pan n,vThe pelts would be collected together on ice pans big enough to keep them safe, and a flag stuck on each pan to mark ownership. The flags has distinctive colours and were also numbered. Each ship'sflags could be told at a considerable distance.PRINTED ITEM DNE-citG.M. Story JUL 1979 JH JUL 1979Used I and SupUsed I and Sup2Used Ipan-ice, pancakes, pan flag, pan
pan n,vYou think of yourself on a little pan of ice, drifting straight out to sea with a strong off...
pan n,vI went aloft again and saw our pan flags flying in great numbers, while the men were very b...
pan n,vThey struck the seals St Patrick's day and then the work began, / With thirteen thousand ...
flag2 nThe pelts would be collected together on ice pans big enough to keep them safe, and a flag ...
pan n,v[The sealers] lace the sculps to their tow-ropes, and being all selected men, each one can ...
pan n,vThe younger ones [seals] are easily killed by a single blow of the gaff; the seal is then sk...
pan n,vEach man then hauls as many as he can manage, usually three, to a spot chosen by the master...
pan n,vBy tomorrow sunrise there would be two hundred men on the ice, broken up into four hunting-...
pan n,vFrom the 18th, [1899] when the wind eased, to the 22nd, the _Neptune_ and the _Newfoundland...
pan n,vA piece of ice of no determined size, but not very large; the large ones are called sheets ...
pan n,vThe ice-floe was two miles or more off the coast; thence it stretched to the horizon - a vas...
pan n,vThe ice, a snowy white, lies in vast fields upon the ocean, carcked in all ways, and broken ...
pan n,vn. 1. A sheet of ice broken away from the main sheet. 2. A collection of seal skins on the i...
pan n,vWe...moved on to another patch of seals. The ship was nearby, picking up the first pan of p...
pan n,vThey are thus met with in vast quantities on the floating fields of ice, a small floating p...
pan n,vYou think of yourself on a little pan of ice, drifting straight out to sea with a strong off...
pan n,vI went aloft again and saw our pan flags flying in great numbers, while the men were very b...
pan n,vThey struck the seals St Patrick's day and then the work began, / With thirteen thousand ...
flag2 nThe pelts would be collected together on ice pans big enough to keep them safe, and a flag ...
pan n,v[The sealers] lace the sculps to their tow-ropes, and being all selected men, each one can ...
pan n,vThe younger ones [seals] are easily killed by a single blow of the gaff; the seal is then sk...
pan n,vEach man then hauls as many as he can manage, usually three, to a spot chosen by the master...
pan n,vBy tomorrow sunrise there would be two hundred men on the ice, broken up into four hunting-...
pan n,vFrom the 18th, [1899] when the wind eased, to the 22nd, the _Neptune_ and the _Newfoundland...
pan n,vA piece of ice of no determined size, but not very large; the large ones are called sheets ...
pan n,vThe ice-floe was two miles or more off the coast; thence it stretched to the horizon - a vas...
pan n,vThe ice, a snowy white, lies in vast fields upon the ocean, carcked in all ways, and broken ...
pan n,vn. 1. A sheet of ice broken away from the main sheet. 2. A collection of seal skins on the i...
pan n,vWe...moved on to another patch of seals. The ship was nearby, picking up the first pan of p...
pan n,vThey are thus met with in vast quantities on the floating fields of ice, a small floating p...
pan n,vYou think of yourself on a little pan of ice, drifting straight out to sea with a strong off...
pan n,vI went aloft again and saw our pan flags flying in great numbers, while the men were very b...
pan n,vThey struck the seals St Patrick's day and then the work began, / With thirteen thousand ...