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IN HISTORY'S WAKE : REPLICA OF VIKING SHIP TO RETRACE LEIF ERICSSON'S TRIP TO AMERICA.


Byline: Jerry Harkavy Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
 

Plank by plank and rivet rivet, headed metal pin or bolt whose shaft is passed through holes in two or more pieces of metal, wood, plastic, or other material in order to unite them by forming the plain end into a second head.  by rivet, boat builders Boat Builders redirects here. That is also the name of a 1938 Disney cartoon, shown before a presentation of Meet The Robinsons. Fishing boats
  • Mecanav Tunisia Boatyard http://www.mecanav.com/
  • Rybovich http://www.rybovich.
 on the Maine coast are completing a 54-foot Viking ship Viking ship is a collective term for ships used during the Viking Age (800–1100) in Northern Europe. The ships are normally divided into classes based on size and function: Types of Ship
Longship
:
Main article: Longship
 that will re-create a 1,000-year-old adventure.

By late April, if all goes as planned, they will have finished an exact replica of a knarr, the type of merchant vessel
For water transport in general, see Ship transport.
A merchant ship is one that transports cargo and passengers during peace time. During wars, the same ships are auxiliaries to the navies of their respective countries, and are called upon to deliver
 used by explorer Leif Ericsson Leif Ericsson (lēf ĕr`ĭksən), Old Norse Leifr Eiriksson, fl. A.D. 999–1000, Norse discoverer of America, b. probably in Iceland; son of Eric the Red.  when he established what is believed by many to be the first contact between Europe and North America.

Following sea trials, the square-rigged boat will be taken to Greenland, where a 12-member crew will attempt to retrace Ericsson's voyage, relying as he did on only the sun and stars for navigation.

Viking Voyage 1000 is the brainchild of W. Hodding Carter, a West Virginia writer whose fascination with the exploits of Viking adventurers dates from books he read during childhood.

``This is a way to indulge these fantasies,'' Carter said. ``It's a way of capturing what was a pivotal moment in history. By going out there and doing it, I get the chance to experience what it really was like.''

This isn't the first such adventure for Carter, the 34-year-old son of former State Department spokesman Hodding Carter, a familiar face to TV viewers during the 1980 Iran hostage crisis Iran hostage crisis, in U.S. history, events following the seizure of the American embassy in Tehran by Iranian students on Nov. 4, 1979. The overthrow of Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlevi of Iran by an Islamic revolutionary government earlier in the year had led to a .

The younger Carter's earlier attempt to retrace the steps of two land-based American explorers provided the basis for his humorous book, ``Westward Whoa! In the Wake of Lewis and Clark.''

Ship takes shape

Construction of the open-deck boat, built from four varieties of wood held together with iron rivets, began in October at Robert Stevens' boat yard on Hermit Island.

Amid piles of sawdust and the reek of pine tar pine tar
n.
A viscous or semisolid brown-to-black substance produced by distillation of pine wood and used as an expectorant and antiseptic.
, the boat is taking shape. Stevens and a half-dozen builders are racing to meet a deadline for an April 23 launch so the vessel can complete sea trials and begin its 1,800-mile journey in early July.

After cutting the keel and stems from Maine-grown oak, the builders shaped 20-foot planks of Carolina pine, some weighing more than 200 pounds. The planks are heated for up to five hours in a jerry-built outdoor steamer so they can be bent and clamped onto the frame.

Timing is essential: The crew only has a two-month window from the breakup of the ice pack that now covers Ericsson's route until the onset of hurricane season.

Departing from the site in southwestern Greenland where the explorer's father, Eric the Red Eric the Red, fl. 10th cent., Norse chieftain, discoverer and colonizer of Greenland. He left (c.950) Norway with his exiled father and settled in Iceland. A feud resulting in manslaughter led to his banishment (c.981) from Iceland for three years. He sailed c. , had a farm, the knarr will sail about 600 miles up the Greenland coast before crossing the Davis Strait to Baffin Island.

The boat will continue down the Baffin Island coast and on to Labrador before its final destination, L'Anse aux Meadows L'Anse aux Meadows

Site on the northern tip of Newfoundland of the first known European settlements in the New World. Norse settlers may have established as many as three settlements there near the end of the 10th century.
, on the northern tip of Newfoundland. It was there in about the year 1000, historians say, that Ericsson established the settlement he called Vinland because of the area's wild grapes.

Eventually, the settlement was abandoned and Ericsson's accomplishment remains overshadowed by Columbus' voyage 500 years later.

`Gentler type of Vikings'

The trip is expected to take six to eight weeks and will include one- or two-day stops along the shore every other day or so. Besides offering a respite from the boat's cramped conditions, the visits will let the crew meet with Greenlanders and Canadian Inuits and to forage for provisions, as did the Vikings earlier.

Unlike the original Vikings, however, those on Carter's boat will neither loot nor pillage PILLAGE. The taking by violence of private property by a victorious army from the citizens or subjects of the enemy. This, in modern times, is seldom allowed, and then, only when authorized by the commander or chief officer, at the place where the pillage is committed. . ``We're replicating the much gentler type of Viking, so we will be begging for our food from the kindly Inuit,'' he said.

Although Carter is leading the trip, he picked Outward Bound instructor Terry Moore as the boat's captain and will defer to him on sailing and safety matters. The boat will have a radio, compasses, a sextant sextant, instrument for measuring the altitude of the sun or another celestial body; such measurements can then be used to determine the observer's geographical position or for other navigational, surveying, or astronomical applications.  and a global positioning satellite system, all to be used only in an emergency.

The wind in the square canvas sail will propel the boat in open water, but crew members will man the six oaring stations when it becomes necessary to maneuver close to shore.

Discussions with boat builders led Carter to Stevens, whose shop works only in wood and focuses more on repairs than on new construction.

``I usually build odd boats for odd people - anything from tiny sailing canoes to Chesapeake Bay-style powerboats,'' said Stevens, 41, who will participate in the voyage as a member of the crew.

Last fall, Stevens and Carter spent 10 days in Scandinavia, where they studied the remains of sunken Viking ships at a Danish museum and returned with plans for their own knarr.

The cost of the project, which Carter puts in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, is being underwritten by Lands' End, the Wisconsin mail-order clothing company that got its start by selling foul-weather gear to recreational sailors.

Lands' End will chronicle the adventure in its catalogs. Carter plans to write a book about it while New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 photographer Russell Kaye will be taking photos for another book.

The boat itself will remain at the spot of Ericsson's landfall land·fall  
n.
1. The act or an instance of sighting or reaching land after a voyage or flight.

2. The land sighted or reached after a voyage or flight.
. Carter said his New Vinland Foundation, which is raising money for the trip, intends to donate the vessel to a park at L'Anse aux Meadows in hopes of drumming up interest in the historic site.

CAPTION(S):

Photo

Photo: Lee Huston, right, works to re-create a Viking ship at a boat yard in Phippsburg, Maine.

Associated Press
COPYRIGHT 1997 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Mar 16, 1997
Words:892
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