...
首页> 外文期刊>WoodenBoat >The Maine Peapods: Small workboats with enduring and universal appeal
【24h】

The Maine Peapods: Small workboats with enduring and universal appeal

机译:The Maine Peapods: Small workboats with enduring and universal appeal

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

A bout 15 years ago, when I was the curator at the Penobscot Marine Museum in Searsport, Maine, I received a call from someone offering to donate a peapod that had been used as late as the 1970s for lobstering. Peapods are Maine's signature small boats, double-enders ranging from 12′ to 16′ long and especially common in Penobscot Bay. The caller, a descendant of one of Matinicus Island's first settlers, had bought this peapod from Orren Ames, the last of the Matinicus fishermen to haul lobster traps by hand from a peapod powered by oars. It was an exciting find, so I flew out to Matinicus, which lies more than 20 miles offshore and is one of the state's most remote inhabited islands, to have a look. For many years, the boat had been stored in a barn. Although the owner had been eager to preserve the boat for family use, it needed to be moved because the house, one of the island's oldest, was being sold. For 20 years, I learned, Ames fished from this peapod, built on the island in the 1950s by Merrill Young, a descendant of a family that first settled there in 1765. Young's father, Leon L. Young, had also built peapods, and one of them, a lapstrake-planked boat, was already in the museum's collections.

著录项

  • 来源
    《WoodenBoat》 |2022年第284期|22-26|共5页
  • 作者

    Ben Fuller;

  • 作者单位

    Penobscot Marine Museum in Searsport;

  • 收录信息
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 英语
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号