Furtună în Marea Labradorului

Furtună în Marea Labradorului



8 minute cu uimitoarea navă vikingă Draken. Acesta este filmul pe care l-am prezentat în cortul nostru expozițional despre festivalurile din jurul Marilor Lacuri, filmat între Groenlanda și Newfoundland la traversarea Oceanului Atlantic de Nord.

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39 thoughts on “Furtună în Marea Labradorului

  1. It's amazing to think that once upon a time people used to travel in such ships without all this protective equipment and modern clothing…

  2. That would have been an awesome and terrifying experience for them. Sailing a cross the Atlantic ocean and heading towards the new world.

  3. I've always been astounded at the clinkerbilt ships and their ability to flex over the waves. Built for the great North Sea there was no place they could not go.

  4. This makes you wonder how the men long ago coped with the storms, wave hight and more primitive boats. Not forgetting the clothes they wore.
    Definitely hardened men back in the day.
    As a Scotsman I'd always thought about the Celts and Vikings, how they survived in the clothing and weather back then.
    Definitely a different breed back then. What has happened to us 🤔

  5. I think this would be super fun, for about a day or two. Then I’d probably get tired of being cold 24/7 and not being able to really dry off

  6. Det er en stor glæde at se Draken i Havvejr.Jeg håber erfarigerne var som ventet. Man får virkelig lyst at male et billede.
    Hilsen Sune Villum-Nielsen

  7. The crew look both miserable and worried at the same time!! Don't blame them! You wouldn't catch me dead crossing the North Atlantic in that!!

  8. Very nice sail but I think there is slaight difference with viking ship. But this is not the exact reconstruction. Supposedly, they had open board. Boards of viking ships were layed not one by one as were not so perfectly cut. How they could face to ocean with something like this? Or were these boats more simmilar to this one, and had closed cabin and closed space under feet?

  9. I want to being back to Life the ancient route to Vinland and make a route for fruits, vegetables, animals, fish and tourism trade from New Burnswick to all Europe💞💞✨❤️❤️ thank you

  10. Such beautiful blue water! I cannot imagine being off shore, with no land insight, in this pitching, rolling, no bilge pump, no auto bailers .. Grew up sailing sloop rigged keel boats. Modern. When he says tacking, in that square rigged ancient mariner, that is like 1/2 walking speed. Only the waves give an illusion of travel. I wonder, is this boat ballested like latter square rigged boats? Is it a cemterboard type to control drift while "she beats to windward"? Glorious Endeavour, God Bless.

  11. It looks so majestic when it's sailing. It's also quite imposing and I can see why the rest of Europe was struck with fear whenever these vessels were spotted off the coast. It makes for a truly intimidating sight.

  12. Wie es sich Aufbäumt, das Wellen Ross, ich spüre das Salzwasser, in meinen Augen, es sind meine Tränen, bei diesen Bildern, was müssen das für Menschen gewesen sein, es berührt mich sehr, starke Menschen, nicht degenerierte, die von degenerierten geführt werden. Lg

  13. I didn't venture as far North as the Labrador sea nor did venture out to sea on a Draken Viking Ship. My ship was a 414 foot long U.S. Navy FFG and we crossed the Atlantic in the winter and it was rough every day. Can't imagine doing it in a Draken, especially if you're not sure where you might be going.

  14. I kind of thought the point of those viking square riggers was to sheet it them out a bit more so the sail actually formed a bit of a wing which would lift the boat up giving it a good bit more speed making it skip across the top of the waves. The way you all had it sheeted in this video would tend to push the ship deeper into the water increasing wetted surface and perhaps even heeling force.

  15. This really illustrates to me that in those times the people were the machine. It must be incredibly intoxicating to be part of a crew working together as a machine to accomplish the incredible feat of crossing the Atlantic.

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