If you want to be more than just ordinary, then at some point, you're going to have to learn to burn your boats. |
|
Burn your boats. Do it or forget it. As Yoda says, “Do or do not. There is no try.” |
|
Then, when you’re ready… burn your boats, plant your flag, stake your claim to the riches of El Dorado. |
|
Have you left yourself an exit strategy? If so, then you need to burn your boats and retreat plans. |
|
Remove your safety net and truly commit to the task at hand. Congratulations my friend, you’re ready to burn your boats! |
|
When you burn your boats, you have to take the island. There is no other option. There is no exit plan except success. |
|
Triumph Boats sent me new gaskets for the storage compartment hatches and I put them in, but the compartments still take on water. |
|
Boats anchored near the Marina are ripped from their moorings and one of them is deposited on Dockweiler Beach. |
|
Boats were refused permission by the Department to land their catches at Dingle. |
|
Boats had low aspect mains, small foretriangles, fractional rigs and no lapping foresails. |
|
Boats off the Donegal coast will be restricted to just nine days fishing a month. |
|
Boats toss on their moorings or lay slumped on their sides on the beach, propped uselessly. |
|
Boats were built for the Roman foot soldiers while the Roman cavalry swam across with their horses. |
|
Boats fostered unusually intimate encounters because of the enforced idleness of travel and because of their physical isolation. |
|
Boats come in about 9 A.M. and sell fresh red snapper, sea trout, sculpin, and mackerel. |
|
Boats can be booby traps, with things like cleats placed awkwardly around the deck to stub bare feet or even send you tumbling overboard. |
|
When your army has crossed the border, you should burn your boats and bridges, in order to make it clear to everybody that you have no hankering after home. |
|
The Blessing of the Boats will take place on Saturday, June 5, at 5.30 pm in the front strand in Cromane Lower. |
|
The Annual Blessing of the Boats will take place on Friday, May 30, at 5 pm on the front strand at Cro-mane Lower. |
|
Boats powered by propellers and engines were bringing people across the river in under three hours. |
|
|
Boats stored ashore are especially prone to having pooling water on the deck and cockpit, which can stain the boat. |
|
These boats were crewed by three men, who operated a watch system whereby two men worked while the other slept. |
|
When steam boats were introduced in the late nineteenth century, crews were enlarged to four. |
|
In the same year a remarkably harsh winter saw many boats frozen into their moorings, and unable to move for weeks at a time. |
|
Several of the boats failed to land at the correct positions in the confusion, while those that did were swept by gunfire and grapeshot. |
|
There is no absolute speed limit on most of the Tideway downstream of Wandsworth Bridge, although boats are not allowed to create undue wash. |
|
Powered boats are limited to 12 knots between Lambeth Bridge and downstream of Tower Bridge, with some exceptions. |
|
However this stretch of the river has little traffic, other than small pleasure boats, canoes and some tour boats in Shrewsbury. |
|
There are locks on the lower Severn to enable seagoing boats to reach as far as Stourport. |
|
Some boats only operate part of the route, or operate out and back cruises, whilst others run the whole distance. |
|
Segrave's mechanic, Victor Helliwell drowned, but Segrave was rescued by support boats. |
|
The rowing trainer at the time noted that Hawking cultivated a daredevil image, steering his crew on risky courses that led to damaged boats. |
|
In addition to the cars at Blackpool, there are four boats in the United States. |
|
Since then they have helped rebuild homes and construct new boats for people to recover their livelihood. |
|
When not in use, the boats were drawn up into the sheds for maintenance and protection. |
|
The city is connected to Bristol and the sea by the River Avon, navigable via locks by small boats. |
|
At Portavogie a few mease of herring were landed in June by some twenty-five boats. |
|
These boats are consumable items and contribute significantly to the running costs of the metallizer. |
|
In 1967, Read was domiciled in the tax haven of Guernsey, where he had a business selling boats. |
|
Additional duties include maintaining the ship's boats and performing other nautical tasks. |
|
|
Similar to the navy, some boats produce waves that attract porpoises, while others may repel them. |
|
In larger boats, the weight of a person has less effect on the hull trim, but it can be adjusted by shifting gear, fuel, water, or supplies. |
|
Different hull trim efforts are required for different kinds of boats and different conditions. |
|
In many small boats, weight too far aft can cause drag by submerging the transom, especially in light to moderate winds. |
|
People take cruises in which they crew and 'learn the ropes' aboard craft such as tall ships, classic sailing vessels and restored working boats. |
|
The match racing rules were set so that you could have two similar boats within a box rule. |
|
A box rule which specifies a maximum overall size for boats in the class, as well as features such as stability. |
|
As their boats and crew get to the windward mark they round it leaving it to starboard, or the right side of the boat. |
|
When the boats go through the gate they are then on the third leg of the race. |
|
Once the boats round the windward mark again they are on the fourth and final leg where they race downwind towards the finish in hope of winning. |
|
It was here that Hanno decided to cross, and ordered that boats and rafts should be constructed from materials that were at hand. |
|
To stand up in the cockly boats in the rough swirling water was at first rather nervous work, but we soon got not to mind it. |
|
Nearly 150 boats crossed the line in a gale of wind that caused several dismastings, and minor disasters. |
|
Douche boats destroyed two bunkers and accumulated 30 minutes of water time. |
|
The great width of the rivers allowed the development of flatbottomed boats capable of carrying hundreds of tons of cargo. |
|
A certain fleet.. through which little boats used to come to the aforesaid town. |
|
The water over which the boats glided was black and smooth, rising into huge foamless billows, the more terrible because they were silent. |
|
He would lie on the green-bed all day long sewing pictures of boats on canvas with coloured wools. |
|
The old Boeing flying boats have seen their day, he added. They will be replaced with more economical land planes. |
|
It took seven more weeks for the boats to reach Kola where they were rescued by a Russian merchant vessel. |
|
|
A small group led by Dezhnyov reached the mouth of the Anadyr River and sailed up it in 1649, having built new boats from the wreckage. |
|
High pressure yielded an engine and boiler compact enough to be used on mobile road and rail locomotives and steam boats. |
|
There are also seasonal passenger boats on Coniston Water, Derwent Water and Ullswater. |
|
Railway services were supplemented by steamer boats on the major lakes of Ullswater, Windermere, Coniston Water, and Derwent Water. |
|
He burned his boats and supplies to show resolve in continuing operations, but the Sassanids began a war of attrition by burning crops. |
|
Lashing the Viking boats to their own, the English crew boarded the enemy's vessels and proceeded to kill everyone on board. |
|
When that occurred, the Danes rushed back to their boats, which being lighter, with shallower drafts, were freed before Alfred's ships. |
|
To make the journey northward, Quinn believed that they used the pinnace and other small boats to transport themselves and their belongings. |
|
In the evening, Evelyn reported that the river was covered with barges and boats making their escape piled with goods. |
|
This would create a new ring route for leisure boats involving the Trent and Mersey Canal, the Anderton Boat Lift and the River Weaver. |
|
In winter special icebreaker boats with reinforced hulls would be used to break the ice. |
|
This makes it similar to the Ferriby boats, which are also stitched planks. |
|
As Controller, he introduced torpedo boat destroyers as a class of ship intended for defence against attack from torpedo boats or submarines. |
|
Six torpedo boats bombarded Calais and another six bombarded Dover just before midnight. |
|
These flotillas of small boats, combined with the naval vessels, continued the evacuation until 3 June. |
|
Even officers ordered to stay behind to aid the evacuation disappeared onto the boats. |
|
But at times, panicky soldiers had to be warned off at gunpoint when they attempted to rush to the boats out of turn. |
|
Most submarines were in the Mediterranean but two training boats were sent into the Bay of Biscay. |
|
The Luftwaffe made 21 deliberate attacks on small torpedo boats during the Battle of Britain, sinking none. |
|
The first few missile boats were originally torpedo boats, with the torpedo tubes replaced by missile launchers. |
|
|
Corner reflectors on boats, for example, make them more detectable to avoid collision or during a rescue. |
|
Brighton began to attract more visitors following improved road transport to London and becoming a boarding point for boats travelling to France. |
|
Similar boats were made in 1785 by John Fitch in Philadelphia and William Symington in Dumfries, Scotland. |
|
Falling out of favour later on, some of the original boats are still in operation in a few places, such as Hjejlen. |
|
Experimental boats built in 1788 and 1789 worked successfully on Lochmaben Loch. |
|
These elongated bull boats were capable of transporting two tons of fur down the shallow waters of the Platte River. |
|
These larger boats required joining the buffalo hides with waterproof seams, a technique not used by the American Indians. |
|
The tails were also kept intact and used to tie numerous bull boats together. |
|
However, similar boats appear in many different regions and are not documented to share a common origin. |
|
In fact many of these boats appear to be similar solutions to common transportation needs for working on rivers. |
|
Backed by three escort boats and smeared in porpoise oil, he set off into the ebb tide at a steady breaststroke. |
|
A large portion of catches are not reported when the fishing boats land to account for profits that are being lost to high taxes and fees. |
|
Currently, it is cleaned by spade and barrow onshore, and it can be collected by raking boats offshore. |
|
The unit is equipped with patrol boats and radars but it does not operate its own helicopters. |
|
Clavus Swart's description fits the Inuit and two of their types of boats, the kayak and the umiak. |
|
Similarly, the Swedish clergyman Olaus Magnus wrote in 1505 that he saw in Oslo Cathedral two leather boats taken decades earlier. |
|
According to Olaus, the boats were captured from Greenland pirates by one of the Haakons, which would place the event in the 14th century. |
|
Now came shipwrecks and life in open boats, with the usual paucity of food. |
|
Waterborne plastic poses a serious threat to fish, seabirds, marine reptiles, and marine mammals, as well as to boats and coasts. |
|
Over time, bottom trawlers became very efficient, some catching as much cod in an hour as traditional boats caught in a season. |
|
|
Nearly every harbor on Cape Cod hosts sport fishing charter boats, which run from May through October. |
|
Many large boats emit very low frequencies, which confuse the manatee and explain their lack of awareness around boats. |
|
Albatrosses are easily attracted to these sightseeing boats by the deployment of fish oil and burley into the sea. |
|
The plant clogs the motors of small boats, making it impossible for fishers to launch their vessels. |
|
The first boats were owned by the boatbuilder Ernest Collins of Wroxham, but other boatyards were soon added to the business. |
|
The range of boats expanded to include powered cruisers in the 1930s, and the Hoseasons agency was founded soon after the Second World War. |
|
There are a number of companies hiring boats for leisure use, including both yachts and motor launches. |
|
At the same site during the reign of King Charles I, river tolls were levied on boats to pay for the maintenance of the bridge. |
|
But fishing boats were heavy working boats, and filled with fishing equipment, hence a new type of boat was required. |
|
In the Age of Sail, a ship carried a variety of ship's boats of different sizes and used for different purposes. |
|
Then the earth in the boats was gradually taken away so that the boats floated much higher and the oxen were lifted off the river bottom. |
|
In 1928, four Supermarine Southampton flying boats of the RAF Far East flight arrived in Melbourne, Australia. |
|
The flight was considered proof that flying boats had evolved to become reliable means of long distance transport. |
|
After World War II the use of flying boats rapidly declined for several reasons. |
|
In addition, three Aquila Airways flying boats were used during the airlift. |
|
This is the only known operational use of flying boats within central Europe. |
|
Today, however, true flying boats have largely been replaced by seaplanes with floats and amphibian aircraft with wheels. |
|
Dornier announced plans in May 2010 to build CD2 SeaStar composite flying boats in Quebec, Canada. |
|
In 1938, Southampton docks also became home to the flying boats of Imperial Airways. |
|
Some split oak suggests that particularly large structures, or possibly boats, were being constructed at the site. |
|
|
Indeed, the captives bobbed up to the surface after being thrown in the water from the boats. |
|
The guns at the Batteries also fired on German torpedo boats attempting night landings. |
|
Since boats sown together is found dating back to this time and their form favors padeling or sailing. |
|
Also older boats were often very heavily constructed compared to their modern counterpart, hence weighed far more. |
|
From 1957 to 1999 the cup was competed for between national teams, each having three boats. |
|
In 1971 the British Prime Minister, Edward Heath, captained one of the winning boats. |
|
In addition, instead of being a competition between national teams, the event was competed between yacht clubs, each with two boats. |
|
Because of this Spectra is only used in spinnakers on high performance boats where the sails are replaced regularly. |
|
Raw linseed oil is not suited to boats as it stays damp and oily for a long time. |
|
It is most commonly used in small pleasure and fishing power boats that are not kept permanently in the water. |
|
Typically used for production boats because of its ability to reuse a female mold as the foundation for the shape of the boat. |
|
This especially applied to long thin fastenings such as screws in boats that have motors. |
|
It has provision for up to 200 boats, either on floating pontoons or leaning against the harbour wall. |
|
The earliest steam powered fishing boats first appeared in the 1870s and used the trawl system of fishing as well as lines and drift nets. |
|
It is difficult to estimate how many recreational fishing boats there are, although the number is high. |
|
The term is fluid, since most recreational boats are also used for fishing from time to time. |
|
Unlike most commercial fishing vessels, recreational fishing boats are often not dedicated just to fishing. |
|
The earliest boats discovered date from the Bronze Age and are constructed of hollowed out logs or sewn planks. |
|
These may be an evolution from boats made of sewn hides, but it is highly unlikely that hide boats could have survived. |
|
Engelhardt found weapons, tools, pieces of clothing and two intact clinker built boats, one made of oak and one made of pine. |
|
|
The smaller of the two boats, perhaps 19 meters long and made of pine, was hacked up and used as firewood by troops. |
|
The Nydam Boat is the largest and best preserved of the boats found in Nydam Bog and is now displayed at Gottorf Castle in Schleswig, Germany. |
|
They left Scandza in three boats under the leadership of Berig, the legendary Gothic King. |
|
Some, including Ariovistus himself, managed to cross the river in boats or by swimming. |
|
Nearby Bonn is linked by both the Stadtbahn and main line railway trains, and occasional recreational boats on the Rhine. |
|
On the large lakes in this region flotillas of patrol boats were stationed. |
|
When they wounded him, he turned back many times to see whether we were all in the boats. |
|
Thereupon, beholding him dead, we, wounded, retreated, as best we could, to the boats, which were already pulling off. |
|
He further wrote that the native men and women came in log boats to trade coconuts. |
|
During the summertime, pleasure boats ply up and down the Volga, with their base off the river station. |
|
The plans for the naval defense of Lisbon would also include the use of torpedo boats and submarines, that are later also acquired. |
|
These forces carried on board four CAMS 37 flying boats and an Army landing force. |
|
The Portuguese Navy focused in the defense of the waters and ports of the Azores with patrol boats and destroyers deployed on rotation. |
|
The pier at Santa Maria on Sal used by both fishing and dive boats has been rehabilitated. |
|
They were more oriented to the sea than earlier peoples, and had developed sleds and boats similar to kayaks. |
|
Those who left the country typically did so by sea, in small boats and fragile rafts. |
|
In the 16th century, there was a brook there which the nobles used to promenade in their boats. |
|
At first slow whales were caught by men hurling harpoons from small open boats. |
|
A chain was strung through the water from the base of the tower to prevent boats from traveling into the river port. |
|
Beyond that, small boats frequently ascend to the Pongo de Manseriche, just above Achual Point in Peru. |
|
|
Gaily decorated native boats come out to greet them, but remembering Gama's experience, Cabral refuses to go ashore until hostages are exchanged. |
|
In late December 1500, after the Portuguese set about seizing the spice cargoes of Arab boats in the harbor, a riot erupted on the piers. |
|
From 2001, the fireworks have been launched from boats, to improve the safety of the event. |
|
Punta del Este has 122 hotels, 80 restaurants, an international airport and a yacht harbor that can accommodate 500 boats. |
|
Mello armed four boats with cannons and personally led them ashore to fill the barrels with water. |
|
Known as Operation Fenkil, the attack utilized both infiltrated commandos and speed boats. |
|
Fishermen drop lines from their cayucas, small wooden dugout boats with upturned prows. |
|
The canoes are decked boats which must be propelled by single bladed paddles and inside which the paddler kneels. |
|
The stranded crew lived on Garden Key for 56 days, and fought a battle with a Spanish sloop, before sailing to Jamaica in several boats. |
|
Guinness Book of World Records has awarded world records to various classes such as luxury liners, sail boats, and rowing boats. |
|
The harbor is still serviced by several cruise lines, commuter ferries, and tourist excursion boats. |
|
The Parade of Lights is a parade of more than 80 small boats with holiday decorations and lights on two Sundays in December. |
|
The expedition was blocked from going farther north toward Point Reyes by the Golden Gate and San Francisco Bay, since they had no boats. |
|
Sources differ on whether two men died on the ice floe and three in the boats, or three on the ice floe and two in the boats. |
|
It is unknown if one or more boats went to New Zealand, or the type of boat, or the names of those who migrated. |
|
The Polish forced the Cossacks to burn their boats and stop raiding by sea, but they did not give it up entirely. |
|
He sailed from Turukhansk up the Lower Tunguska with many men on several strug boats. |
|
In autumn of 1623 Pyanda's party reached the upper Angara and still had some time to build new boats, since Angara usually freezes rather late. |
|
They also heard that the bearded Daurs had recently come in boats and killed many Gilyaks. |
|
He spent the next winter there, built boats and sailed down the Indigirka and east to the Alazeya where he met Zyryan. |
|
|
She said that Fedot died of scurvy, some of his companions were killed by the Koryaks and the rest fled in small boats to an unknown fate. |
|
In the spring or early summer of 1649 the 12 remaining men built boats from driftwood and went up the Anadyr. |
|
When the Lena River was free from ice, they resumed their voyage, travelling downstream with boats. |
|
Passenger would be transferred to smaller boats to take them to the historic area. |
|
The powder was carried over the hill to Tobacco Bay, from where boats transported it to an American ship that lay offshore. |
|
Farnese cut off all access to the sea by constructing a bridge of boats across the Scheldt. |
|
It has more public golf courses, registered boats, and lighthouses than any other state. |
|
Charter boats are based in many Great Lakes cities to fish for salmon, trout, walleye and perch. |
|
Packet boats pulled by horses on tow paths traveled slowly over the canal carrying passengers and freight. |
|
The British party tried to push the boats off but all except three remained stuck. |
|
Fishing boats on the Caribbean side bring shrimp as well as lobsters into processing plants at Puerto Cabezas, Bluefields, and Laguna de Perlas. |
|
Following this, iron was used in rails, boats, ships, aqueducts, and buildings, as well as in iron cylinders in steam engines. |
|
Wood has been an important construction material since humans began building shelters, houses and boats. |
|
Nearly all boats were made out of wood until the late 19th century, and wood remains in common use today in boat construction. |
|
Double slipways were installed to haul boats over when the difference in water levels were too great for the flash lock to operate. |
|
With a variety of boats, converted lifeboats and wooden boats from the Lakes, they kept boats moving on the canal after commercial use stopped. |
|
The ships and boats of the fleet would explore the coast of Australia by sailing all around it looking for suitable farming land and resources. |
|
The Battle of the Scheldt in October 1944 was fought primarily on Dutch soil, but with the objective of opening the way for boats to Antwerp. |
|
The mooring, winter storage and maintenance of recreational boats, motor and sail, still contribute a large part of the city's income. |
|
The houses remain but the landing and the boats are gone and the street has been improved. |
|
|
Ultimately, almost 3,000 men worked at the naval shipyard, building eleven warships and many smaller boats and transports. |
|
On September 4, these gunboats were taken unawares and captured by British boarding parties from canoes and small boats. |
|
This regularly attracts upwards of 200 sailing boats and comprises two races, both of which cover the full length of the lake. |
|
There are seven lakeside marinas, the most popular stops being Keswick, Portinscale and the Lodore Falls, from which boats may be hired. |
|
This is suspended temporarily for boats attempting new world waterspeed records during Records Week, usually the first week in November. |
|
In addition to purchasing these, he was able to acquire their aid in building still other boats. |
|
They deepened the river so that larger boats could sail through. |
|
The Coast Guard issued a small craft advisory, warning little boats to watch out for bad weather. |
|
Scratches should be closely analyzed to determine the attitudes of the boats at the time of initial contact. |
|
Boatsheds and bathing boxes were strung along the beaches of Port Phillip Bay for the shelter of boats as well as the bodies of the affluent. |
|
The boathorse provided the power for most boats until the 1880s, when steam boats became more common. |
|
The bow guard was watching the other boat as it floated among several fishing boats waiting for the bridge to open. |
|
Boats can be hired for passage to outer islands and fringing reefs. |
|
The Small Boats Course focuses on traditional boatbuilding, both lapstrake and carvel plank-on-frame construction, using modern materials and techniques. |
|
York City Rowing Club host their final event of the year on Sunday when more than 350 crews and scullers will compete in the York Chambers Small Boats Head Rowing Race. |
|
Boats were pounded to matchwood on the savage, foam-lashed rocks below. |
|
Dragon Boats have crossed the globe into the welcoming arms of American business. |
|
She has taught brightwork seminars at the Center for Wooden Boats. |
|
However, when there are only two boats on the course any penalty for one boat is an advantage for the other. |
|
The extremity of both 1903 cup contenders encouraged Nathanael Herreshoff to make boats more wholesome and durable by devising a new rule. |
|
|
From 986, Greenland's west coast was settled by Icelanders and Norwegians, through a contingent of 14 boats led by Erik the Red. |
|
Between March and October boats depart from Cardiff Bay to take visitors to Flat Holm Island. |
|
Modern pirates favor small boats and taking advantage of the small number of crew members on modern cargo vessels. |
|
Minkes can grow to 10m and are likely to approach boats, delighting passengers with acrobatics as they hurl themselves out of the water. |
|
The RAF played a minor role in the Korean War, with flying boats taking part. |
|
Downed pilots and aircrew, it was hoped, would be picked up by any boats or ships which happened to be passing by. |
|
The boats spread out into a long patrol line that bisected the path of the Allied convoy routes. |
|
Often as many as 10 to 15 boats would attack in one or two waves, following convoys like SC 104 and SC 107 by day and attacking at night. |
|
From at least the 16th century, boats from mainland Scotland and the Netherlands dominated the local herring fishery. |
|
Swansea Marina to the south of the city centre has berths for 410 leisure boats. |
|
An addition 200 berths for leisure boats are located near the mouth of the River Tawe. |
|
Singleton Park has acres of parkland, a botanical garden, a boating lake with pedal boats, and crazy golf. |
|
Beaumaris is a yachting centre, with many boats moored in the bay or off Gallows Point. |
|
There are regular sailing regattas on national holidays, such as Carnival, which are contested by locally built and designed boats. |
|
These boats have names and have sponsors that print their logo on their sails. |
|
The Archaeological Institute of America reports that some of the oldest ships yet unearthed are known as the Abydos boats. |
|
The image of boats in peril contrasts the cold light of the moon with the firelight glow of the fishermen's lantern. |
|
The sport can be either recreational for enjoyment or fitness, or competitive, when athletes race against each other in boats. |
|
Racing boats also have sliding seats to allow the use of the legs in addition to the body to apply power to the oar. |
|
The rowing boats require oars on both sides to prevent them from rolling over. |
|
|
With the smaller boats, specialist versions of the shells for sculling can be made lighter. |
|
In other boats, there is a rudder, controlled by the coxswain, if present, or by one of the crew. |
|
Hull damage can be caused by submerged logs, poor strapping to trailers, and collisions with other boats, docks, rocks, etc. |
|
Boats are conveyed to competitions on special trailers accommodating up to 20 boats. |
|
The losing boats from each heat may be given a second chance to qualify through a repechage. |
|
Preventing immigrants from boarding aircraft or boats prevents them from applying for asylum. |
|
In the Canadian Maritimes, cairns have been used as beacons like small lighthouses to guide boats, as depicted in the novel The Shipping News. |
|
Another route proposed is that, either on foot or using primitive boats, they migrated down the Pacific coast to South America. |
|
Still, most Newporters were mesmerized by the boats and their chesslike maneuvers. |
|
The National Park Authority also have other boats on the Loch such as The Brigadier. |
|
The north coast is the most isolated region of Labrador, with snowmobiles, boats, and planes being the only modern modes of transportation. |
|
They will also follow fishing boats with the hope of finding food in the same way as gulls do. |
|
They fly around the boats to take fish from the fishing nets or pick up the remains thrown into the sea. |
|
The two crews used to maximise the availability time of the boats are called 'blue' and 'red' crews. |
|
The boats are capable of deploying with a maximum of 192 independently targetable warheads, or MIRVs, with immediate readiness to fire. |
|
Prior to the construction of the bridge, ferry boats were used to cross the Firth. |
|
Eight men were saved from drowning by rowing boats positioned in the river under the working areas. |
|
Doggerland was named after the Dogger Bank, which in turn was named after the 17th century Dutch fishing boats called doggers. |
|
She was unable to leave for 10 days because of the wind and could not be boarded as no suitable boats were available. |
|
They have three of these traditional Welsh boats with fixed seats and use these for races in Wales. |
|
|
During 1943, when home to the Sunderland flying boats, it was the largest operational base for flying boats in the world. |
|
With berths for more than 6,000 boats, the Chicago Park District operates the nation's largest municipal harbor system. |
|
Certified tour operators have to comply with criteria regarding the sustainable operation of their boats and their business as a whole. |
|
This is a gregarious species, which can be seen in large numbers from boats or headlands, especially on migration in autumn. |
|
It can be attracted by feeding cetaceans, but rarely follows boats or associates with other shearwater species. |
|
Injuries or deaths due to collisions with boats, especially their propellers, are also common. |
|
This is accomplished by driving a pod together with boats and usually into a bay or onto a beach. |
|
Their escape is prevented by closing off the route to the ocean with other boats or nets. |
|
Bala has two sailing clubs, and a number of companies provide kayaks, yachts and various other types of boats for hire. |
|
Entire schools are then encircled with fast auxiliary boats which deploy purse seine nets as they speed around the school. |
|
Canal boats could enter the river at high tide to load goods directly onto seagoing vessels. |
|
Restored, expanded ferry service in the Port of New York and New Jersey uses boats for pedestrians only. |
|
Ferry boats often dock at specialized facilities designed to position the boat for loading and unloading, called a ferry slip. |
|
The city is served by the Trent and Mersey Canal, which sees traffic of some 10,000 boats a year. |
|
With boats and gifts from Galadriel, the Company travel down the River Anduin to the hill of Amon Hen. |
|
There followed in 1890 the boats WW1 and WW2, built to a Nordenfelt design. |
|
With the Danish government's purchase of two Type 205 boats, the West German government realized the potential for the submarine as an export. |
|
By 1788, Wexford, with 44 cargo ships and 200 herring boats was the sixth busiest port in Ireland. |
|
They have also been observed bow riding on baleen whales, and they also bow ride on boats. |
|
The hunters first surround the pilot whales with a wide semicircle of many boats. |
|
|
The boats then drive the pilot whales into a bay or to the bottom of a fjord. |
|
Eventually, seal hunters used harpoons to spear the animals from boats out at sea, and hooks for killing pups on ice or land. |
|
In 1899, he returned to Ireland, taking charge of the Saturn and her four small auxiliary sailing boats used for sampling. |
|
This is accomplished by driving a pod together with boats, usually into a bay or onto a beach. |
|
Collisions occur both with large commercial vessels and recreational boats and cause injury to whales or smaller cetaceans. |
|
Tourism boats designed for whale and dolphin watching can also negatively impact on marine mammals by interfering with their natural behavior. |
|
This sailing race featured, among other entrants, all the boats that took part in the 2007 America's Cup. |
|
There are large ferry boats that link islands as well as fast ferries linking most of the islands. |
|
Consequently, the shipbuilding industry developed in many islands, from small fishing boats, to whaling sloops to larger passenger services. |
|
Yet, cargo and passenger transportation ceased in the 1970s, and the ships were sold or converted into tuna fishing boats. |
|
This technique is often used to keep waterways navigable and creates an anti sludge pathway for boats. |
|
They serve a purpose of breaking waves, but in some occasions they are also used for docking boats, in these occasions they will be called piers. |
|
Until 1965, Maryland limited dredging to sailboats, and even since then motor boats can be used only on certain days of the week. |
|
Fowlsheugh can be accessed by a public clifftop trail, or by boats which usually emanate from the nearby harbour at the town of Stonehaven. |
|
Ancient whalers used harpoons to spear the bigger animals from boats out at sea. |
|
When humans drive motor boats over shallow seagrass areas, sometimes the propeller blade can tear out or cut the seagrass. |
|
For example, hurricanes often involve water contamination from sewage, and petrochemical spills from ruptured boats or automobiles. |
|
Trawling is a method of fishing that involves pulling a fishing net through the water behind one or more boats. |
|
From 1907 onward, all torpedo boats were constructed using turbine engines. |
|
Hipper ordered German ships vigorously to enforce search and seizure rules, bringing fishing boats into Cuxhaven to be searched. |
|