Putting up a good, clear, complete word list with nautical jargon is totally above me. So I won't even try. In the story, I tried to keep from overusing nautical terms not to obscure the narration, but you need some in this kind of story.1123Please respect copyright.PENANAaWDFYBoqJs
If you wanna speak like a true sailor and swearing like crazy doesn't do the trick, check seatalk.info or this Wikipedia article about Nautical Terms. And then you'll scare Davy Jones himself with your accuracy.
However, I'm not letting you set sail without at least some basics.1123Please respect copyright.PENANAzfIVfVMYfX
So here we go.
YE OLDE NAVY JONES
Battery: group of guns operated in one place. E.g.: the starboard battery is all the cannons placed on that side of the ship.1123Please respect copyright.PENANALKd5VaPZCE
Bosun: boatswain. The leading seaman in charge of supervising the crewmembers when performing work on deck. I use it as the "third in command". Like, first comes the captain, then the lieutenant and then the bosun.
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Chasers: cannons set at the bows and the stern of the ships, in pairs, usually of a larger gauge than those along the sides, on and below deck.
Companionway: just like there are no ropes on ships, but lines, there are no stairs onboard. Any series of steps to go up and down anywhere on a ship is called companionway.
Crosstree: a way smaller platform than the tops, located above them --between the topsails and the topgallants.
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Gangplank: A moveable ladder or ramp used for boarding a vessel from the dock. Also called brow.
Gangway: passageway on a ship. E.g.: at the maindeck, the space between the batteries, for the sailors to come and go.
Gunwale: the top of the side of a ship. Like, if you lean over the side to look over it, you're leaning over the gunwale.
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Knot: A unit of speed = 1 nautical mile (1.8520 km; 1.1508 mi) per hour. Originally speed was measured by paying out a line from the stern of a moving boat; the line had a knot every 47 feet 3 inches (14.40 m), and the number of knots passed out in 30 seconds gave the speed through the water in nautical miles per hour.
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Lines: Just like there are no stairs, but companionways, there are no ropes on a ship: they're called lines. Most of them have their own names, but never mind.
Lookout: the sailors at the tops and crosstrees of the masts, looking out for other ships, land or whatever may come around.
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Make Sail: raise sails while getting underway --with the ship in motion, not moored.
Moor: dropping anchor.
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Rigging is all the masts and thousand sails and the zillion lines.
Speaking of the lines to work the sail, you had two kinds of rigging:
*Standing rigging: the "fixed lines", like the long netish setting on the sides going up to the masts. 1123Please respect copyright.PENANAb6AFl1rhEg
Those were made by two different kinds of lines:1123Please respect copyright.PENANAVaZOtwJykf
- Shrouds: were the vertical lines, running up and down.1123Please respect copyright.PENANAusWabpPDio
- Ratlines: were the horizontal lines from shroud to shroud, that sailors used as steps to climb up and down the masts.
*Running rigging: the lines sailors loosened or pulled to furl/unfurl sails, drop/weigh the anchor, etc.
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Sharpshooters: snipers that took posts at the tops or on the yardarms.
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Taffrail: the tall gunwale around the stern.
Top: the platform for watching located right above the first yardarm of the masts from bottom up. They were identified with the name of the mast, e.g. foretop. Watchers used it to keep an eye on the sea around, and shooters used it during battle.
Transom: the flat outboard stern structure of a ship from keel to deck. Meaning the bulk with the windows and nice carvings, where the name of the ship was painted.
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Underway: in motion, having way on. Not at dock, or anchored or aground.
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Wake: waves emanating from a vessel as it passes through the water. The track of disturbed water left behind by a moving ship. So if someone is following on your wake, you're being chased, mate.
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Yard or yardarms: the long horizontal beams across the masts from where the sails hung. They were called depending on the sail hanging from it. E.g. topsail yard.
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**The Wind and the Ships**
When talking about the wind to sail, you have two sides:
*The side the wind blows from ---> WINWARD1123Please respect copyright.PENANA9kw185brrd
*The side the wind blows toward ---> LEEWARD1123Please respect copyright.PENANAgW5fSCGReG
They're not a particular, fixed direction like North and South. They work like left and right: they depend on a reference that can change at every instance.
E.g.: The Lesser Antilles, the arch of little islands between Puerto Rico and Trinidad y Tobago.1123Please respect copyright.PENANASvOGG3Elw4
On the Caribbean Sea you have the Trade Winds, blowing constantly from Africa across the Atlantic Ocean and into the Caribbean from the east-southeast.1123Please respect copyright.PENANARQuKps71DQ
So the Windward Islands are the southeastern islands of this group.1123Please respect copyright.PENANAS8FsNhcLw9
And the Leeward Islands are the northern islands --the Virgin Islands.1123Please respect copyright.PENANAaKyrRCOVnE
Why? Because the Trade Winds reach the Windward Islands firts and blow toward the Leeward Islands.
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The side of the ship, or a house or a rock or whatever, exposed to the way the wind blows from is called WEATHER.1123Please respect copyright.PENANAqiDcTjnYwb
The side of something on the opposite side from where the wind blows is called LEE.
If you want to order a move on any of these directions, you add an A before the side you want to turn to. 1123Please respect copyright.PENANAGxc0rNuS0m
E.g.: You're sailing North with wind blowing from the East.1123Please respect copyright.PENANAEBbG7iJVc4
East is your windward and West is our leeward.1123Please respect copyright.PENANAsC6lrooM8Y
So if you wanna order the pilot to turn West, you're gonna order him to "turn alee."1123Please respect copyright.PENANA1reQUfJ7aD
And if you wanna tell him to turn East, you're gonna order him to "turn aweather."1123Please respect copyright.PENANA98L5opZR56
I know it sounds stupid to say "alee" instead of "West". But this is thought to be used when the wind doesn't blow from one clean, straight direction. Alee is always shorter than west-by-southwest, right?
Helm's alee!
It's a warning to let the sailors know the ship is about to make a sharp turn into the wind, or aweather.1123Please respect copyright.PENANAtWXIEbexg0
It also means, "Hey, guys, hold tight 'casue we're gonna teach those Fast & Furious pansies what veering really means."
The Weather Gauge
All this windward and leeward thing brings us to something crucial in naval battles: the weather gauge—or gage.
Long, long, long story short, it was having the best wind during a confrontation against another ship.
Because tailwinds may not come around at sea when you need them most, sometimes you sailed with a side wind in some given angle that allowed your sails to pack it in and move the ship forward.
So when you were to engage in a battle with another ship, and the wind blew even a little from a side, the one with the weather gauge had the upper hand. This meant placing your ship between the wind and the other ship. 1123Please respect copyright.PENANAPHu8mvpj6p
Like, you're sailing North with wind from the southeast. Then you'd try to be east or southeast of the other ship. This could even come to a point, when the ships were really close to each other, in which the ship with the weather gauge blocked most of the wind the other ship was getting, depriving it of any way to maneuver and slowing it down.
It also affected the cannon fire of your ship.
For example, the wind made the ships lean alee, right? This way, the shots fired from the weather side were shot into the wind/upwind/against the wind and they would fly aiming higher, but they'd lose speed faster, so the effective range was shorter. And the shots fired from the lee side were fired downwind, so they would fly aiming down, but faster and further.
Meaning that if you had the weather gauge, it'd be easier for you to shoot the waterline of the other ship —lower than the height of your cannons from the water. But the other ship, if close enough, could hit your masts.
Darn, I love this crap! It's fascinating!
Tacking/beating
Okay, this is gonna take another while, so bear with me —that's a pun you'll get by the end of this section. And you'll find a lot of new vocabulary.
When travelling on sailing ships, you depend 100% on the wind, right? So what happened if you wanted to go against it? Like, you need to go from A to B, but the wind is blowing from B to A?1123Please respect copyright.PENANAwr1DJUNR20
Answer: you tacked.
Sailing ships couldn't move straight into (against) the wind, so they moved in a zigzag, from side to side crossing before the wind, to load it from the side and be able to move forward. Like this:
Here you can also see the way sails must be trimmed (oriented) to get wind on each tack.
Every zig and every zag is called tack.
The moment of ending one tack and starting the next is called "coming about", so the sailors needed to get "ready about". This maneuver, simple as it seems, needed a lot of attention and coordination to trim the sails in the right angle and in the right order. They couldn't be turned all at the same time, or the ship would end upwind (bow facing straight into the wind) and would be left in the irons (incapable of maneuvering due to contrary wind).
So the bosun would shout out the instructions in the correct order, and the sailors would follow them down to the letter right when they were told to, while the pilot steered the helm.
You could go in long or short tacks.
Shorter tacks bring the bow close to the wind, or close hauled. It's faster than long tacks, but it also requires more sailsmanship (skill to sail).
Ha! I managed to throw in a lot of vocabulary! :D
Bear: this verb describes actions on a ship in relation to another ship or the wind.
Bear away: sail away from the wind —as in moving the bow away from the windward (the direction the wind blows from).1123Please respect copyright.PENANAqpZin5HAoQ
Bear off: the same as bear away. OR turning the ship to avoid a collision.1123Please respect copyright.PENANAnMdy5rDoJ7
Bear down: head toward and close on another ship.1123Please respect copyright.PENANAApuUsNQtsm
Bear up: change direction toward the wind.
As she/it bears: as another ship, headland or whatever passes by the side or across the bow of your ship. This was used mostly as a command for gunners. "Fire as she bears" means "Fire your cannon when you see the other ship sails by your gunport."
Run with the wind/sail downwind: sailing with the wind on your tail/stern (blowing from behind your ship).
Wind across the beam: when the wind blows from the side right across the waist --the middle-- of the ship, on a 90º angle with the line from bow to stern.
Full and by: making best speed to weather by keeping the sails full.
Put about: turning sails and sailing in the opposite direction.
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