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CJB CJB is offline
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Default Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs

Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs

The Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs and buy four of
the Challenge yachts.

They cite lack of funds and although I have not seen the actual
release they will sail the four yachts in company and call them Tall
Ship Challenge 1 to 4.

This winter they will stick one brig against the wall and take the
other to the Caribbean. The four yachts will winter in the Canaries.

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Default Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs


"CJB" wrote in message
ups.com...
Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs

The Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs and buy four of
the Challenge yachts.

They cite lack of funds and although I have not seen the actual
release they will sail the four yachts in company and call them Tall
Ship Challenge 1 to 4.

This winter they will stick one brig against the wall and take the
other to the Caribbean. The four yachts will winter in the Canaries.


A 'brig' is the term used for a prison. You know like, "Throw the
******* into the brig!" Buck up there, man! Call a spade a spade. It's
a 'brigantine.'

Wilbur Hubbard

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Default Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs

Wilbur Hubbard wrote:

A 'brig' is the term used for a prison. You know like, "Throw the
******* into the brig!" Buck up there, man! Call a spade a spade. It's
a 'brigantine.'


Not so. They are brigs (square rigged on both masts). Brigantines
are square rigged only on the fore mast.

That's what it says on Wikipeia at any rate, which cannot always be
taken for gospel, but ought to be good enough for you.

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Default Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs

On 2007-08-23 09:33:08 -0700, Ronald Raygun
said:

Wilbur Hubbard wrote:

A 'brig' is the term used for a prison. You know like, "Throw the
******* into the brig!" Buck up there, man! Call a spade a spade. It's
a 'brigantine.'


Not so. They are brigs (square rigged on both masts). Brigantines
are square rigged only on the fore mast.


Yep, a brig is a two-master with the forward mast shorter than the
after. If the forward mast is taller it's a ketch. (Unless the mizzen
is behind the rudder post, then it's a yawl.) Just like the
brig/brigantine distinction, a barque is a three-masted ship
square-rigged on the main and fore, while a barquentine is only
square-rigged on the fore.

Someone once told me that the boat name and the term for a prison were
etymologically related, maybe from using ship hulks for prisons, but I
can't find any verification of that.

-D

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Default Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs

Dave wrote:

On 2007-08-23 09:33:08 -0700, Ronald Raygun
said:

Wilbur Hubbard wrote:

A 'brig' is the term used for a prison. You know like, "Throw the
******* into the brig!" Buck up there, man! Call a spade a spade. It's
a 'brigantine.'


Not so. They are brigs (square rigged on both masts). Brigantines
are square rigged only on the fore mast.


Yep, a brig is a two-master with the forward mast shorter than the
after. If the forward mast is taller it's a ketch. (Unless the mizzen
is behind the rudder post, then it's a yawl.)


If the fore mast is shorter than the main it could also be a schooner.
I gather the distinction between that and a brigantine is that the
schooner has no square sails at all.

Would you have a ketch/yawl with square sails?



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Default Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs

Ronald Raygun wrote:
Dave wrote:


Yep, a brig is a two-master with the forward mast shorter than the
after. If the forward mast is taller it's a ketch. (Unless the mizzen
is behind the rudder post, then it's a yawl.)


If the fore mast is shorter than the main it could also be a schooner.


ISTR that http://www.mari-cha4.com/ causes some confusion in that it's
described as a schooner because although both masts are the same
*length*, the foremast has slightly greater rake, so is *lower*....

BICBW, Alan
--
99 Ducati 748BP, 95 Ducati 600SS, 81 Guzzi Monza, 74 MV Agusta 350
"Ride to Work, Work to Ride" SI# 7.067 DoD#1930 PGP Key 0xBDED56C5
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Default Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs


"Ronald Raygun" wrote in message
...
Dave wrote:

On 2007-08-23 09:33:08 -0700, Ronald Raygun
said:

Wilbur Hubbard wrote:

A 'brig' is the term used for a prison. You know like, "Throw the
******* into the brig!" Buck up there, man! Call a spade a spade.
It's
a 'brigantine.'

Not so. They are brigs (square rigged on both masts). Brigantines
are square rigged only on the fore mast.


Yep, a brig is a two-master with the forward mast shorter than the
after. If the forward mast is taller it's a ketch. (Unless the mizzen
is behind the rudder post, then it's a yawl.)


If the fore mast is shorter than the main it could also be a schooner.
I gather the distinction between that and a brigantine is that the
schooner has no square sails at all.

Would you have a ketch/yawl with square sails?



http://www.sailbaltimore.org/shiptypes.htm

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Default Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs

On 2007-08-23 10:33:26 -0700, Ronald Raygun
said:

Dave wrote:
Yep, a brig is a two-master with the forward mast shorter than the
after. If the forward mast is taller it's a ketch. (Unless the mizzen
is behind the rudder post, then it's a yawl.)


If the fore mast is shorter than the main it could also be a schooner.
I gather the distinction between that and a brigantine is that the
schooner has no square sails at all.


Oh! I was going to mention schooners, too. A schooner can have a square
topsail, but I guess it isn't a schooner any more if it has a square
course.

Now on to xebecs, carracks, smacks, and hoys..

-D

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Default Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs

On 23 Aug, 17:56, Dave wrote:

Yep, a brig is a two-master with the forward mast shorter than the
after.


That's a schooner.

Or can be. All these terms - brig, brigantine, schooner, ship, barque
and so on - were pretty flexible, and meant little more than what the
person using them meant.

Ian

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Default Tall Ships Youth Trust is to sell one of its brigs


"Ronald Raygun" wrote in message
...
Wilbur Hubbard wrote:

A 'brig' is the term used for a prison. You know like, "Throw the
******* into the brig!" Buck up there, man! Call a spade a spade.
It's
a 'brigantine.'


Not so. They are brigs (square rigged on both masts). Brigantines
are square rigged only on the fore mast.

That's what it says on Wikipeia at any rate, which cannot always be
taken for gospel, but ought to be good enough for you.


Is that your final answer?

I hope not because a brigantine is a two-masted, square-rigged ship with
fore and aft mainsail. A 'brig' is a lubberly shortening of the word
'brigantine.'

Wilbur Hubbard



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