To: franksolich
The Vikings must not have been as good ship-builders as the English, if this boat is so fragile that vaccuuming it causes harm. One recalls a few years the English excavated a boat from the reign of Henry VIII, where it had laid in the bottom of the water for hundreds of years, and it was still reasonably intact. Not really fair. A viking longboat would be MUCH older than the reign of Henry VIII.
To: ModelBreaker
You are right, sir; the English ship would be only half as old, or even less than that--there was a cerebral gap while I typed the comments (sometimes the fingers type faster than the brain thinks).
So I apologetically take that part back.
9 posted on
02/25/2005 12:42:19 PM PST by
franksolich
(ski jumping flop)
To: ModelBreaker
Not really fair. A viking longboat would be MUCH older than the reign of Henry VIII.Not only that, but it is like comparing a DE to a BB (destroyer escort to a battleship). One light, built for speed and manuverability; the other heavy, built to take and deliver punishment.
15 posted on
02/25/2005 12:48:37 PM PST by
JimRed
("Hey, hey, Teddy K., how many girls did you drown today?")
To: ModelBreaker
If you've ever seen them, they are so low to the water that it makes you wonder how they ever made it across the ocean. I saw the Hjemkomst (spelling?) when it traveled over from the US to Norway around 1982 or 3 and it was amazing. It was only about two feet high above the surface of the water.
113 posted on
02/27/2005 3:34:13 PM PST by
Marysecretary
(Thank you, Lord, for FOUR MORE YEARS!!!)
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