Francis Liardet: Professional Recollections on Points
of Seamanship, Discipline, &c., 1849.
Page 312:
Every ship should be her own dock-yard, as much as possible.
There are many officers who so manage the resources under their command while
at sea, that on the arrival of their ships in port (excepting they have met
with accidents from gales of wind, &c.,) seldom require anything from the
dock-yard beyond their stores to complete, or perhaps a spar, or something in
the small way, which they make themselves, therefore, after have completed
their provisions, water, &c., they are ready for sea, if required immediately.
Perhaps two vessels may have been cruising together, and gone as near as
possible over the same ground, and encountered the same weather, still, one
ship will have a long string of defects, and the other will have almost
nothing to be done by the dockyard; and this arises in a great measure from
every little defect being made good as it occurs, in one ship, and in the
other, being left to be done by the dock-yard. If a ship of war do not meet
with serious casualties, her artificers are generally sufficiently to keep her
in a complete state of efficiency, without having recourse to the dock-yard
beyond completing her stores at stated periods. On many foreign stations, the
vessels employed on those stations have nothing but a store-house to supply
their wants from, still, generally speaking, those vessels do nearly as well
as if they continually had a dock-yard under their lee; yet many of those
ships which manage very well without continually having recourse to a
dock-yard, would soon be full of wants if they had one at hand. When it is
generally known how much vessels do for themselves on stations where there are
no dock-yards -- and when it is considered that stations wanting this
accommodation are generally the most distant ones, and in consequence of this
increased distance, that they are generally much longer from England, or any
dock-yard, it shows plainly what can be done with the resources of a
ship-of-war. If the carpenter is on the alert, a ship will seldom require a
general caulking, as he will continually be on the look out for soft seams,
&c. If the defects about the ships and boats are many good as soon as they
occur, much valuable time will be saved; as, if this is not done, the
carpenters are too often employed about trifles, or even sometimes, things not
connected with the ship. From care and attention in some ships during bad
weather, hardly a rope will be cafed, while in other ships, where the same
care and precaution have not been taken, much injury will often be done to the
standing and running rigging for the want of attention to chafes, &c.; and
these chafes will frequently extend themselves to the sails, more particularly
to the courses when reefed or furled, from pressing against the lower stays.
When a suit of sails have been much worn, endeavour, if possible, to finish
wearing them out during the fine-weather season. Sails should be repaired
immediately after any accident, as upon the principal sails of a ship, in
blowing weather, depends her very safety: and it is generally very bad
management to begin to repair sails when they are actually wanted. These
cannot be a doubt that the seamanlike way of furling topsails in harbour is,
first to take in two good reefs, and then furl the sails; this gives you snug
canvass to make sail from at once, and divides the sails more equally on the
yards when furled; but when you have much exercise of sail-furling, it would
be well to overhaul the topsails before going to sea, as between the second
and third reefs the topsails are often much worn than any other part, from
this practice, and consequently often split about that part of the sail. Some
good seamen are of opinion, that if the topsails were made of stouter canvass
from a little above the fourth reef, throughout the lower part of the sails,
that it would make them better able to encounter gales of wind. What I wish to
express by every ship being her own dock-yard is, that nothing can require
more continual attention than a ship, and where that attention is paid,
general repairs of every kind are very much diminished.
Francis Liardet: Professional Recollections on Points
of Seamanship, Discipline, &c.
William Woodward, Portsea, 1849. 8vo, frontisp.,
(6), x, 319 pp, 1 col. plate of signals.
Transcribed by
Lars Bruzelius
Sjöhistoriska Samfundet | The Maritime History Virtual Archives.
Copyright © 1998 Lars Bruzelius.