weatheted. . . [the vessel] could have come into the harbour very easily; but hauling her wind, she weatheted the Gannets, and stood out to sea again . . .PRINTED ITEM W.J.KIRWIN JAN 1973JH JAN 1973Not usedNot usedWithdraw
mooring. . . the inner mooring of the old net being parted, the brought it home, fixed another moor...
ragged aRagged harbour.PRINTED ITEM DNE-citW. J. KIRWIN AUG 1970JH AUG 1970Used I and S...
fresh avAt day-light we hauled the nets, and had two spring fish and a slink: we afterwards tighten...
getThe wind soon after getting up, kept continually increasing, till we had so much, that we th...
victual-fishThis morning we got the brig up to the salmon-post, moored her with the kedge anchor an...
bendOfficer Gillis then seized the schooner and conveyed her back to Codroy, where he landed her ca...
wing-and-wingIt was a beautiful evening as the schooner dropped out of the harbor wing and wing.PRI...
sailThe next day...we unloaded the boat, unbent the sails, put them in the sail loft, moored the b...
served[the vessel] was in the river about half a mile below, but could not come any higher till the...
NewfoundlanderHere I learned that great numbers of vessels, particularly Newfoundlanders, had been...
sticksup with the sails and run for Newfoundland waters with all speed, though we risked ripping th...
whiting nHaving filled up the boat with whitings, pryor-poles and killick-rods, at high water we sa...
gutOn her [boat's] disappearance into the gloomy gut [difficulties sprang up] . . .PRINTED ITEM W...
she broke. . . we found a bridge of ice across Huntingdon Harbour, . . we attempted to launch one o...
barredThe harbour is barred, and can only be entered at high tide. [Garnish]PRINTED ITEM DNE-cit...
mooring. . . the inner mooring of the old net being parted, the brought it home, fixed another moor...
ragged aRagged harbour.PRINTED ITEM DNE-citW. J. KIRWIN AUG 1970JH AUG 1970Used I and S...
fresh avAt day-light we hauled the nets, and had two spring fish and a slink: we afterwards tighten...
getThe wind soon after getting up, kept continually increasing, till we had so much, that we th...
victual-fishThis morning we got the brig up to the salmon-post, moored her with the kedge anchor an...
bendOfficer Gillis then seized the schooner and conveyed her back to Codroy, where he landed her ca...
wing-and-wingIt was a beautiful evening as the schooner dropped out of the harbor wing and wing.PRI...
sailThe next day...we unloaded the boat, unbent the sails, put them in the sail loft, moored the b...
served[the vessel] was in the river about half a mile below, but could not come any higher till the...
NewfoundlanderHere I learned that great numbers of vessels, particularly Newfoundlanders, had been...
sticksup with the sails and run for Newfoundland waters with all speed, though we risked ripping th...
whiting nHaving filled up the boat with whitings, pryor-poles and killick-rods, at high water we sa...
gutOn her [boat's] disappearance into the gloomy gut [difficulties sprang up] . . .PRINTED ITEM W...
she broke. . . we found a bridge of ice across Huntingdon Harbour, . . we attempted to launch one o...
barredThe harbour is barred, and can only be entered at high tide. [Garnish]PRINTED ITEM DNE-cit...
mooring. . . the inner mooring of the old net being parted, the brought it home, fixed another moor...
ragged aRagged harbour.PRINTED ITEM DNE-citW. J. KIRWIN AUG 1970JH AUG 1970Used I and S...
fresh avAt day-light we hauled the nets, and had two spring fish and a slink: we afterwards tighten...