships' crew quotas by kidnapping men off the streets and forcing them into
service. This was called Impressment and was done by Press Gangs.
Rummage
Sale
-
From the French
"arrimage" meaning ship's cargo. Damaged cargo was sold at a
rummage sale.
Scuttlebutt
-
A butt was a barrel. Scuttle meant
to chop a hole in something. The scuttlebutt was a water barrel with a
hole cut into it so that sailors could reach in and dip out drinking
water. The scuttlebutt was the place where the ship's gossip was
exchanged.
Skyscraper -
A small triangular sail set above
the skysail in order to maximize effect in a light wind.
Slush Fund
-
A slushy slurry of fat was obtained
by boiling or scraping the empty salted meat storage barrels. This stuff
called "slush" was often sold ashore by the ship's cook for the
benefit of himself or the crew. The money so derived became known as a
slush fund.
Son of a Gun
-
When in port, and with the crew
restricted to the ship for any extended period of time, wives and ladies
of easy virtue often were allowed to live aboard along with the crew.
Infrequently, but not uncommonly, children were born aboard, and a
convenient place for this was between guns on the gun deck. If the child's
father was unknown, they were entered in the ship's log as "son of a
gun".
A Square Meal
-
In good weather, crews' mess was a
warm meal served on square wooden platters.
Start Over with a Clean Slate
-
A slate tablet was kept near the
helm on which the watch keeper would record the speeds, distances,
headings and tacks during the watch. If there were no problems during the
watch, the slate would be wiped clean so that the new watch could start
over with a clean slate.
Taken
Aback
-
A dangerous situation where the
wind is on the wrong side of the sails pressing them back against the mast
and forcing the ship astern. Most often this was caused by an inattentive
helmsman who had allowed the ship to head up into the wind.
Taking the wind out of his sails
-
Sailing in a manner so as to steal
or divert wind from another ship's sails.
Three Sheets to the Wind
-
A sheet is a rope line which
controls the tension on the downwind side of a square sail. If, on a three
masted fully rigged ship, the sheets of the three lower course sails are
loose, the sails will flap and flutter and are said to be "in the
wind". A ship in this condition would stagger and wander aimlessly
downwind.
Toe
the Line -
When called to line up at
attention, the ship's crew would form up with their toes touching a seam
in the deck planking.
Touch and Go -
This referred to a ship's keel
touching the bottom and getting right off again.
Under the Weather
-
If a crewman is standing watch on
the weather side of the bow, he will be subject to the constant beating of
the sea and the ocean spray. He will be under the weather.
Windfall
-
A sudden unexpected rush of wind
from a mountainous shore which allowed a ship more leeway. |