Sixareen
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The sixareen or sixern ( non, sexæringr; no, seksring meaning "six-oared") is a
traditional fishing boat Traditionally, many different kinds of boats have been used as fishing boats to catch fish in the sea, or on a lake or river. Even today, many traditional fishing boats are still in use. According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Org ...
used around the Shetland Islands. It is a
clinker-built Clinker built (also known as lapstrake) is a method of boat building where the edges of hull planks overlap each other. Where necessary in larger craft, shorter planks can be joined end to end, creating a longer strake or hull plank. The techni ...
boat, evolved as a larger version of the
yoal The yoal, often referred to as the ness yoal, is a clinker-built craft used traditionally in Shetland, Scotland. It is designed primarily for rowing, but also handles well under its traditional square sail when running before the wind or on a broad ...
, when the need arose for crews to fish further from shore. The first of the sixareens were, like the yoal, imported from
Norway Norway, officially the Kingdom of Norway, is a Nordic country in Northern Europe, the mainland territory of which comprises the western and northernmost portion of the Scandinavian Peninsula. The remote Arctic island of Jan Mayen and the ...
in kit form until the mid 19th century, when increasing import duty made it more cost effective to import the raw materials and build the boats in Shetland.


Construction and terminology

The sixareen was so named because she was crewed by six men, each man rowing a single oar, unlike the yoal where three men rowed a pair of oars each. The size of a sixareen was about overall, with a beam of . The boat carried a square sail which was used when the wind was favourable, however in light winds or in a head wind the crew could row for many hours to complete their journey. Fishing trips usually were over three days, with the boats making two trips each week when the weather permitted. As with the yoal, all the parts of a sixareen have names, which are usually found only in the
Shetland dialect Shetland dialect (also variously known as Shetlandic; broad or auld Shetland or Shaetlan; and referred to as Modern Shetlandic Scots (MSS) by some linguists) is a dialect of Insular Scots spoken in Shetland, an archipelago to the north of mai ...
, although many of the names are derived from the
old Norse language Old Norse, Old Nordic, or Old Scandinavian, is a stage of development of North Germanic dialects before their final divergence into separate Nordic languages. Old Norse was spoken by inhabitants of Scandinavia and their overseas settlement ...
. The names of the parts listed here include the English name and where possible, the Norwegian name. There are six separate rooms, or sections in a sixareen: The ''fore head'' where sails and tackle were stored, the ''fore room'', the ''mid room'' where stones for ballast were placed, the ''owsin room'' which was kept clear for ''owsin'' (bailing) out water using an ''owsekerri'', the ''shot room'' where the catch was stowed, and the ''kannie'' where the skipper sat at the helm. The compartments in the boat were separated by ''tafts'' on which the crew sat, ''fiskabrods'' under the tafts which stopped the catch and fishing gear from shifting between rooms, and by ''baands'', the frames to which the boards were fixed. The boards, named from the keel upwards, were the ''boddam runner'', the ''hassen'', the first and second ''swills'', the ''laands'' (four boards), and the ''reebin'', the upper board, inside which the wale or gunwale was fixed. At the bow and stern the boards were fixed to the ''stammerin'' before attaching to the fore and aft stems. The ''reebin'' was additionally strengthened by the breast hook or ''hinny spot'' where it met the ''horn'' at the top of the stem.


History

While the yoal was used for inshore fishing, and seldom ventured more than from land, the sixareen was used to fish up to from Shetland. Because of this, and the unpredictable nature of the weather in northern waters, the loss of boats and lives was high. The worst losses were on 16 July 1832 when 17 boats and 105 men were lost in a severe gale, and again on 21 July 1881 when a sudden and violent summer storm claimed 10 boats and 58 men, mostly from Gloup, in the north of Yell, in what became known as The Gloup Disaster. Although it is not clear when the last sixareens were built for fishing, it is likely to be not much later than the late 1880s, by which time it was seen that larger boats were the way forward for the local fishing industry. Two sixareens were built in the 20th century. In the 1980s Duncan Sandison of
Unst Unst (; sco, Unst; nrn, Ønst) is one of the North Isles of the Shetland Islands, Scotland. It is the northernmost of the inhabited British Isles and is the third-largest island in Shetland after Mainland and Yell. It has an area of . Unst ...
realised that the sixareen was very much a boat of the past, as there were none left in Unst. With the help of a group of volunteers, after 800 hours work, the ''Far Haaf'', a replica sixareen was completed in 1988, but was destroyed by a hurricane which swept the isles in 1992. Another ''Far Haaf'' was built and launched in 1993. It now occupies a special enclosure outside the Unst boat haven. Another sixareen, the ''Vaila Mae'', was built in 2008 for the Shetland Museum in Lerwick, where it can be seen on the water during the summer months.


References


External links


The Haaf Fishing - A scalloway Junior High School project
a downloadable "Resource pack for fishing and the Gloup desaster 1881".


External links



a downloadable "Resource pack for fishing and the Gloup desaster 1881".
Picture Gallery of new Sixareen Building Project in Shetland
{{fisheries and fishing Fishing history of Shetland Types of fishing vessels Transport in Shetland Boat types