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Traditional fishing boat

Traditionally, many different kinds of boats have been used as fishing boats to catch fish in the sea, or on a lake or river. Even today, many traditional fishing boats are still in use. According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), at the end of 2004, the world fishing fleet consisted of about 4 million vessels, of which 2.7 million were undecked (open) boats. While nearly all decked vessels were mechanised, only one-third of the undecked fishing boats were powered, usually with outboard engines. The remaining 1.8 million boats were traditional craft of various types, operated by sail and oars.[1]

Traditional Vietnamese fishing boat
Traditional Philippines fishing boat with outriggers, often known as pump boats

This article is about the boats used for fishing that are or were built from designs that existed before engines became available.

Overview edit

 
Dhonis are the traditional fishing boat of the Maldives.

Early fishing vessels included rafts, dugout canoes, reed boats, and boats constructed from a frame covered with hide or tree bark, such as coracles.[2] The oldest boats found by archaeological excavation are dugout canoes dating back to the Neolithic Period around 7,000-9,000 years ago. These canoes were often cut from coniferous tree logs, using simple stone tools.[2][3] A 7000-year-old sea going boat made from reeds and tar has been found in Kuwait.[4] These early vessels had limited capability; they could float and move on water, but were not suitable for use any great distance from the shoreline. They were used mainly for fishing and hunting.

The development of fishing boats took place in parallel with the development of boats built for trade and war. Early navigators began to use animal skins or woven fabrics for sails. Affixed to a pole set upright in the boat, these sails gave early boats more range, allowing voyages of exploration

According to the FAO, at the end of 2004, the world fishing fleet included 1.8 million traditional craft of various types which were operated by sail and oars.[5] These figures for small fishing vessels are probably under reported. The FAO compiles these figures largely from national registers. These records often omit smaller boats where registration is not required or where fishing licences are granted by provincial or municipal authorities.[5] Indonesia reportedly has about 700,000 current fishing boats, 25 percent of which are dugout canoes, and half of which are without motors.[6] The Philippines have reported a similar number of small fishing boats.

Traditional fishing boats are usually characteristic of the stretch of coast along which they operate. They evolve over time to meet the local conditions, such as the materials available locally for boat building, the type of sea conditions the boats will encounter, and the demands of the local fisheries.

Artisan fishing is small-scale commercial or subsistence fishing, particularly practices involving coastal or island ethnic groups using traditional fishing techniques and traditional boats. This may also include heritage groups involved in customary fishing practices. Artisan fishers usually use small traditional fishing boats that are open (undecked) and have sails; these boats use little to no mechanised or electronic gear. Large numbers of artisan fishing boats are still in use, particularly in developing countries with long productive marine coastlines.

Rafts edit

 
Boys fishing from a wooden crate raft

A raft is a structure with a flat top that floats. It is the most basic boat design, characterised by the absence of a hull. The classic raft is constructed by lashing several logs, placed side by side, to two or more additional logs placed transverse to the others. In many Asian countries, the rafts are similarly constructed using bamboo.

In shallow waters, rafts can be punted with a push pole. They can be used as stealthy platforms for fishing shallow waters around lakes. In sheltered coastal waters, anchored or drifting rafts can become effective fish aggregating devices. Payaos were traditional bamboo rafts used in Southeast Asia as aggregating device. Fishermen on the top of the raft used handlines to catch tuna.[7]

Pontoon boats, and to some degree the punt, can be viewed as modern derivatives of rafts.

Reed boats edit

 
Uro man pulling a boat made of totora reeds
 
Totora reed fishing boats on the beach at Huanchaco, Peru

Boats, rafts and even small floating islands have been made from reeds. Reed rafts can be distinguished from reed boats, since the rafts are not made watertight.[8]

The earliest known boat made with reeds (and tar) is a 7000-year-old sea going boat found in Kuwait.[4]

The Uros are an indigenous people pre-dating the Incas. They live, still today, on man-made floating islands scattered across Lake Titicaca. These islands are constructed from totora reeds.[9] Each floating island supports between three and ten houses, also built of reeds.[10] The Uros also build their boats from bundled dried reeds.[9] These days some Uros boats, used for fishing and hunting seabirds, have motors.

Reed boats were constructed in Easter Island with a markedly similar design to those used in Peru.[11] Apart from Peru and Bolivia, reed boats are still used in Ethiopia[12] and were used until recently in Corfu.[13]

Coracles edit

 
Coracles in the early morning at the Doi Duong fishing village near Phan Thiết, Vietnam.

Coracles are light boats shaped like a bowl, typically with a frame of woven grass or reeds, or strong saplings covered with animal hides.[14] The keel-less, flat bottom evenly spreads the weight across the structure reducing the required depth of water often to only a few inches. Coracles have been used, and to a degree are still used, in India, Vietnam, Iraq, Tibet, North America and Britain.[15]

Coracles in Iraq are called "quffa." Their history goes back to antiquity where they appear on Assyrian-era reliefs sculpted between 600 and 900 BC. These reliefs are now in the British Museum. Herodotus visited Babylon in the 5th century BC, and wrote a long description of the coracles he encountered there. Traditionally, quffa were framed with willow or juniper and covered with hides or reeds. The outside was then coated with hot bitumen for waterproofing, although the inside could also be coated for larger vessels. These coracles have been in continuous use on the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, particularly around Baghdad, through the 1970s. Some of the Iraqi coracles are very large, with the largest reaching up to 5.5 metres (18 ft) in diameter and being able to carry up to 5 tons.[16]

Coracles are known to have been in use in Britain in 49 BC when Julius Caesar encountered them.[17] They are still used in Wales, where they were traditionally framed with split and interwoven willow rods, tied with willow bark. The outer layer was an animal skin, such as horse or bullock hide, with a thin layer of tar for waterproofing. Today tarred calico or canvas, or simply fiberglass can be used.[18][19] Different Welsh rivers have their own designs, tailored to the flow of the river. The Teifi coracle, for instance, is flat-bottomed, as it is designed to negotiate shallow rapids, common on the river in the summer, while the Carmarthen coracle is rounder and deeper, because it is used in tidal waters on the Tywi, where there are no rapids.[20]

Coracles can be effective fishing vessels. When operated skilfully, they hardly disturb the water or the fish. Welsh coracle fishing is performed by two men, each seated in his coracle and with one hand holding the net while with the other he plies his paddle. When a fish is caught, each hauls up his end of the net until the two coracles touch and the fish are secured. Many coracles are so light and portable that they can easily be carried on the fisherman's shoulders.

In North America, American Indians and frontiersmen made coracles, called bull boats, by covering a willow frame with buffalo hide. The buffalo hair was left on the hide because it inhibited the craft from spinning, and the tails were also left intact and used to tie bull boats together.[21]

Indian coracles commonly operate on the rivers Kaveri and Tungabhadra in Southern India.[22] The smaller ones are about 6.2 feet (1.9 metres) in diameter, and are used primarily for fishing. Indian coracles have been used since prehistoric times.[14]

In Tibet, coracles, used for fishing and ferrying people, are made by stretching yak hide over juniper frames, and fastened with leather thongs. They are shaped like the Iraq coracles. Yack butter is used for waterproofing. Again, different rivers have their own designs. Sometimes two coracles are strapped together for added stability.[23][24]

In Vietnam, elegant coracles constructed with bamboo, are still used from many beaches, such as at Nha Trang, Phan Thiết and Mui Ne. The coracles are towed in a line behind a motor boat, like beads on a string, to their fishing ground. There the fisherman lay fishing nets in the sea. Later, another tow returns the coracle fishermen to the beach with their catch.

Canoes edit

 
Constructing a traditional dugout at Panay in the Philippines
 
Basnigan with stabilising outriggers in the Philippines
 
Fishing catamaran in Indonesia

A canoe is a small narrow boat, usually pointed at both bow and stern and normally open on top, though they can be covered. A dugout is a canoe hollowed from a tree trunk. The oldest known canoe is the dugout Pesse canoe found in the Netherlands.[25] According to C14 dating analysis it was constructed somewhere between 8200 and 7600 BC.[25] This canoe is exhibited in the Drents Museum in Assen, Netherlands. Another dugout, almost as old, has been found at Noyen-sur-Seine.[26] The oldest known canoe found in Africa is the Dufuna canoe, constructed about 6000 BC. It was discovered by Fulani herdsman in Nigeria in 1987.[27]

During the Iron Age residents of Great Britain used dugouts for fishing and transport. Two ancient dugouts discovered in Newport, Shropshire are on display at Harper Adams University in Newport. In 1964, a dugout was uncovered in Poole Harbour, Dorset. The Poole Logboat, dated to 300 BC, was large enough to accommodate 18 people and was constructed from a large oak tree.

Best known are the canoes of the Eastern North American Indians. These, often elegant canoes, were not dugouts, but were made of a wooden frame covered with bark of a birch tree, pitched to make it waterproof.[28]

Typically canoes are propelled with paddles, often by two people. Paddlers face in the direction of travel, either seated on supports in the hull, or kneeling directly upon the hull. Paddles can be single-bladed or double-bladed.

A pirogue is a small, flat-bottomed boat of a design associated particularly with West African fishermen[29] and the Cajuns of the Louisiana marsh. These are usually dugouts, and are light and small enough to be easily taken onto land. The design allows the pirogue to move through the very shallow water of marshes and be easily turned over to drain any water that may get into the boat. The pirogue is usually propelled by paddles with one blade. It can also be punted with a push pole in shallow water. Small sails can also be used. Outboard motors are increasingly being used in many regions.

The log canoe of Chesapeake Bay is in the modern sense not a canoe at all, though it evolved through the enlargement of dugout canoes.

For stability in rougher waters, canoes can be fitted with outriggers. One or two small logs are mounted parallel to the main hull by long poles. In the case of two outriggers, one is mounted to either side of the hull. These are called outrigger canoes.

Many of the fishing boats in Indonesia and the Philippines are double-outrigger craft, consisting of a narrow main hull with two attached outriggers, commonly known as jukung in Indonesia and banca in the Philippines.[30]

The jukung is of Balinese origin, one of many genre of Pacific/Asian outrigger canoes. The considerable stability provided by the outriggers means that the jukung copes well with a lateen (triangular) sail. While the lateen sail presents some difficulties in tacking into the wind, requiring a jibe, the jukung is superb in its reaching ability and jybe-safe running. They are usually highly decorated and bear a marlin-like prow.

A traditional catamaran consists of two canoes, or vakas, joined by a frame, formed of akas. Catamarans were used by the ancient Tamil Chola dynasty as early as the 5th century AD for moving their invasion fleets. Since then, they have been widely used for fishing in South East Asia and Polynesia.

Kayaks are generally differentiated from canoes by the sitting position of the paddler and the number of blades on the paddle. In a kayak the paddler faces forward, legs in front, using a double bladed paddle. In a canoe the paddler faces forward and sits or kneels in the boat, using a single bladed paddle. In some parts of the world, such as the United Kingdom, kayaks are considered a subtype of canoe. Continental European and British canoeing clubs and associations of the 19th Century used craft similar to kayaks, but referred to them as canoes.

Ropes and lines edit

 
Ancient Egyptians were the first to document tools for ropemaking

The availability of reliable and durable ropes and lines has had many consequences for the development and utility of traditional fishing boats. They can be used to lash planks and frames together, as stay lines for masts, as anchor lines to secure the boat, and as fishing lines for making fishing nets.

Ropes and lines are made of fibre lengths, twisted or braided together to provide tensile strength. They are used for pulling, but not for pushing.

Fossilised fragments of "probably two-ply laid rope of about 7 mm diameter" have been found in one of the caves at Lascaux, dated about 15,000 BC.[31] Egyptian rope dates back to 4000 to 3500 BC and was generally made of water reed fibers. Other rope in antiquity was made from the fibers of date palms, flax, grass, papyrus, leather, or animal hair. Rope made of hemp fibres was in use in China from about 2800 BC.

Propulsion edit

 
A flat bottom fishing boat being rowed in Halong Bay, Vietnam

Before engines became available, boats could be propelled manually or by the wind. Boats could be propelled by the wind by attaching sails to masts set upright in the boat. Manual propulsion could be done in shallow water by punting with a push pole, and in deeper water by paddling with a paddle or rowing with oars. The difference between paddling and rowing is that when rowing the oars have a mechanical connection with the boat, while when paddling the paddles are hand-held with no mechanical connection. Canoes were traditionally paddled, with the paddler facing the bow of the boat. Small boats that use oars are called rowboats, and the rower typically faces the stern.

Around 4000 BC, Egyptians were building long narrow boats powered by many oarsmen. Over the next 1,000 years, they made a series of remarkable advances in boat design. They developed cotton-made sails to help their boats go faster with less work. Then they built boats large enough to cross the oceans. These boats had sails and oarsmen, and were used for war and trade. Some ancient vessels were propelled by either oars or sail, depending on the speed and direction of the wind (see trireme and bireme). The Chinese were using sails around 3000 BC, of a type that can still be seen on traditional fishing boats sailing off the coast of Vietnam in Ha Long Bay.

A jangada is an elegant planked fishing boat used in northern Brazil. It has been claimed the jangada dates back to ancient Greek times.[32] It uses a triangular (lateen) sail, which allows it to sail against the wind.

A felucca is a traditional wood-planked sailing boat used in protected waters of the Red Sea and eastern Mediterranean including Malta, and particularly along the Nile in Egypt. Its rig consists of one or two lateen sails.

Planking edit

Building boats from planks meant boats could be more precisely constructed along the line of large canoes than hollowing tree trunks allowed. It is possible that planked canoes were developed as early as 8,500 years ago in Southern California.[33]

By 3000 BC, the Egyptians knew how to assemble planks of wood into a ship hull.[34] They used woven straps to lash planks together,[34] and reeds or grass stuffed between the planks to seal the seams.[34] An example of their skill is the Khufu ship, a vessel 143 feet (44 m) in length entombed at the foot of the Great Pyramid of Giza around 2500 BC and found intact in 1954.

 
A comparison of clinker-building and carvel-building styles.

A further development was the use of timber frames, to which the planks could be lashed, stitched or nailed. With the use of frames, it is possible to develop carvel-style and clinker-style planking (in the USA the term lapstrake is used instead of clinker). Scandinavians were using clinker construction by at least 350 BC.[35]

Carvel construction dates back even earlier. A luzzu is a double-ended carvel-built fishing boat from the Maltese islands. Traditionally, they are brightly painted in shades of yellow, red, green and blue, and the bow is normally pointed with a pair of eyes. These eyes may be the modern survival of an ancient Phoenician custom (also practiced by the ancient Greeks); they are sometimes (and probably inaccurately) referred to as the Eye of Horus or of Osiris. The luzzu has survived because it tends to be a sturdy and stable boat even in bad weather. Originally, the luzzu was equipped with sails although nowadays almost all are motorised, with onboard diesel engines being the most common.

European boats edit

 

Boats in South East Asia and Polynesia centred on canoes, outriggers and multihull boats. By contrast, boats in Europe centred on framed and keeled monohulls.

The Scandinavians were building innovative boats millennia ago, as shown by the many petroglyph images of Nordic Bronze Age boats. The oldest archaeological find of a wooden Nordic boat is the Hjortspring boat, built about 350 BC. This is the oldest known boat to use clinker planking, where the planks overlap one another. It was designed as a large canoe, 19 m long and crewed by 22–23 men using paddles. Scandinavians continued to develop better boats, incorporating iron and other metal into the design, adding keels, and developing oars for propulsion.[35][36] Another Nordic shipfind is the Nydam boat, found preserved in the Nydam Mose bog in Sundeved, Denmark. It has been dendro dated to 310-320 AD. Built of oak, it is also clinker-built, is 23 metres long and was rowed by thirty men.[37]

 
Norse herring boat

By 1000 AD the Norsemen were pre-eminent on the oceans. They were skilled seamen and boat builders, with clinker-built boat designs that varied according to the type of boat. Trading boats, such as the knarrs, were wide to allow large cargo storage. Raiding boats, such as the longship, were long and narrow and very fast. The vessels they used for fishing were scaled down versions of their cargo boats. The Scandinavian innovations influenced fishing boat design long after the Viking period came to an end. For example, yoles from the Orkney Island of Stroma were built in the same way as the Norse boats, as were the Shetland yoals and the sgoths of the Outer Hebrides..

 
Herring Buss taking aboard its drift net (G. Groenewegen)

In the 15th century, the Dutch developed a type of sea-going herring drifter that became a blueprint for subsequent European fishing boats. This was the herring buss, used by Dutch herring fishermen until the early 19th centuries. The ship type buss has a long history. It was known around 1000 AD in Scandinavia as a bǘza, a robust variant of the Viking longship. The first herring buss was probably built in Hoorn around 1415. The last one was built in Vlaardingen in 1841. The ship was about 20 metres long and displaced between 60 and 100 tons. It was a massive round-bilged keel ship with a bluff bow and stern, the latter relatively high, and with a gallery. The busses used long drifting gill nets to catch the herring. The nets would be retrieved at night and the crews of eighteen to thirty men[38] would set to gibbing, salting and barrelling the catch on the broad deck. The ships sailed in fleets of 400 to 500 ships[38] to the Dogger Bank fishing grounds and the Shetland isles. They were usually escorted by naval vessels, because the English considered they were "poaching". The fleet would stay at sea for weeks at a time. The catch would sometimes be transferred to special ships (called ventjagers), and taken home while the fleet would still be at sea (the picture shows a ventjager in the distance).[38]

 
A dogger viewed from before the port beam. c. 1675 by Willem van de Velde the Younger

During the 17th century, the British developed the dogger, an early type of sailing trawler or longliner, which commonly operated in the North Sea. The dogger takes its name from the Dutch word dogger, meaning a fishing vessel which tows a trawl. Dutch trawling boats were common in the North Sea, and the word dogger was given to the area where they often fished, which became known as the Dogger Bank.[39] Doggers were slow but sturdy, capable of fishing in the rough conditions of the North Sea.[40] Like the herring buss, they were wide-beamed and bluff-bowed, but considerably smaller, about 15 metres long, a maximum beam of 4.5 m, a draught of 1.5 m, and displacing about 13 tonnes. They could carry a tonne of bait, three tonnes of salt, half a tonne each of food and firewood for the crew, and return with six tonnes of fish.[40] Decked areas forward and aft probably provided accommodation, storage and a cooking area. An anchor would have allowed extended periods fishing in the same spot, in waters up to 18 m deep. The dogger would also have carried a small open boat for maintaining lines and rowing ashore.[40]

 
A banks dory used for cod fishing from the Gazela

During the same period, small boats were also undergoing development. The French bateau type boat was a small flat bottom boat with straight sides used as early as 1671 on the Saint Lawrence River.[41] The common coastal boat of the time was the wherry and the merging of the wherry design with the simplified flat bottom of the bateau resulted in the birth of the dory. Anecdotal evidence exists of much older precursors throughout Europe. England, France, Italy, and Belgium have small boats from medieval periods that could reasonably be construed as predecessors of the dory.[42] In Ireland, the Gandelow was used to fish for salmon in the Shannon estuary from the 1600s onwards.

 
Typically schooners were used as dory mother ships

Dories are small, shallow-draft boats, usually about five to seven metres (15 to 22 feet) long. They are lightweight versatile boats with high sides, a flat bottom and sharp bows, and are easy to build because of their simple lines. The dory first appeared in New England fishing towns sometime after the early 18th century.[43] The Banks dories appeared in the 1830s. They were designed to be carried on mother ships and used for fishing cod at the Grand Banks.[43] Adapted almost directly from the low freeboard, French river bateau, with their straight sides and removable thwarts, bank dories could be nested inside each other and stored on the decks of fishing schooners, such as the Gazela Primeiro, for their trip to the Grand Banks fishing grounds.

 
A smack near Brightlingsea

In the 19th century, a more effective design for sailing trawlers was developed at the English fishing port, Brixham. These elegant wooden sailing boats spread across the world, influencing fishing fleets everywhere. Their distinctive sails inspired the song Red Sails in the Sunset, written aboard a Brixham sailing trawler called the Torbay Lass. In the 1890s there were about 300 trawling vessels there, each usually owned by the skipper of the boat. Several of these old sailing trawlers have been preserved.[44][45]

 
The restored lugger-rigged fifie, Reaper.

Throughout history, local conditions have led to the development of a wide range of types of fishing boats. The Lancashire nobby was used down the north west coast of England as a shrimp trawler from 1840 until World War II. The bawley and the smack were used in the Thames Estuary and off East Anglia, while trawlers and drifters were used on the east coast. Herring fishing started in the Moray Firth in 1819. The Manx nobby was used as a herring drifter around the Isle of Man, and the fifie were used as herring drifters along the east coast of Scotland from the 1850s until well into the 20th century.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ FAO (2007) The status of the fishing fleet State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome. ISBN 978-92-5-105568-7
  2. ^ a b McGrail 2004, page 431
  3. ^ . China.org.cn. Archived from the original on 2009-01-02. Retrieved 2008-05-05.
  4. ^ a b Lawler, Andrew (June 7, 2002). "Report of Oldest Boat Hints at Early Trade Routes". Science. 296 (5574): 1791–1792. doi:10.1126/science.296.5574.1791. PMID 12052936. S2CID 36178755.
  5. ^ a b FAO 2007
  6. ^ FAO: Country Profile: Indonesia
  7. ^ Experiences With Fish Aggregating Devices In Sri Lanka FAO
  8. ^ McGrail S (1985) Towards a classification of Water transport World Archeology, 16 (3).
  9. ^ a b Encyclopædia Britannica Online: Lake Titicaca. Retrieved 12 July 2007.
  10. ^ "Puno" (PDF). Mincetur.
  11. ^ Heiser C. B. (1974) "Totoras, Taxonomy, and Thor" Plant ScienceBulletin, 20 (2).
  12. ^ de Graafa M, van Zwietenb PAM, Machielsb MAM, Lemmac E, Wudnehd T, Dejene E and Sibbing FA () "Vulnerability to a small-scale commercial fishery of Lake Tana's (Ethiopia) endemic Labeobarbus compared with African catfish and Nile tilapia: An example of recruitment-overfishing?" Fisheries Research, 82 (1-3) 304-318.
  13. ^ Sordinas A (1970) "Stone implements from northwestern Corfu", Anthropological Research Center, University of Memphis.
  14. ^ a b "coracle | boat | Britannica". www.britannica.com.
  15. ^ "The Official website of The Coracle Society".
  16. ^ Hornell, James (1946) Water transport : origins & early evolution, Page 101–108, Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-7153-4860-4.
  17. ^ Coracle man won’t let this one get away TimesOnline, 23 February 2008.
  18. ^ A good little vessel The New Yorker, 2 June 1986, p. 38.
  19. ^ The Welsh Coracle: The Tradition of Coracle Fishing in Wales 2009-10-14 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ "Map of Welsh Rivers and Coracle Types".
  21. ^ Bull Boats: Crossing Rivers, Indian Style From Discovering Lewis & Clark.
  22. ^ Hornell, James (1933). "165. The Coracles of South India". Man. 33: 157–160. doi:10.2307/2790095. JSTOR 2790095.
  23. ^ Hornell, James (1946) Water transport : origins & early evolution, Page 99–100, Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-7153-4860-4.
  24. ^ "Coracles on Tsangpo River at Nyapso La". tibet.prm.ox.ac.uk.
  25. ^ a b . Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation. 2001-07-05. Archived from the original on March 9, 2007. Retrieved 2009-06-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  26. ^ McGrail 2004, page 174
  27. ^ Garba, Abubakar (1996) "The architecture and chemistry of a dug-out: the Dufuna Canoe in ethno-archaeological perspective" Berichte des Sonderforschungsbereichs, 268 (8): 193–200.
  28. ^ Hodgins BW, Jennings J and Small D (1999) The Canoe in Canadian Cultures Natural Heritage Books. ISBN 1-896219-48-9
  29. ^ Setting sail. Retrieved 9 June 2008.
  30. ^ FAO: Country Profile: Philippines
  31. ^ J.C. Turner and P. van de Griend (ed.), The History and Science of Knots (Singapore: World Scientific, 1996), 14.
  32. ^ Lima, Paul The raft men of Brazil 2008-11-21 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 25 April 2008.
  33. ^ Fagan, B (2004) "The House of the Sea" An Essay on the Antiquity of Planked Canoes in Southern California" Society for American Archaeology
  34. ^ a b c Ward, Cheryl. "World's Oldest Planked Boats," in Archaeology (Volume 54, Number 3, May/June 2001). Archaeological Institute of America, [1].
  35. ^ a b Sawyer, Peter Hayes (2001) The Oxford Illustrated History of the Vikings Page 183. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-285434-6
  36. ^ Nationalencyklopedin
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on July 15, 2007.
  38. ^ a b c De Vries & Woude (1977), pages 244–245
  39. ^ Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea, p. 256
  40. ^ a b c Fagan 2008
  41. ^ Gardner 1987, page 18
  42. ^ Gardner 1987, page 15
  43. ^ a b Chapelle, page 85
  44. ^ History of a Brixham trawler 2010-12-02 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 2 March 2009.
  45. ^ Pilgrim's restoration under full sail BBC. Retrieved 2 March 2009.

References edit

  • Chapelle, Howard L. (1951) American Small Sailing Craft WW Norton Company, New York, ISBN 0-393-03143-8
  • Fagan, Brian (2008) The Great Warming. Chapter 10: Bloomsbury Press. ISBN 978-1-59691-392-9
  • FAO: CWP Handbook of Fishery Statistical Standards : Section L: Fishery Fleet
  • FAO (2007) The status of the fishing fleet State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome. ISBN 978-92-5-105568-7
  • Forman, Shepard (1970) The raft fishermen: Tradition & change in the Brazilian peasant economy, Indiana University Press for International Affairs Center. ISBN 0-253-39201-2
  • Gardner, John (1987) The Dory Book. Mystic Seaport Museum, Mystic Connecticut. ISBN 0-913372-44-7
  • Johnstone, Paul (1889) The Sea-Craft of Prehistory, Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-02635-2
  • McGrail, Sean (2004). Boats of the World: From the Stone Age to Medieval Times. USA: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-927186-0.
  • Vries, J. de, and Woude, A. van der (1997), The First Modern Economy. Success, Failure, and Perseverance of the Dutch Economy, 1500-1815, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-57825-7

Reading edit

  • Adney ET, Chappelle HI and McPhee J (2007) Bark Canoes and Skin Boats of North America Skyhorse Publishing. ISBN 1-60239-071-1
  • Gerr, Dave (1995) The Nature of Boats: Insights and Esoterica for the Nautically Obsessed McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 978-0-07-024233-3
  • Smylie, Michael (1999) Traditional Fishing Boats of Britain & Ireland: Design, History and Evolution. Adlard Coles Nautical. ISBN 978-1-84037-035-5
  • Smylie, Mike (2013) Traditional Fishing Boats of Europe Amberley Publishing Limited. ISBN 9781445614342.
  • Traung, Jan-Olaf (1960) Fishing Boats of the World 2 Fishing News (Books) Ltd. Download PDF (99MB)
  • Traung, Jan-Olaf (1967) Fishing Boats of the World 3 Kiefer Press. ISBN 978-1-4437-6711-8. Download PDF (56MB)
  • Vigor, John (2004) The Practical Encyclopedia of Boating: An A-Z Compendium of Seamanship, Boat Maintenance, Navigation, and Nautical Wisdom McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 978-0-07-137885-7
  • Woodman, Richard (1998) The History of the Ship: The Comprehensive Story of Seafaring from the Earliest Times to the Present Day, Lyons Press. ISBN 978-1-55821-681-5

External links edit

  • The Uros People at GlobalAmity.net
  • Video tour of Uros floating fishing villages
  • Uros Indian Culture - Home
  • Floating islands on Google Maps
  • Trujillo, The Golden Steeds of Huanchaco
  • Indigenous boats: Small craft outside the Western tradition
  • A history of shipbuilding in Newfoundland
  • Jangadeiros, the fishermen in the northeastern Brazil
  • Indigenous sails

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Traditionally many different kinds of boats have been used as fishing boats to catch fish in the sea or on a lake or river Even today many traditional fishing boats are still in use According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization FAO at the end of 2004 the world fishing fleet consisted of about 4 million vessels of which 2 7 million were undecked open boats While nearly all decked vessels were mechanised only one third of the undecked fishing boats were powered usually with outboard engines The remaining 1 8 million boats were traditional craft of various types operated by sail and oars 1 Traditional Vietnamese fishing boatTraditional Philippines fishing boat with outriggers often known as pump boatsThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Traditional fishing boat news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is about the boats used for fishing that are or were built from designs that existed before engines became available Contents 1 Overview 2 Rafts 3 Reed boats 4 Coracles 5 Canoes 6 Ropes and lines 7 Propulsion 8 Planking 9 European boats 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Reading 14 External linksOverview edit nbsp Dhonis are the traditional fishing boat of the Maldives Early fishing vessels included rafts dugout canoes reed boats and boats constructed from a frame covered with hide or tree bark such as coracles 2 The oldest boats found by archaeological excavation are dugout canoes dating back to the Neolithic Period around 7 000 9 000 years ago These canoes were often cut from coniferous tree logs using simple stone tools 2 3 A 7000 year old sea going boat made from reeds and tar has been found in Kuwait 4 These early vessels had limited capability they could float and move on water but were not suitable for use any great distance from the shoreline They were used mainly for fishing and hunting The development of fishing boats took place in parallel with the development of boats built for trade and war Early navigators began to use animal skins or woven fabrics for sails Affixed to a pole set upright in the boat these sails gave early boats more range allowing voyages of explorationAccording to the FAO at the end of 2004 the world fishing fleet included 1 8 million traditional craft of various types which were operated by sail and oars 5 These figures for small fishing vessels are probably under reported The FAO compiles these figures largely from national registers These records often omit smaller boats where registration is not required or where fishing licences are granted by provincial or municipal authorities 5 Indonesia reportedly has about 700 000 current fishing boats 25 percent of which are dugout canoes and half of which are without motors 6 The Philippines have reported a similar number of small fishing boats Traditional fishing boats are usually characteristic of the stretch of coast along which they operate They evolve over time to meet the local conditions such as the materials available locally for boat building the type of sea conditions the boats will encounter and the demands of the local fisheries nbsp These fishing boats in Gambia conform to a local design nbsp These fishing boats conform to a different local design in Vietnam nbsp Fishing boats in Thailand at Surat Thani follow this style nbsp Fishing boats in Thailand at Bang Sen follow another style Artisan fishing is small scale commercial or subsistence fishing particularly practices involving coastal or island ethnic groups using traditional fishing techniques and traditional boats This may also include heritage groups involved in customary fishing practices Artisan fishers usually use small traditional fishing boats that are open undecked and have sails these boats use little to no mechanised or electronic gear Large numbers of artisan fishing boats are still in use particularly in developing countries with long productive marine coastlines Rafts edit nbsp Boys fishing from a wooden crate raftSee also Raft A raft is a structure with a flat top that floats It is the most basic boat design characterised by the absence of a hull The classic raft is constructed by lashing several logs placed side by side to two or more additional logs placed transverse to the others In many Asian countries the rafts are similarly constructed using bamboo In shallow waters rafts can be punted with a push pole They can be used as stealthy platforms for fishing shallow waters around lakes In sheltered coastal waters anchored or drifting rafts can become effective fish aggregating devices Payaos were traditional bamboo rafts used in Southeast Asia as aggregating device Fishermen on the top of the raft used handlines to catch tuna 7 Pontoon boats and to some degree the punt can be viewed as modern derivatives of rafts Reed boats editMain article Reed boat nbsp Uro man pulling a boat made of totora reeds nbsp Totora reed fishing boats on the beach at Huanchaco PeruBoats rafts and even small floating islands have been made from reeds Reed rafts can be distinguished from reed boats since the rafts are not made watertight 8 The earliest known boat made with reeds and tar is a 7000 year old sea going boat found in Kuwait 4 The Uros are an indigenous people pre dating the Incas They live still today on man made floating islands scattered across Lake Titicaca These islands are constructed from totora reeds 9 Each floating island supports between three and ten houses also built of reeds 10 The Uros also build their boats from bundled dried reeds 9 These days some Uros boats used for fishing and hunting seabirds have motors Reed boats were constructed in Easter Island with a markedly similar design to those used in Peru 11 Apart from Peru and Bolivia reed boats are still used in Ethiopia 12 and were used until recently in Corfu 13 Coracles editSee also Coracle and Indian coracles nbsp Coracles in the early morning at the Doi Duong fishing village near Phan Thiết Vietnam Coracles are light boats shaped like a bowl typically with a frame of woven grass or reeds or strong saplings covered with animal hides 14 The keel less flat bottom evenly spreads the weight across the structure reducing the required depth of water often to only a few inches Coracles have been used and to a degree are still used in India Vietnam Iraq Tibet North America and Britain 15 Coracles in Iraq are called quffa Their history goes back to antiquity where they appear on Assyrian era reliefs sculpted between 600 and 900 BC These reliefs are now in the British Museum Herodotus visited Babylon in the 5th century BC and wrote a long description of the coracles he encountered there Traditionally quffa were framed with willow or juniper and covered with hides or reeds The outside was then coated with hot bitumen for waterproofing although the inside could also be coated for larger vessels These coracles have been in continuous use on the Tigris and Euphrates rivers particularly around Baghdad through the 1970s Some of the Iraqi coracles are very large with the largest reaching up to 5 5 metres 18 ft in diameter and being able to carry up to 5 tons 16 Coracles are known to have been in use in Britain in 49 BC when Julius Caesar encountered them 17 They are still used in Wales where they were traditionally framed with split and interwoven willow rods tied with willow bark The outer layer was an animal skin such as horse or bullock hide with a thin layer of tar for waterproofing Today tarred calico or canvas or simply fiberglass can be used 18 19 Different Welsh rivers have their own designs tailored to the flow of the river The Teifi coracle for instance is flat bottomed as it is designed to negotiate shallow rapids common on the river in the summer while the Carmarthen coracle is rounder and deeper because it is used in tidal waters on the Tywi where there are no rapids 20 Coracles can be effective fishing vessels When operated skilfully they hardly disturb the water or the fish Welsh coracle fishing is performed by two men each seated in his coracle and with one hand holding the net while with the other he plies his paddle When a fish is caught each hauls up his end of the net until the two coracles touch and the fish are secured Many coracles are so light and portable that they can easily be carried on the fisherman s shoulders nbsp Welsh coracle fishermen use a net to catch salmon on the River Teifi 1972 nbsp Painting of North American coracles bull boats c a 1832 nbsp Indian coracle on the Kaveri river nbsp Yak skin coracle in Tibet 1938In North America American Indians and frontiersmen made coracles called bull boats by covering a willow frame with buffalo hide The buffalo hair was left on the hide because it inhibited the craft from spinning and the tails were also left intact and used to tie bull boats together 21 Indian coracles commonly operate on the rivers Kaveri and Tungabhadra in Southern India 22 The smaller ones are about 6 2 feet 1 9 metres in diameter and are used primarily for fishing Indian coracles have been used since prehistoric times 14 In Tibet coracles used for fishing and ferrying people are made by stretching yak hide over juniper frames and fastened with leather thongs They are shaped like the Iraq coracles Yack butter is used for waterproofing Again different rivers have their own designs Sometimes two coracles are strapped together for added stability 23 24 nbsp Vietnamese one man fishing coracle nbsp Off to work nbsp Waiting for the tow at Mui Ne Beach nbsp Being towed to the fishing ground In Vietnam elegant coracles constructed with bamboo are still used from many beaches such as at Nha Trang Phan Thiết and Mui Ne The coracles are towed in a line behind a motor boat like beads on a string to their fishing ground There the fisherman lay fishing nets in the sea Later another tow returns the coracle fishermen to the beach with their catch Canoes editSee also Canoe Dugout boat and Kayak fishing nbsp Constructing a traditional dugout at Panay in the Philippines nbsp Pirogue on the Niger River nbsp Basnigan with stabilising outriggers in the Philippines nbsp Fishing catamaran in Indonesia A canoe is a small narrow boat usually pointed at both bow and stern and normally open on top though they can be covered A dugout is a canoe hollowed from a tree trunk The oldest known canoe is the dugout Pesse canoe found in the Netherlands 25 According to C14 dating analysis it was constructed somewhere between 8200 and 7600 BC 25 This canoe is exhibited in the Drents Museum in Assen Netherlands Another dugout almost as old has been found at Noyen sur Seine 26 The oldest known canoe found in Africa is the Dufuna canoe constructed about 6000 BC It was discovered by Fulani herdsman in Nigeria in 1987 27 During the Iron Age residents of Great Britain used dugouts for fishing and transport Two ancient dugouts discovered in Newport Shropshire are on display at Harper Adams University in Newport In 1964 a dugout was uncovered in Poole Harbour Dorset The Poole Logboat dated to 300 BC was large enough to accommodate 18 people and was constructed from a large oak tree Best known are the canoes of the Eastern North American Indians These often elegant canoes were not dugouts but were made of a wooden frame covered with bark of a birch tree pitched to make it waterproof 28 Typically canoes are propelled with paddles often by two people Paddlers face in the direction of travel either seated on supports in the hull or kneeling directly upon the hull Paddles can be single bladed or double bladed A pirogue is a small flat bottomed boat of a design associated particularly with West African fishermen 29 and the Cajuns of the Louisiana marsh These are usually dugouts and are light and small enough to be easily taken onto land The design allows the pirogue to move through the very shallow water of marshes and be easily turned over to drain any water that may get into the boat The pirogue is usually propelled by paddles with one blade It can also be punted with a push pole in shallow water Small sails can also be used Outboard motors are increasingly being used in many regions The log canoe of Chesapeake Bay is in the modern sense not a canoe at all though it evolved through the enlargement of dugout canoes For stability in rougher waters canoes can be fitted with outriggers One or two small logs are mounted parallel to the main hull by long poles In the case of two outriggers one is mounted to either side of the hull These are called outrigger canoes Many of the fishing boats in Indonesia and the Philippines are double outrigger craft consisting of a narrow main hull with two attached outriggers commonly known as jukung in Indonesia and banca in the Philippines 30 The jukung is of Balinese origin one of many genre of Pacific Asian outrigger canoes The considerable stability provided by the outriggers means that the jukung copes well with a lateen triangular sail While the lateen sail presents some difficulties in tacking into the wind requiring a jibe the jukung is superb in its reaching ability and jybe safe running They are usually highly decorated and bear a marlin like prow A traditional catamaran consists of two canoes or vakas joined by a frame formed of akas Catamarans were used by the ancient Tamil Chola dynasty as early as the 5th century AD for moving their invasion fleets Since then they have been widely used for fishing in South East Asia and Polynesia Kayaks are generally differentiated from canoes by the sitting position of the paddler and the number of blades on the paddle In a kayak the paddler faces forward legs in front using a double bladed paddle In a canoe the paddler faces forward and sits or kneels in the boat using a single bladed paddle In some parts of the world such as the United Kingdom kayaks are considered a subtype of canoe Continental European and British canoeing clubs and associations of the 19th Century used craft similar to kayaks but referred to them as canoes nbsp Ancient British dugout canoe nbsp Andamanese dugout canoes 1875 nbsp North American birch bark canoe nbsp Split log fishing canoe in IndiaRopes and lines editSee also Rope and Fishing line nbsp Ancient Egyptians were the first to document tools for ropemakingThe availability of reliable and durable ropes and lines has had many consequences for the development and utility of traditional fishing boats They can be used to lash planks and frames together as stay lines for masts as anchor lines to secure the boat and as fishing lines for making fishing nets Ropes and lines are made of fibre lengths twisted or braided together to provide tensile strength They are used for pulling but not for pushing Fossilised fragments of probably two ply laid rope of about 7 mm diameter have been found in one of the caves at Lascaux dated about 15 000 BC 31 Egyptian rope dates back to 4000 to 3500 BC and was generally made of water reed fibers Other rope in antiquity was made from the fibers of date palms flax grass papyrus leather or animal hair Rope made of hemp fibres was in use in China from about 2800 BC Propulsion editSee also Rowboats and Sailboat nbsp A flat bottom fishing boat being rowed in Halong Bay VietnamBefore engines became available boats could be propelled manually or by the wind Boats could be propelled by the wind by attaching sails to masts set upright in the boat Manual propulsion could be done in shallow water by punting with a push pole and in deeper water by paddling with a paddle or rowing with oars The difference between paddling and rowing is that when rowing the oars have a mechanical connection with the boat while when paddling the paddles are hand held with no mechanical connection Canoes were traditionally paddled with the paddler facing the bow of the boat Small boats that use oars are called rowboats and the rower typically faces the stern Around 4000 BC Egyptians were building long narrow boats powered by many oarsmen Over the next 1 000 years they made a series of remarkable advances in boat design They developed cotton made sails to help their boats go faster with less work Then they built boats large enough to cross the oceans These boats had sails and oarsmen and were used for war and trade Some ancient vessels were propelled by either oars or sail depending on the speed and direction of the wind see trireme and bireme The Chinese were using sails around 3000 BC of a type that can still be seen on traditional fishing boats sailing off the coast of Vietnam in Ha Long Bay A jangada is an elegant planked fishing boat used in northern Brazil It has been claimed the jangada dates back to ancient Greek times 32 It uses a triangular lateen sail which allows it to sail against the wind A felucca is a traditional wood planked sailing boat used in protected waters of the Red Sea and eastern Mediterranean including Malta and particularly along the Nile in Egypt Its rig consists of one or two lateen sails nbsp Lateen rigged jangada on the coast off Mossoro Brazil nbsp Lateen rigged feluccas at Luxor Egypt nbsp Traditional fishing lakana with distinctive Austronesian Crab claw sail from Madagascar nbsp Square sail fishing boat from Negombo Sri Lanka nbsp Small junk sailing in Halong Bay VietnamPlanking editBuilding boats from planks meant boats could be more precisely constructed along the line of large canoes than hollowing tree trunks allowed It is possible that planked canoes were developed as early as 8 500 years ago in Southern California 33 By 3000 BC the Egyptians knew how to assemble planks of wood into a ship hull 34 They used woven straps to lash planks together 34 and reeds or grass stuffed between the planks to seal the seams 34 An example of their skill is the Khufu ship a vessel 143 feet 44 m in length entombed at the foot of the Great Pyramid of Giza around 2500 BC and found intact in 1954 nbsp Fishing boats at Mbour Senegal constructed along the lines of a large canoe using planks nbsp Another Senegal planked fishing boat at Dakar nbsp Planked fishing boat in Kasenyi Uganda nbsp Planked fishing boat on the beach of Narikel Zinzira Bangladesh nbsp A comparison of clinker building and carvel building styles A further development was the use of timber frames to which the planks could be lashed stitched or nailed With the use of frames it is possible to develop carvel style and clinker style planking in the USA the term lapstrake is used instead of clinker Scandinavians were using clinker construction by at least 350 BC 35 Carvel construction dates back even earlier A luzzu is a double ended carvel built fishing boat from the Maltese islands Traditionally they are brightly painted in shades of yellow red green and blue and the bow is normally pointed with a pair of eyes These eyes may be the modern survival of an ancient Phoenician custom also practiced by the ancient Greeks they are sometimes and probably inaccurately referred to as the Eye of Horus or of Osiris The luzzu has survived because it tends to be a sturdy and stable boat even in bad weather Originally the luzzu was equipped with sails although nowadays almost all are motorised with onboard diesel engines being the most common nbsp Carvel built luzzu at Marsaxlokk Malta nbsp Building a carvel boat at Quee Ngon Vietnam nbsp Clinker built fishing boats at Jantar Beach nbsp Decked fishing boat at Koh Rung Samleom CambodiaEuropean boats edit nbsp Boats in South East Asia and Polynesia centred on canoes outriggers and multihull boats By contrast boats in Europe centred on framed and keeled monohulls The Scandinavians were building innovative boats millennia ago as shown by the many petroglyph images of Nordic Bronze Age boats The oldest archaeological find of a wooden Nordic boat is the Hjortspring boat built about 350 BC This is the oldest known boat to use clinker planking where the planks overlap one another It was designed as a large canoe 19 m long and crewed by 22 23 men using paddles Scandinavians continued to develop better boats incorporating iron and other metal into the design adding keels and developing oars for propulsion 35 36 Another Nordic shipfind is the Nydam boat found preserved in the Nydam Mose bog in Sundeved Denmark It has been dendro dated to 310 320 AD Built of oak it is also clinker built is 23 metres long and was rowed by thirty men 37 nbsp Norse herring boatBy 1000 AD the Norsemen were pre eminent on the oceans They were skilled seamen and boat builders with clinker built boat designs that varied according to the type of boat Trading boats such as the knarrs were wide to allow large cargo storage Raiding boats such as the longship were long and narrow and very fast The vessels they used for fishing were scaled down versions of their cargo boats The Scandinavian innovations influenced fishing boat design long after the Viking period came to an end For example yoles from the Orkney Island of Stroma were built in the same way as the Norse boats as were the Shetland yoals and the sgoths of the Outer Hebrides nbsp Herring Buss taking aboard its drift net G Groenewegen In the 15th century the Dutch developed a type of sea going herring drifter that became a blueprint for subsequent European fishing boats This was the herring buss used by Dutch herring fishermen until the early 19th centuries The ship type buss has a long history It was known around 1000 AD in Scandinavia as a bǘza a robust variant of the Viking longship The first herring buss was probably built in Hoorn around 1415 The last one was built in Vlaardingen in 1841 The ship was about 20 metres long and displaced between 60 and 100 tons It was a massive round bilged keel ship with a bluff bow and stern the latter relatively high and with a gallery The busses used long drifting gill nets to catch the herring The nets would be retrieved at night and the crews of eighteen to thirty men 38 would set to gibbing salting and barrelling the catch on the broad deck The ships sailed in fleets of 400 to 500 ships 38 to the Dogger Bank fishing grounds and the Shetland isles They were usually escorted by naval vessels because the English considered they were poaching The fleet would stay at sea for weeks at a time The catch would sometimes be transferred to special ships called ventjagers and taken home while the fleet would still be at sea the picture shows a ventjager in the distance 38 nbsp A dogger viewed from before the port beam c 1675 by Willem van de Velde the YoungerDuring the 17th century the British developed the dogger an early type of sailing trawler or longliner which commonly operated in the North Sea The dogger takes its name from the Dutch word dogger meaning a fishing vessel which tows a trawl Dutch trawling boats were common in the North Sea and the word dogger was given to the area where they often fished which became known as the Dogger Bank 39 Doggers were slow but sturdy capable of fishing in the rough conditions of the North Sea 40 Like the herring buss they were wide beamed and bluff bowed but considerably smaller about 15 metres long a maximum beam of 4 5 m a draught of 1 5 m and displacing about 13 tonnes They could carry a tonne of bait three tonnes of salt half a tonne each of food and firewood for the crew and return with six tonnes of fish 40 Decked areas forward and aft probably provided accommodation storage and a cooking area An anchor would have allowed extended periods fishing in the same spot in waters up to 18 m deep The dogger would also have carried a small open boat for maintaining lines and rowing ashore 40 nbsp A banks dory used for cod fishing from the GazelaDuring the same period small boats were also undergoing development The French bateau type boat was a small flat bottom boat with straight sides used as early as 1671 on the Saint Lawrence River 41 The common coastal boat of the time was the wherry and the merging of the wherry design with the simplified flat bottom of the bateau resulted in the birth of the dory Anecdotal evidence exists of much older precursors throughout Europe England France Italy and Belgium have small boats from medieval periods that could reasonably be construed as predecessors of the dory 42 In Ireland the Gandelow was used to fish for salmon in the Shannon estuary from the 1600s onwards nbsp Typically schooners were used as dory mother shipsDories are small shallow draft boats usually about five to seven metres 15 to 22 feet long They are lightweight versatile boats with high sides a flat bottom and sharp bows and are easy to build because of their simple lines The dory first appeared in New England fishing towns sometime after the early 18th century 43 The Banks dories appeared in the 1830s They were designed to be carried on mother ships and used for fishing cod at the Grand Banks 43 Adapted almost directly from the low freeboard French river bateau with their straight sides and removable thwarts bank dories could be nested inside each other and stored on the decks of fishing schooners such as the Gazela Primeiro for their trip to the Grand Banks fishing grounds nbsp A smack near BrightlingseaIn the 19th century a more effective design for sailing trawlers was developed at the English fishing port Brixham These elegant wooden sailing boats spread across the world influencing fishing fleets everywhere Their distinctive sails inspired the song Red Sails in the Sunset written aboard a Brixham sailing trawler called the Torbay Lass In the 1890s there were about 300 trawling vessels there each usually owned by the skipper of the boat Several of these old sailing trawlers have been preserved 44 45 nbsp The restored lugger rigged fifie Reaper Throughout history local conditions have led to the development of a wide range of types of fishing boats The Lancashire nobby was used down the north west coast of England as a shrimp trawler from 1840 until World War II The bawley and the smack were used in the Thames Estuary and off East Anglia while trawlers and drifters were used on the east coast Herring fishing started in the Moray Firth in 1819 The Manx nobby was used as a herring drifter around the Isle of Man and the fifie were used as herring drifters along the east coast of Scotland from the 1850s until well into the 20th century See also editBoat Fishing vessel Maritime history of the United Kingdom ShipNotes edit FAO 2007 The status of the fishing fleet State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations Rome ISBN 978 92 5 105568 7 a b McGrail 2004 page 431 Oldest Boat Unearthed China org cn Archived from the original on 2009 01 02 Retrieved 2008 05 05 a b Lawler Andrew June 7 2002 Report of Oldest Boat Hints at Early Trade Routes Science 296 5574 1791 1792 doi 10 1126 science 296 5574 1791 PMID 12052936 S2CID 36178755 a b FAO 2007 FAO Country Profile Indonesia Experiences With Fish Aggregating Devices In Sri Lanka FAO McGrail S 1985 Towards a classification of Water transport World Archeology 16 3 a b Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Lake Titicaca Retrieved 12 July 2007 Puno PDF Mincetur Heiser C B 1974 Totoras Taxonomy and Thor Plant ScienceBulletin 20 2 de Graafa M van Zwietenb PAM Machielsb MAM Lemmac E Wudnehd T Dejene E and Sibbing FA Vulnerability to a small scale commercial fishery of Lake Tana s Ethiopia endemic Labeobarbus compared with African catfish and Nile tilapia An example of recruitment overfishing Fisheries Research 82 1 3 304 318 Sordinas A 1970 Stone implements from northwestern Corfu Anthropological Research Center University of Memphis a b coracle boat Britannica www britannica com The Official website of The Coracle Society Hornell James 1946 Water transport origins amp early evolution Page 101 108 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 7153 4860 4 Coracle man won t let this one get away TimesOnline 23 February 2008 A good little vessel The New Yorker 2 June 1986 p 38 The Welsh Coracle The Tradition of Coracle Fishing in Wales Archived 2009 10 14 at the Wayback Machine Map of Welsh Rivers and Coracle Types Bull Boats Crossing Rivers Indian Style From Discovering Lewis amp Clark Hornell James 1933 165 The Coracles of South India Man 33 157 160 doi 10 2307 2790095 JSTOR 2790095 Hornell James 1946 Water transport origins amp early evolution Page 99 100 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 7153 4860 4 Coracles on Tsangpo River at Nyapso La tibet prm ox ac uk a b The Mysterious Bog People Background to the exhibition Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation 2001 07 05 Archived from the original on March 9 2007 Retrieved 2009 06 01 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link McGrail 2004 page 174 Garba Abubakar 1996 The architecture and chemistry of a dug out the Dufuna Canoe in ethno archaeological perspective Berichte des Sonderforschungsbereichs 268 8 193 200 Hodgins BW Jennings J and Small D 1999 The Canoe in Canadian Cultures Natural Heritage Books ISBN 1 896219 48 9 Setting sail Retrieved 9 June 2008 FAO Country Profile Philippines J C Turner and P van de Griend ed The History and Science of Knots Singapore World Scientific 1996 14 Lima Paul The raft men of Brazil Archived 2008 11 21 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 25 April 2008 Fagan B 2004 The House of the Sea An Essay on the Antiquity of Planked Canoes in Southern California Society for American Archaeology a b c Ward Cheryl World s Oldest Planked Boats in Archaeology Volume 54 Number 3 May June 2001 Archaeological Institute of America 1 a b Sawyer Peter Hayes 2001 The Oxford Illustrated History of the Vikings Page 183 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 285434 6 Nationalencyklopedin The Nydam Societys homepage Archived from the original on July 15 2007 a b c De Vries amp Woude 1977 pages 244 245 Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea p 256 a b c Fagan 2008 Gardner 1987 page 18 Gardner 1987 page 15 a b Chapelle page 85 History of a Brixham trawler Archived 2010 12 02 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2 March 2009 Pilgrim s restoration under full sail BBC Retrieved 2 March 2009 References editChapelle Howard L 1951 American Small Sailing Craft WW Norton Company New York ISBN 0 393 03143 8 Fagan Brian 2008 The Great Warming Chapter 10 Bucking the trades Bloomsbury Press ISBN 978 1 59691 392 9 FAO CWP Handbook of Fishery Statistical Standards Section L Fishery Fleet FAO 2007 The status of the fishing fleet State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations Rome ISBN 978 92 5 105568 7 Forman Shepard 1970 The raft fishermen Tradition amp change in the Brazilian peasant economy Indiana University Press for International Affairs Center ISBN 0 253 39201 2 Gardner John 1987 The Dory Book Mystic Seaport Museum Mystic Connecticut ISBN 0 913372 44 7 Johnstone Paul 1889 The Sea Craft of Prehistory Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 02635 2 McGrail Sean 2004 Boats of the World From the Stone Age to Medieval Times USA Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 927186 0 Vries J de and Woude A van der 1997 The First Modern Economy Success Failure and Perseverance of the Dutch Economy 1500 1815 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57825 7Reading editAdney ET Chappelle HI and McPhee J 2007 Bark Canoes and Skin Boats of North America Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 1 60239 071 1 Gerr Dave 1995 The Nature of Boats Insights and Esoterica for the Nautically Obsessed McGraw Hill Professional ISBN 978 0 07 024233 3 Smylie Michael 1999 Traditional Fishing Boats of Britain amp Ireland Design History and Evolution Adlard Coles Nautical ISBN 978 1 84037 035 5 Smylie Mike 2013 Traditional Fishing Boats of Europe Amberley Publishing Limited ISBN 9781445614342 Traung Jan Olaf 1960 Fishing Boats of the World 2 Fishing News Books Ltd Download PDF 99MB Traung Jan Olaf 1967 Fishing Boats of the World 3 Kiefer Press ISBN 978 1 4437 6711 8 Download PDF 56MB Vigor John 2004 The Practical Encyclopedia of Boating An A Z Compendium of Seamanship Boat Maintenance Navigation and Nautical Wisdom McGraw Hill Professional ISBN 978 0 07 137885 7 Woodman Richard 1998 The History of the Ship The Comprehensive Story of Seafaring from the Earliest Times to the Present Day Lyons Press ISBN 978 1 55821 681 5External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fishing boats The Uros People at GlobalAmity net Video tour of Uros floating fishing villages Uros Indian Culture Home Floating islands on Google Maps Trujillo The Golden Steeds of Huanchaco Indigenous boats Small craft outside the Western tradition A history of shipbuilding in Newfoundland Jangadeiros the fishermen in the northeastern Brazil Indigenous sails Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Traditional fishing boat amp 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