The rescued oarsmen breakfasted aboard, and descended the gangplank shortly after 8 am, wearing identical boiler suits supplied by the ship. |
|
The oarsmen were already seated at their places and were laughing and joking as they prepared to set to the oars. |
|
If personnel are already in the foresheets they should carry out this duty as No 1 oarsmen continue to function at oars. |
|
Many, probably most, of the oarsmen, like the ships' officers, made their living primarily from rowing. |
|
As coxswain, I would steer, control the pace, and act as the eyes of the oarsmen, who were facing backward. |
|
Whatever the shape it always has the standard engraved ship with oarsmen and is always pale green. |
|
The oarsmen pushed their oars above the water while a brawny man dropped an anchor into the deep. |
|
Seen through the door in the background, a team of black oarsmen propel the boat along the Nile. |
|
A fast and fearsome battleship, the bireme was manned by 44 oarsmen working two banks of oars. |
|
He shouted fresh commands and the oarsmen went to work again, backing the ship away from the sinking merchantman. |
|
Thirteen oarsmen and a captain form the crew of the fixed-thwart rowing boats that participate in the competitions. |
|
Also, larger oars were heavy and clumsy to maneuver and required multiple oarsmen. |
|
At 10.30 am they dashed into the boat, and Anthony and his oarsmen pulled the craft out into the surf. |
|
The oarsmen rotated their oars at four strokes per half minute and didn't show any signs of fatigue. |
|
The singer of the opera-ballet costumed as a sailor and personifying navigation is represented by the oarsmen of the Louvre version. |
|
They followed Kinade to a rope ladder, then climbed down into a wooden boat manned by four oarsmen. |
|
Each boat carries about 120 oarsmen whose commander is sailor, sapper, swordsman, quartermaster and general. |
|
Back then, muscly oarsmen would row paying passengers across Southampton Water, a journey well capable of taking an hour or more. |
|
Although winning teams often contain incompetent members, effective oarsmen have the greatest rate of success and increase in frequency the fastest. |
|
Because the crews of their twin galliots were comprised of free men, including oarsmen, rather than slaves, there was a concomitant need for more rest and relaxation. |
|
|
If there were 100 oars per bank, that would have required 15000 oarsmen. |
|
He wondered if we could earn our passage out to the Antipodes as oarsmen on a quinquereme. |
|
Forty oared vessels driven by 500 oarsmen, many dressed in period costume, rowed from Greenwich to Westminster, retracing the route of Nelson's coffin. |
|
This was an ideal and rare opportunity to see a traditional canvas currach in use and the Indian summer weather ensured ideal conditions for oarsmen and onlookers. |
|
To combat the physical demands made on them oarsmen must consume 6,000 calories a day, more than twice the normal daily requirement for men. |
|
But we all want to be oarsmen on it. We all belong on the same boat and want to row with you. |
|
Races in line between rowing boats on flat waters, with the oarsmen facing backwards. |
|
Some oarsmen organize visits in mangroves for some expatriate tourists coming from Abidjan, especially during weekends. |
|
One of the most spectacular sports is the regattas, in which teams of oarsmen from different localities race one another. |
|
A state of balance and speed that many oarsmen strive to achieve when rowing. |
|
All the oarsmen whose oars are in the water on the left side of the shell when facing the stern. |
|
A two-shell, unsinkable hard chine dinghy, apt for fishers and recreational oarsmen. |
|
David noticed that square holes had been cut in the hull to allow oarsmen to row the ship despite the fact that it possessed a single mast with a sail. |
|
Warships at this time were propelled by a number of oarsmen which rowed the boat if it came becalmed or it was necessary to manoeuvre it in battle. |
|
The traghetto are larger gondola-style boats, with two oarsmen. |
|
The boatswain's pipe is the 'modern day' descendant of the flutes used by the Ancient Greeks and Romans to convey orders to the oarsmen and galley slaves. |
|
Each year the boat race between the two universities highlights the skills of the best oarsmen, who spend the rest of the year in intercollegiate races and training. |
|
The tribute was originally designed as a revenue source to pay the wages of the oarsmen who kept the Persians away. |
|
All the 200 oarsmen were from Kerala and they formed the 500-member contingent of artists from Kerala who came to demonstrate their art and craft in the four-day festival. |
|
There are oarsmen on the lower deck of the galley but these take no part in the fighting and should be ignored for game purposes. |
|
|
The oarsmen fore and aft of the middle of the ship would provide power when the wind dropped or came ahead, the conditions under which sailing barges would anchor and wait. |
|
Three local rowers, two of them oarsmen who learned their skills on the River Aire as fellow pupils at Bradford Grammar School, celebrated victory at the Henley Royal Regatta. |
|
As the tips of their oars touched the sides of the stone quay, the port oarsmen hauled as one as their oars absorbed the impact of ship against the quay. |
|
He explained that each raft would hold one drummer, and would need its own crew of roadies — two oarsmen as well as a coxswain — for steadying purposes. |
|
If they are not all onboard and thinking prosperity, both personally and for the company, then it's like the oarsmen in a boat rowing in different directions. |
|
He stationed 25 men on every launch, 12 oarsmen, 12 crossbowmen and musketeers, and a captain. |
|
Fifty years ago, the Anglican church made a reconstruction of the saint's Derry to Iona voyage, with the Archbishop of Canterbury waiting on the Scottish shore to welcome the oarsmen. |
|
It had over 200 triremes each powered by 170 oarsmen who were seated in 3 rows on each side of the ship. |
|
Men also were used as fishermen, canoeists, oarsmen, sailors, and artisans. |
|
Houses were grouped into twenties for the purpose of naval recruitment, with each group having to provide a quota of 28 oarsmen. |
|
By the end of the 4th century bce, armed deck soldiers had become so important in naval warfare that the trireme was superseded by heavier, decked-over ships with multiple rows of oarsmen. |
|
Conversely, if the midships oarsmen row as hard as the others, they will move a greater weight of water and contribute more to the ship's movement. |
|
But the oarsmen could not moult themselves in hoplites to be able to be opposed to the Macédonian phalanx: at the time of the final combat, the fleet remained unemployed. |
|
The oars are 5 meter long. 12 kilogram lead balance weights were placed at the oar tops in order to enable the oarsmen to row easier and for maximum efficiency. |
|
Warships were oared sailing galleys with three to five banks of oarsmen. |
|
Trireme oarsmen used leather cushions to slide over the seats, which allowed them to use their leg strength as a modern oarsman does with a sliding seat. |
|