norfolk wherry การใช้
- In 1981 The Norfolk Wherry Trust acquired a base at Womack Water near Ludham.
- See also the Thames sailing barge and the Norfolk wherry, two British equivalents to the scow schooner.
- In the western part of the broad, known as " The Slaughters ", lie two Norfolk wherry wrecks.
- The "'Norfolk wherry "'is a type of boat used on The Broads in Norfolk and Suffolk, England.
- The Norfolk wherry, the traditional cargo craft of the area, can still be seen on the Broads as some specimens have been preserved and restored.
- He respects academic discipline, but when a Norfolk wherry needs saving from wreck, he is the one who knows what to do, and even his own father acknowledges it.
- In the late 18th century the name was given to the Norfolk wherry, a kind of sailing barge with large sails which was developed to replace an earlier cargo boat, the Norfolk Keel.
- Examples of clinker-built boats directly descended from those of Norsemen shipbuilders are the traditional round-bottomed Thames skiffs of the River Thames, and the larger ( originally ) cargo-carrying Norfolk wherries of England.
- As part of the millennium celebrations, ten mosaics were commissioned, showing scenes from local history, including the Peasants'Revolt and the Great Fire of North Walsham and a picture of a Norfolk wherry an allusion to the canal.
- Built in 1898, she served as a trading vessel and then as a lighter until being acquired by the Norfolk Wherry Trust for restoration and preservation in 1949 . Since 1981 she has been moored at the Norfolk Wherry Trust wherry base at Womack Water near Ludham.
- Built in 1898, she served as a trading vessel and then as a lighter until being acquired by the Norfolk Wherry Trust for restoration and preservation in 1949 . Since 1981 she has been moored at the Norfolk Wherry Trust wherry base at Womack Water near Ludham.
- The Norfolk Wherry Trust keep trading wherry " Albion " at Forsythe Wherry Yard, off Womack Water at Ludham; trading wherry " Maud " also berths here in the winter . " Solace " can usually be seen on Wroxham Broad in the sailing season, while " Ardea " is often seen at Southgates yard in Horning.
- In 1949 she was acquired by the then newly formed Norfolk Wherry Trust who renamed her " Albion ", restored her and operated her full-time as a trading wherry until 1953 when, unable to support a full-time crew, " Albion " s hold was swept out and she spent summers as a crewed charter accommodating groups of young people sleeping in hammocks.