| | Re: What class is my ship? Bruce Schlickbernd
| | | (...) It depends on the rigging of the ship and whose definitions you want to use. A three-masted square-rigged ship is a "ship". Cannon aren't really proportional on Lego vessels, so it's kind of hard to use them in the definition. Go here: (URL) (...) (25 years ago, 10-Mar-00, to lugnet.pirates)
| | | | | | | | Re: What class is my ship? Lindsay Frederick Braun
| | | | | (...) Arrr. Welcome to Pirates. Here's yer parrot and yer peg leg... (...) I always loved doing that too. IIRC, later sailing ships did include such lamps--held a ways away from the mast itself, naturally, and enclosed as fully as possible--to be (...) (25 years ago, 10-Mar-00, to lugnet.pirates)
| | | | | | | | | | | | Re: What class is my ship? Bruce Schlickbernd
| | | | | (...) Grog! Where be the grog? The parrot I be having says nuthin' what one would call nautical yet. But he sez, "Nyuk, nyuk, nyuk!" One has to be careful what ones sez in front o' a clever parrot. (and I only said it once!) (...) It (...) (...) (25 years ago, 10-Mar-00, to lugnet.pirates)
| | | | | | |