We have an Anglo Saxon boat being reconstructed in Woodbridge in suffork . It is a replica of the one that the local Anglo Saxon king was buried in on the shore at Sutton hoo. All the planks are hand cut from single tree trunks . They identify the tree to a specific plank . All work is hand crafted . Incredible venture ………
There is literally one example of a guy using ravens to ditect land and contemporary people thought it was bizarre enough for it to earn him the nickname Hrafnaflóki (Raven Floki) so it would hardly seem like a common method.
Actually she isn't an open ship as she has quite solid deck, right? As as she is decked, why should you bail water out? Water may get out itself through the scuppers, right?
No it doesn't, it has a steering oar like the real longships did. It does however have modern navigation and steering installed because otherwise it wouldn't be legal to take people out across the ocean with it.
@@r3gr3tfulfly3r5 What a pointless argument lmao. They built it completely authentically; but after it was done they had to fit modern equipment on it in order to sail. If they didn't it'd just be stuck docked to a museum somewhere. Would that be better?
@@r3gr3tfulfly3r5 My argument is invalid? Do you even understand what my argument here is lmao? Obviously it can sail without technological assistance; nobody is claiming otherwise. They just wouldn't be allowed to because of modern safety regulations. It would sure make for a great story if they just built it completely authentic then left it sitting in a drydock forever. If the option is to either keep it original and not be allowed to sail; or modify it so they are allowed to take it out on the open seas with a crew, then the choice is pretty easy.
The outside of it might look "authentic" but them electrical gizmos r not authentic, so basically it simply can not be labeled as "exact replica" and that woman said no modern tools were used... To be truly authentic u would legit build it with every single thing that they used in the Viking days , no modern anything
They built it with all the materials and nails, etc as they did 1100 years ago. They used a combination of mostly old and also new tools to build it. Its absolutely authentic. But they put in aditional stuff as a machine.
We have an Anglo Saxon boat being reconstructed in Woodbridge in suffork . It is a replica of the one that the local Anglo Saxon king was buried in on the shore at Sutton hoo. All the planks are hand cut from single tree trunks . They identify the tree to a specific plank . All work is hand crafted . Incredible venture ………
Wow what a wonderful ship, thank you for sharing with the world
Very proud being a direct descendant of ‘the Rus’ or Redmen of the north.’
There is literally one example of a guy using ravens to ditect land and contemporary people thought it was bizarre enough for it to earn him the nickname Hrafnaflóki (Raven Floki) so it would hardly seem like a common method.
Noah used a raven in Genesis 8 to detect land.
@@DaneStolthed In a viking context...
Noah...the first vicking
Nowadays we use a kid with a cellphone. If it starts dancing like a moron, it means it's on tiktok, and you're within WiFi range of land
Absolutely beautiful 👍
4:23 i guess she wasn't told about the hydraulic crane that was used to move big things.
Beautiful
Actually she isn't an open ship as she has quite solid deck, right?
As as she is decked, why should you bail water out? Water may get out itself through the scuppers, right?
Love this , great Achievemt?🇺🇸🇩🇰🇸🇪🇧🇻🌅♥️💜Good steed Vikings
💫
“Viking” is pirate in old Norse ………
This is all fine. But, where is the latrine ?
Shit in a bucket throw the contents overboard keep bucket
Porta potty?
@@thyssenheinel6507 called the head for a reason a hole in front of the ship where you sit shit and piss or shit in a bucket
🤩
It has a 18th century wheel not authentic
No it doesn't, it has a steering oar like the real longships did.
It does however have modern navigation and steering installed because otherwise it wouldn't be legal to take people out across the ocean with it.
@@bobosuda so you admitted that modern ocean laws mandate a steering wheel? It’s not authentic with the steering wheel.
@@r3gr3tfulfly3r5 What a pointless argument lmao. They built it completely authentically; but after it was done they had to fit modern equipment on it in order to sail. If they didn't it'd just be stuck docked to a museum somewhere. Would that be better?
@@bobosuda it sailed 1000 years ago without a modern wheel so it can sail today under the same position therefore your argument is invalid.
@@r3gr3tfulfly3r5 My argument is invalid? Do you even understand what my argument here is lmao?
Obviously it can sail without technological assistance; nobody is claiming otherwise. They just wouldn't be allowed to because of modern safety regulations.
It would sure make for a great story if they just built it completely authentic then left it sitting in a drydock forever. If the option is to either keep it original and not be allowed to sail; or modify it so they are allowed to take it out on the open seas with a crew, then the choice is pretty easy.
The outside of it might look "authentic" but them electrical gizmos r not authentic, so basically it simply can not be labeled as "exact replica" and that woman said no modern tools were used... To be truly authentic u would legit build it with every single thing that they used in the Viking days , no modern anything
They built it with all the materials and nails, etc as they did 1100 years ago. They used a combination of mostly old and also new tools to build it. Its absolutely authentic.
But they put in aditional stuff as a machine.
@@tylerbrock9186 these are things that have to be on board for safety reasons. Some ports don't let you enter without them
Now raid north ombria lol
Basically a big lie, just call it a regular sail boat , no need to lie and say it's an "EXACT REPLICA" and authentic lmfao
"People notice that, they really do"... For a moment I thought I heard Donal Trump speaking...