Câștigă o grămadă de bani dintr-o barcă! Și Vocabularul Barcă Explained – Ep 256 – Lady K Sailing

Câștigă o grămadă de bani dintr-o barcă!  Și Vocabularul Barcă Explained - Ep 256 - Lady K Sailing



Cum să câștigi bani lucrând de pe o barcă în timp ce navighezi este o întrebare MARE – și nu, nu ne referim la un canal YouTube. Există modalități de a câștiga bani trăind pe o barcă, de a lucra de la distanță de oriunde în lume și de companii care te vor angaja știind foarte bine că locuiești la bord. Puteți lucra de oriunde atâta timp cât aveți o conexiune la internet și aveți anumite cunoștințe de împărtășit lumii – și aveți disciplina de a lucra de la distanță. Ai nevoie de un consult? Faceți clic aici pentru a trimite un mesaj: https://ladyksailing.com/consults/ Vrei să ajuți să sprijiniți Lady K Sailing? Faceți clic aici pentru a deveni Patron: http://www.patreon.com/ladyksailing Sau aici pentru a face o donație unică: http://www.ladyksailing.com/team-k Urmărește-l pe Lady K pe Facebook: https:// www.facebook.com/ladyksailing sau Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ladyksailing/

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25 thoughts on “Câștigă o grămadă de bani dintr-o barcă! Și Vocabularul Barcă Explained – Ep 256 – Lady K Sailing

  1. I have some slightly different origins to some of the terms but overall quite informative. My late father in law told me son of a gun meant your mother was a prostitute who had sex bent over a cannon. There really doesn't seem relationship between POSH and "port out starboard home" but it is a very popular origin story, or so the Oxford Dictionary says. Keep it up…and get back on the water.

  2. Ahoy ! We might be three sheets to the wind here having scraped the bottom of the rum barrel but Blimey do we have some scuttlebutt for you ! Now some might just keel over at the suggestion , and not be able to fathom dealing with such a loose cannon, but batten down the hatches and have another cup of joe ! You see thar be a real son of a gun over on Chasing Latitudes who constantly shows his true colors ! but we think it be a False Flag and he is really a First Rate sort ! Not over bearing at all ! While Shanghaied as we may be , we turn a blind eye to his occasional shangaans as he is afterall a real son of a gun ! So pIPE dOWN all ye haters as we are suggesting a long shot be taken for a collaboration between ye ! Please don't be taken aback as he may be down in the doldrums of late having swallowed a bit of flotsam seemingly from all the Big Wigs of the YouTube sailing community ! Under the Weather perhaps ? Well we present landlubbers are a bit pooped ourselves but even keeled as we be have decided that while working hand over fist on our own refit to toe the line , dip into our slush fund for more Holiday grog and raise as glass to All Sailors far & away ! Bottoms Up ! Happy Holidays ! Fairs Winds and Following Seas !

  3. The English language, as spoken in the UK, is riddled with nautical terms.
    Needless to say, none of them are coming to me at the moment, but I know a dozen or more, that are just everyday, off hand terms, that everyone knows, but no one thinks about where they came from.
    It sad really, the UK has forgotten it's maritime past, and now boating is seen as upper class and, indeed, posh.

    Incidentally, I recently completed my RYA Dayskipper theory, a most excellent course for learning the theoretical side of sailing.
    I highly recommend it, it's been of so much value to me, even though I'm not yet sailing.
    Some of it is relevant, even on a Kayak out on the sea.

  4. Touch and go comes from the river Thames trading boats as they tacked upwind, they wanted to reduce the number of tacks, so they would go as far to the bank of the river as possible, to touch the bank before going about.

  5. That was an EXCELLENT episode! Fantastic! So enjoyable. Would love more – especially where "Freeze the balls off a brass monkey" originates. (I refuse to apologize for my potty-brain. 😉 )

  6. So cold it would Freeze the balls off a brass monkey.
    Iron Cannon balls were stored on a brass rack/grid (monkey). brass has a higher thermal expansion coefficient than iron. When it was really cold the gaps in the rack were larger than the iron balls which would fall through the rack.

  7. Good episode. There are so many. I finally learned why they call it starboard and poopdeck. Some other good ones are “Three sheets to the wind” and the history of getting “Shanghaied”

  8. 'Cheers big ears'. Mugs on tall ships had 2 loop handles, referred to as t ears, on either side so u could grab then quickly as they slid across t table, regardless of where t handle was located. The mugs started showing up at taverns where honey brews/ales became t drunkards vessel and they shouted…cheers big ears 🍻

  9. 0:00: 🚤 Learn how to make money while living on a boat by utilizing existing skills or working remotely, and also explore boat vocabulary.
    4:16: ⚓ The video discusses the origin of nautical terms and phrases, such as starboard, port, and showing one's true colors.
    8:11: 🚢 The video discusses the historical origins of nautical terms like 'toilet paper' and 'poop deck'.
    12:22: ⚓ The video discusses the historical rating system of British naval ships, the origins of nautical terms, and the use of sails in sailing competitions.
    16:35: 🚢 The video discusses the origins of various terms and phrases related to naval history and culture.
    Learn more at TammyAIsite

  10. blasted. In whaling days, if the carcis of a whale was left in the water too long, gas in the body would cause it to swell and burst open. it was known as a "blasted whale"

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