THE BANK TRAWL LINE COD FISHERY. 173 



come iu sight, the skipper changed the course to north. In an hour or two after this the light 

 appeared on our starboard bow. A very little longer to NW. and we should have missed it entirely. 



DESCRIPTION OF DOEY. The dory uiay fairly be said to be one of the safest forms of small 

 boats. It is a flat-bottomed boat, sharp at the bow, but with the sharp point of the stern trun- 

 cated, arid with very flaring sides. In cross section it is a flat-bottomed letter V. In longitudinal 

 section it is elliptical, sharp pointed iu the bow, and cut square across astern. 



They are a lap-streak boat, provided usually with three seats, and having thole-pins in place of 

 stationary row-locks. To the bow and stern are fastened painters, to be used in retaining the 

 dories by the vessel's side or in securing them on deck. The seats are not fastened in, but are 

 merely laid upon ribbands running round inside the dory and nailed to the ribs, iu order that they 

 can be easily removed when the dories are to be placed on deck "spoon-fashion." In the bottom 

 of the dory is a plug, kept in the dory by a rope. This rope passes through the plug, and is held 

 from slipping by a large bight in its end. It is manifest that this bight is far more than is neces- 

 sary to keep the rope from slipping through the plug. It has another and more important purpose 

 than that. When the dory is overturned iu the sea and her bottom lies upward, the smooth surface 

 presents nothing to which the struggling fishermen can cling. This bight is the only thing project- 

 ing through the bottom of the boat, and while not a very firm support, has doubtless formed the sole 

 dependence of more than one poor fellow. I heard of a narrow escape before this bight was thought 

 of. One dory was overturned in a hard storm ; one of the occupants was at once washed away 

 and drowned; the other managed to force the plug out of the hole, and then continued to hang on 

 all night by putting his fingers into the hole. In the morning he was rescued, his fingers worn to 

 the bone from the chafing. 



SHIP-CHANDLERY. In preparing for a voyage every want must be anticipated and prepared 

 for. Although the fishermen are not very distant from land, yet that land is not the place in which 

 to procure supplies at low cost, or, indeed, at times at any cost. All needs of rigging must be 

 supplied. The halyards and sheets must be strong, the sails looked to and their weak spots exam- 

 ined. Spare anchors, cable, extra blocks, ropes of various sizes, bolts, chains, and all the other 

 hundred things that belong to a vessel must be placed on board. The tool-chest must be looked 

 over, and a good supply of nails, screws, &c., taken on board. The medicine chest must also be 

 overhauled and the medicines ascertained to be present in the proper quantity. 



GEAR FOR FISHING. Besides providing a full set of the various ship chandlery, all the 

 lines, hooks, and other material necessary for constructing trawls must be taken, and a supply 

 of the implements used iu trawling and iu dressing fish. Three kinds of line were used in the 

 construction of the trawl; also hooks, small iron anchors, and buoys for indicating the end of the 

 trawls. Dories, wood for dory plugs, thole pins, thwarts, and spare oars to supply broken ones, 

 hooks and lines of proper size for catching bait if a chance were offered, knives for bait-cutting, 

 dory knives, splitting knives, and throating knives, gaffs, gob sticks and pews, tubs for trawls, 

 dressing tubs, splitting tables, nippers, rollers, powder for the swivel, a horn and a bell for fog, 

 are among the thousand things to be looked to before the vessel's departure. 



SALT AND ICE. For the preservation of the fish a large amount of salt was carried in our 

 case ICO hogsheads stowed away iu the hold, and there being very useful as ballast. This was 

 coarse salt, of the kind known as Trapaui salt. This salt, the skipper explained, was of a better 

 quality than Cadiz salt, which is used somewhat, for he claimed it was coarser and stronger. 



Besides salt, the vessel's outfit also included ice. This is purchased at home by vessels fishing 

 near Gloucester, but the Grand Bankers generally expect to obtain the ice that they will need either 

 at Nova Scotia or Newfoundland, fn the former place we obtained a supply at the rate of $_'.">< 



