Dick Sargeant
Well-known member
I have almost finished reading the Endurance a story about Ernest Shackleton who was stuck in the arctic for over a year. As some of you know, this chronicle is hard to imagine even with modern equipment. At one point, Ernest leaves 22 guys on an Island and goes for help about 800 miles away with 4-5 others on a 22 foot wooden boat........having to navigate the most treacherous piece of ocean, maybe on earth. One of the things that they did with this heavy wooden double ender, which could be rowed or sailed, was to put a big load of rocks on the inside which they sometimes had to adjust to suit conditions. It was a complete miracle, of course, that they made it but it got me to thinking about ballast.
I know one commercial tuna boat, I think it's a 41 foot lowell, that has ballast tanks that they fill when on anchor to smooth things out but this is a big boat capable of running at speed through 10 foot waves.
The only time I ever heard about weight added to a duck boat was for the bow of a sculler but, again, I wonder if weight added below deck would make a small boat safer in rough conditions ?
sarge
I know one commercial tuna boat, I think it's a 41 foot lowell, that has ballast tanks that they fill when on anchor to smooth things out but this is a big boat capable of running at speed through 10 foot waves.
The only time I ever heard about weight added to a duck boat was for the bow of a sculler but, again, I wonder if weight added below deck would make a small boat safer in rough conditions ?
sarge