Except now all our technology has been given freely to the world and they use it to passively invade us without a declaration of war so we can't even fight back as we're being made extinct.
@@dr.lexwinter8604 I don't know what country you are in, but you better start displaying and wearing your culture pinned to your chest. You know who, is trying to make it illegal in some countries. Olde Norse is classified as racist terrorist by the racist ADL in the USA.
Yeah, he hasn't quite got the technique yet... but that's why he is manning one of the beginner-seats. In the crew at Havhingsten we value learning by doing. Rest assured that he'll be taught before long
I give a thumbs up because the sailing was so hilariously bad. I really had a good laugh. The boat is amazing though! It is really a work of art! Is it still in service? Oh boy, these people have never sailed before. The ship is totally out of control. 5:06 + They pulled their oars in. The oars are part of the steering control system. Oars stay in until the wind, current, course is stable. The steer board can't control the boat by itself. Anyway, hope they got it figured out before making a long voyage! LOL, The boat turned all the way around and they are sailing backwards! LOL. 6:13 Everyone is getting their oars back out. They put the plugs back in the oar wholes, so they are going to take forever unscrewing everything again to get their oars back out. Oh boy. They should not have taken the oars out while underway. The boat looks so awesome though. Whoever built it was very good craftsmen. Did they build it with "traditional" tools, like axes, chisels, hammers, etc? There is only one guy putting heart and muscle into rowing, the guy with the long blonde hair in ponytail. Everyone else is mostly just sitting with their oars in hand, looking around like they never saw water before. What are they staring at with these confused looks on their faces?
Eventualy they did sail it from Denmark to Ireland. www.vikingeskibsmuseet.dk/en/professions/the-boat-collection/sea-stallion-from-glendalough As far as I know it is still moored at the museeum.
@@steenjacobsen1474 I started watching a few of these boat videos and I had no idea how many of them have been made. It is amazing. I would like to sail one from Michigan to Istanbul, like it was done 6k years ago.
@@steenjacobsen1474 We don't know if it was before longships. I am certain that longships existed before 400 BCE. The copper mines that were found on Lake Superior were huge. There are metal tools recovered from the mines too. An entire ship load of copper ingots from the Michigan mine was found sunk in the Mediterranean most likely on its way to the Phoenicians.
@@VidarrKerr If you are refering to the Uluburun shipwreck, I belive that its copper has been analyzed to be from cyprus, turkey and afganistan, not from the great lakes. It is doubtfull if any vessel could have sailed the atlantic ocean during or before the bronze age. A heavy cargo would not help. Longships did not master bluewater sailing until well into the viking age(AD 800+)
Pause it and pay closer attention. You'll see why. Every rower out of sync is a woman, later you see their faces. A couple are too old to be rowing, a couple are shorn headed lesbians with sports glasses who probably drive Subaru's and have something to prove, and one is a beta male with soy face.
Did you see the boat got turned all the way around and they cruising along Backwards! 6:13 That was hilarious. You can see them kind of scrambling to get the oars back out.
@@claradahlberg-garde8993 Cool story bro. Is it still the "front" (I think you mean "bow"), when the boat is going backwards? They were sailing backwards, that's a fact. That whole thing was a hilarious mess and epic disaster. I'm positive the ancestors are laughing in Valhalla.
@@VidarrKerr I actually know what I'm talking about, I know how this ship works, so why are you being so dismissive? (I'm still learning the english maritime terms so forgive me for getting the wrong word for bow)
Anyone else notice that every single woman rowing couldn't understand or keep time and was utterly out of sync and often beating the other oarsmen in front of her with her oar? I saw all these oars out of sync and thought "Seriously, how can you fuck up rowing?" then I paused the video and noticed.
The fourth and ninth oarsmen to starboard are worthless. The fourth oar only pulls halfway through and the ninth is a complete loser - I'd have let him go overboard during the trip
Danish fragility. Why do the Danes hate the Swedes?. They always denigrate the Swedes whenever they can. The Swedes have arguably produced a more successful nation state than Denmark. Denmark helped gives us England, but the Swedes helped with Russia. What’s the story?
Schön wie sich das Schiff mit Ruderkraft bewegt. Aber zu viele Frauen an den Riemen. Die Synchronisation stimmt nicht. Da gehören nur Männer hin Ist nicht bös gemeint.
The only ship I always wanted to own😢❤, lucky people.
Looking at a Viking Ship is like looking at a Spitfire in the Sky Beautiful.
Except now all our technology has been given freely to the world and they use it to passively invade us without a declaration of war so we can't even fight back as we're being made extinct.
@George Glazier We got a coin,20 kroner,with this ship on,it is a viable coin so it shouldn't be too difficult to get one if you want :o)
@@dr.lexwinter8604 I don't know what country you are in, but you better start displaying and wearing your culture pinned to your chest. You know who, is trying to make it illegal in some countries. Olde Norse is classified as racist terrorist by the racist ADL in the USA.
@@VidarrKerr Screw them!
@@VidarrKerr This is Denmark, a town called Roskilde, west of copenhagen
What a glorious vessel 🍺
Rowing in unison never happens in the movies.
great job by all!
The third guy from the stern (the rear end) is totally useless! He dips the oar in the water and lifts it out again without ever pulling on the oar!
He is probably swedish :o)
@@channelnumber73: Or he's used as a sea anchor/ drogue when running before a following sea!
They are going to practice their keel-hauling on him when they get outside the narrows.
He only attempted to row once, when he noticed the camera was on him. He never rowed before, or after, that moment.
Yeah, he hasn't quite got the technique yet... but that's why he is manning one of the beginner-seats. In the crew at Havhingsten we value learning by doing. Rest assured that he'll be taught before long
Very good
I give a thumbs up because the sailing was so hilariously bad. I really had a good laugh. The boat is amazing though! It is really a work of art! Is it still in service?
Oh boy, these people have never sailed before. The ship is totally out of control. 5:06 + They pulled their oars in. The oars are part of the steering control system. Oars stay in until the wind, current, course is stable. The steer board can't control the boat by itself. Anyway, hope they got it figured out before making a long voyage!
LOL, The boat turned all the way around and they are sailing backwards! LOL. 6:13 Everyone is getting their oars back out. They put the plugs back in the oar wholes, so they are going to take forever unscrewing everything again to get their oars back out. Oh boy. They should not have taken the oars out while underway.
The boat looks so awesome though. Whoever built it was very good craftsmen. Did they build it with "traditional" tools, like axes, chisels, hammers, etc?
There is only one guy putting heart and muscle into rowing, the guy with the long blonde hair in ponytail. Everyone else is mostly just sitting with their oars in hand, looking around like they never saw water before. What are they staring at with these confused looks on their faces?
Eventualy they did sail it from Denmark to Ireland.
www.vikingeskibsmuseet.dk/en/professions/the-boat-collection/sea-stallion-from-glendalough
As far as I know it is still moored at the museeum.
@@steenjacobsen1474 I started watching a few of these boat videos and I had no idea how many of them have been made. It is amazing. I would like to sail one from Michigan to Istanbul, like it was done 6k years ago.
@@VidarrKerr 6000 years ago? Bit before the longships. ;)
But a trip across the atlantic in a longship would be quite the adventure!
@@steenjacobsen1474 We don't know if it was before longships. I am certain that longships existed before 400 BCE.
The copper mines that were found on Lake Superior were huge. There are metal tools recovered from the mines too. An entire ship load of copper ingots from the Michigan mine was found sunk in the Mediterranean most likely on its way to the Phoenicians.
@@VidarrKerr If you are refering to the Uluburun shipwreck, I belive that its copper has been analyzed to be from cyprus, turkey and afganistan, not from the great lakes.
It is doubtfull if any vessel could have sailed the atlantic ocean during or before the bronze age. A heavy cargo would not help.
Longships did not master bluewater sailing until well into the viking age(AD 800+)
Where is this ship now? This video was made nine years ago. How is she now? Please more information on her.
She's still going strong! At the moment she's on land (as she is every winter) but will be launched back to sea in a few days.
@@ThomasDanielsen1000 Thank you, that is wonderful news!
The ship is at the viking ship museum in Roskilde Denmark. ruclips.net/video/nOmhTtXWpw0/видео.html
How did they carry horses in a ship so narrow?
They took their own vessels..? I've also heard those days superwomanz handled such demands ✌️
Glendalough .... Dalen af to søer
un remazo a cada uno por perder el ritmo de boga.
The Danes have arrived
Við getum kent ykkur að róa,enn góða viðskifta hætti heiðarleik og siðferði verði þið að fara anna eftir kv.ps flott skip.
Get those oarsmen and women in stroke!
Glad I'm no the only one triggered by it.
They are the ones who were watching that mini-series the Vikings.
They look more like the donors, than the craftsmen shipbuilders.
@@xdj77 Really in this day and age,
Need a cox shouting row! to co ordinate the rowers. Bit of a muddle there.
Pause it and pay closer attention. You'll see why. Every rower out of sync is a woman, later you see their faces. A couple are too old to be rowing, a couple are shorn headed lesbians with sports glasses who probably drive Subaru's and have something to prove, and one is a beta male with soy face.
🖕🏿
@@dr.lexwinter8604 LOLOLOL. You nailed it.
A drum and mebbe a cat o nine tails....
What a rowing disaster. Fortunately for them they were not going a-viking!
Did you see the boat got turned all the way around and they cruising along Backwards! 6:13 That was hilarious. You can see them kind of scrambling to get the oars back out.
@@VidarrKerr no one is anywhere near getting the oars back out.
The guy in the front? He's moving some oars out of the way, to avoid accidents
@@claradahlberg-garde8993 Cool story bro. Is it still the "front" (I think you mean "bow"), when the boat is going backwards? They were sailing backwards, that's a fact. That whole thing was a hilarious mess and epic disaster. I'm positive the ancestors are laughing in Valhalla.
@@VidarrKerr I actually know what I'm talking about, I know how this ship works, so why are you being so dismissive?
(I'm still learning the english maritime terms so forgive me for getting the wrong word for bow)
But look at how she goes under sail
Hi yt
Hi yt Hi yt
Hi yt
Hi yt
Genial
Anyone else notice that every single woman rowing couldn't understand or keep time and was utterly out of sync and often beating the other oarsmen in front of her with her oar? I saw all these oars out of sync and thought "Seriously, how can you fuck up rowing?" then I paused the video and noticed.
Jesus. Starboard side. Third from stern. No contribution. Go home
The fourth and ninth oarsmen to starboard are worthless. The fourth oar only pulls halfway through and the ninth is a complete loser - I'd have let him go overboard during the trip
Danish fragility. Why do the Danes hate the Swedes?. They always denigrate the Swedes whenever they can. The Swedes have arguably produced a more successful nation state than Denmark. Denmark helped gives us England, but the Swedes helped with Russia. What’s the story?
Friendly banter but to be fair denmark has been at war with the swedes more than any other country. But thats more then 300 years ago :)
Schön wie sich das Schiff mit Ruderkraft bewegt. Aber zu viele Frauen an den Riemen. Die Synchronisation stimmt nicht. Da gehören nur Männer hin
Ist nicht bös gemeint.