string nWe was forced to put into the ice for shelter - that is, sir, into a string of loose runnin' ice, about three or four miles off the shore.Used I and SupUsed I3Used Istring of ice, string of seal
slip vAs soon as slain, the seals are flensed, and the blubber and skins of five or six are made i...
run vThe great object is when ice hunting masters come up with old seals on loose ice to keep by...
run v[ice] running the shore We kept the boat as far to the windward as the wind would let us, ...
string nThere were now strings of slob ice reaching across the bay and pans of ice everywhere.stri...
string nYou go up on the hill, and you'll see a great big white string of ice--snow slob on the ou...
string nStream/Strip/ String [ice] long narrow area of pack-ice/drift ice, about half a mile or l...
string nThe Bay was full of strings of ice and there was fog about. But the wind was fair. But s...
string nA string of seals sixty miles long had passed south-east the day before, just a few mile...
string nThe mother seals in their quest after bait for a living always prefer to fish in open water...
string nAbout 1760 a French seal-fisher, wintering on the northern tip of Newfoundland, wrote of s...
running vbl nThe Northern Newfoundlanders often run great risks in seal hunting. They walk out o...
string n... there are no less than 17 terms [for ice and ice conditions] that I found in common use...
sealing vbl n...if 'twas the ice, you know, was in, you...you'd walk off... from the land, you kn...
string nBut hoods are always to seaward of harps. This entails a crossing over of the "strings" of...
tow vIf a man [sealer] fell through the ice, as he often did, he could usually get out with the he...
slip vAs soon as slain, the seals are flensed, and the blubber and skins of five or six are made i...
run vThe great object is when ice hunting masters come up with old seals on loose ice to keep by...
run v[ice] running the shore We kept the boat as far to the windward as the wind would let us, ...
string nThere were now strings of slob ice reaching across the bay and pans of ice everywhere.stri...
string nYou go up on the hill, and you'll see a great big white string of ice--snow slob on the ou...
string nStream/Strip/ String [ice] long narrow area of pack-ice/drift ice, about half a mile or l...
string nThe Bay was full of strings of ice and there was fog about. But the wind was fair. But s...
string nA string of seals sixty miles long had passed south-east the day before, just a few mile...
string nThe mother seals in their quest after bait for a living always prefer to fish in open water...
string nAbout 1760 a French seal-fisher, wintering on the northern tip of Newfoundland, wrote of s...
running vbl nThe Northern Newfoundlanders often run great risks in seal hunting. They walk out o...
string n... there are no less than 17 terms [for ice and ice conditions] that I found in common use...
sealing vbl n...if 'twas the ice, you know, was in, you...you'd walk off... from the land, you kn...
string nBut hoods are always to seaward of harps. This entails a crossing over of the "strings" of...
tow vIf a man [sealer] fell through the ice, as he often did, he could usually get out with the he...
slip vAs soon as slain, the seals are flensed, and the blubber and skins of five or six are made i...
run vThe great object is when ice hunting masters come up with old seals on loose ice to keep by...
run v[ice] running the shore We kept the boat as far to the windward as the wind would let us, ...