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Saturday news

By tk
Saturday, April 26, 2003

*Private docks built along coastal waterways would be exempt from the 33-year-old Coastal Marshlands Protection Act under a bill given final approval Friday by the General Assembly.
-Savannah Morning News, 4-26-03

*Riverfront claims another shrimp boat
-Coast News, 4-26-03

*River has new resident: shrimp boat, contents submerge
-Beaufort Gazette, 4-26-03

*Now, a group in Georgia is trying to come up with a plan to preserve the Gullah/Geechee culture and to entice those who have taken up with the modern world to return home
-Brunswick News, 4-25-03

*Riptides pose early threat to swimmers
-Fernandina Beach News Leader, 4-23-03

*The old Sidney Lanier Bridge is officially out with yesterday's removal of the 250-foot-wide center lift span
*Beach Boys coming to Jekyll Island fete
-Florida Times Union, 4-26-03

*Public oyster reefs open only three days over three months
-Dauphin Mullet Wrapper, 4-26-03

*http://www.pbrla.com/03NEWS/news_042503.html

*County Endorses Navarre Beach Renourishment
-Pensacola Beach News, 4-25-03

*Beach officials to stay on alert for dangerous surf conditions
-Pensacola News Journal, 4-26-03


Heaving the Lead, and Markings on a lead line.

A lead weight hollowed out at the bottom is fitted to a lead line, so that it may be armed with tallow, this allows the nature of the bottom to be ascertained when a lead line is used by a seaman to find the depth of water when a ship is navigating in restricted or shallow water.

The lead line is a length of rope up to 50 fathoms long, ( a fathom is the term for 6 feet ) and this line is fitted to the lead weight, hence the expression "To heave the lead" which means to use a lead line line to find the water depth. This should not be confused with the term " Swinging the lead" which is used to describe a sailor who is lazy.

On either side of a ship about adjacent to the bridge there is a small platform, with protective chain on three sides connected to small stanchions these e are known as "The chains"

On entering or leaving harbour, or in restricted waters a seaman mans the starboard chains, he holds the lead line coiled in his left hand, and takes a length of the line in his right hand, with the lead weight secured to its end, he swings this line in an arc over his head several times, letting it go on the forward swing.

As the ship moves forward and the lead line is vertical, he reads the depth showing on the line just above water level, and calls out this depth in a loud clear voice.

To allow the seaman to read the water depth, the lead line is marked as follows:

2 fathoms from the lead - 2 strips of leather.

3 fathoms from the lead - 3 strips of leather.

5 fathoms from the lead - a piece of white cloth.

7 fathoms from the lead - a piece of red cloth.

10 fathoms from the lead - a piece of leather with a hole in it.

13 fathoms from the lead - a piece of blue cloth.

15 fathoms from the lead - same as for 5 fathoms.

17 fathoms from the lead - same as for 7 fathoms.

20 fathoms from the lead - small line with 2 knots.

25 fathoms from the lead - small line with 1 knot.

30 fathoms from the lead - small line with 3 knots.

35 fathoms from the lead - small line with 1 knot.

40 fathoms from the lead - small line with 4 knots.


Your sort out list is: Dutch Submarines of the Royal Netherlands Navy 1906-2003.
http://www.dutchsubmarines.com

U-Boat War. As it is.

A research site about German Submarines.
http://www.uboatwaffe.net/

A site about a Dutch Submarine. http://hrmspotvis.com/

 

First para, 2nd. line it seems unreasonable to include these 8 boats, please in stead of the 7 as it is now reads.

Are you when convenient, able to line up some of the figures in their columns?

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