ONE YACHT
WikiOne
Word | Description |
---|---|
Alongside | A boat coming alongside another boat or to a pier. |
Abram | To take under control, to keep under command, to overcome, to manage sea vehicles |
To come out | To move a ship that is on the pier or stern to the shore to anchor at a more distant place to move away. |
To open | To open as much as desired from a shore or any place that is understood to be too close, to move the ship to starboard or port in order to prevent a collision on the path of a ship encountered. |
Admiralty Anchor | Also known as a fishing anchor. These are anchors with a tack perpendicular to their arms. Some of these types of anchors have fixed tacks, while others have movable tacks. They hold well on rocky and stony ground. |
Aganta | A command given to stop and hold the flow of a rope or chain that is being slacked or loosened for a short time. (Aganta skota, aganta burina burinata!) |
Heavy Sea | Seas with long wave lengths and wave heights and high impact pressures. |
Heavy Storm | Wind that creates high waves, is long and the tops start to roll forward, covers the sea with white foam and has a speed of 48-55 miles per hour. |
AIS | Automatic Identification System. Ship traffic tracking system. |
Harabanda | Inside of the side. The rudder is pressed to one side as much as possible. (Hard on starboard, Hard on port) |
Capsing | Overturning, turning the boat upside down. |
Offshore | Not on the shore, waiting offshore. (Waiting offshore) |
Alesta | To be ready, to wait ready. Alesta tack! (Get ready to tack) Alesta ferro! (Anchor ready) |
Almanac | A book published every year that includes the rising and setting times of the sun, moon and planets and other astronomical information related to navigation. |
Main Sails | These are the sails that are raised on the main spars. These sails are called by the names of the main spars they are raised on: trinket sail, maystra sail, foa sail… |
Earth sail | It is called the change of direction of a current against the direction of flow. The vortex is mostly seen on coasts with many indentations and protrusions. |
Anele | Moving iron ring. |
Anemometer | A device that measures the speed of the wind in nautical miles per hour. |
Apaz | Wind coming from the direction of the belt, blowing perpendicular to the board. Sailing using this wind is called apaz sailing. |
Apiko | The position in which the anchor is released from the sea bottom and stands upright when heaving; or waiting carefully. |
Rigging | Fixed rigging. (Mast crosses, stays, etc.) The masts, spars and rope equipment on them located above the deck and all kinds of equipment used. The fixed rigging is called ‘main’ and the mobile rigging is called ‘selviçe’. |
Armuz | The line between the deck and side planks. |
Avaka | Auxiliary tools and materials used in doing any work. |
Avara (Idling) | The departure of a ship, boat or boat from its berth. |
Bear Leg | Sailing with sails, which allows the sails to be filled with wind and to sail fast, by using a sloop to open one of the sheets to starboard and the other to port on sailing ships that sail from the stern. method. |
Transom Stern | A boat whose stern is not sharp and is flat in the direction of the beam. |
Transom | A wooden board placed on the sternpost and on which the rudder pintle is placed. (Mirror sterns) |
Baba | A fixed device made of wood or metal, cylindrical in shape and with a head or a protrusion so that the ropes do not slip, attached to the deck or dock for rope belaying. |
Whitewashing | Wrapping a rope with rope or a protective material to prevent it from wearing out. |
Port of Mooring | Ports where merchant ships are registered and all kinds of registration procedures are carried out. The name of the mooring port is written on the transoms of the ships and under the ship’s names |
Shelter | Entering the nearest port or anchoring in a protected place on the coast in stormy weather. |
Barometer | A device that measures air pressure. |