flense การใช้
- She carves great gashes down his flank like butchers flensing sheep.
- In Finnmark the whales were merely flensed at low-tide.
- Flensing is the process of stripping skin and blubber from whales.
- Whales were towed to a shore station for flensing.
- The flensing plan of the station still exists as part of the resort.
- On the flensing deck several workers use specialized tools to butcher the whale.
- Shore whaling flensing methods elsewhere differed little from the European whaling mentioned above.
- As more and more of the carcass was utilized flensing became more specialized.
- Whaleboats brought the captured whales to the whaleships to be flensed or cut up.
- On Norfolk Island humpback whales were flensed in the shallows along a rocky beach.
- Where the whale was flensed differed between the English and oil in large copper kettles.
- The whales were brought alongside a wharf or cutting stage, where they were flensed.
- This allowed another whale to be brought up the slipway and unto the deck to be flensed.
- Between 1852 and 1874, flense whales, and obtain wood and water or shelter from storms.
- Flensing at stations in the early modern era ( late nineteenth century ) differed little from earlier methods.
- Once ashore, the whale was quickly flensed and divided into its separate parts for various warehouses and further processing.
- The meat was flensed similar to the blubber, while the bones were sliced by a steam-driven bone saw.
- Whalers hunted by day, towing their catch to shore for flensing, operating in a fairly small area around the whaling stations.
- The Dutch eschewed this system, bringing the whales into the shallows at high-tide and flensing them at low-tide.
- With the introduction of the stern slipway in the " Lancing " in 1925 flensing could be performed entirely on the open sea.
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