I live in Australia and I am a sailor. I’ve owned a Clinker Years ago , was a Swedish Folkboat . Used to sail it in Tasmania. Very safe boats . Great feel when under sail . Wooden boat building is definitely a Art that should never die . Tasmania has a small guild of craftsman that have kept wooden boat building alive in franklin southern Tasmania. They have built many clinkers . And even have a wooden boat festival every two years in Hobart . Thanks for Video Mate . Happy New Year 🍺
Happy New Year, it's good to see you again, especially at the dawn of the year. I have been to the Roskilde museum many, many years ago, maybe within a decade of it opening. i suspect that it has greatly changed now and has been enhanced by new technologies of display? It would be good to see it again, but I fear that in the present conditions of the World and my health that it is just a pipe dream. At least I had the priviledge to see it, so I'm not complaining.
Happy New Year, Colin. I hope your health improves so you can go where you want, it is difficult to travel right now, but it is not impossible. If you decide to visit the museum again, then the summer months would, in my opinion, be the best time.
@@Skjalden Thanks. If I'm able to travel it would only be in the Summer as part of my problem is due to neural damage following an amputation, and the cold would only aggravate it. Mobility is also a main concern now too but most places are made accessable thses days.
Just found your channel and subbed. My parents are immigrants of Frisian and Gronengan stock with a dash of Danish. I have always loved clinker built boats. Is the Tjalk boat building style related> My daughter was in Denmark in 2017 for Medieval sword fighting and absolutely loved Denmark!
I thought there is nothing particular Scandinavian anyways ;) That we are all a blended, generic mass, with no individual cultures. According to media. UNESCO is proving the media wrong, and I am all for it!
Happy New Year Skjalden, it's good to see you back. I hope this new year is finding you well. As you said, it's about time UNESCO includes the clinker boats. Clinkers are like a timeless classic as they've seemingly been around forever. A bit of history in our modern times. Cheers🥂 and best wishes for 2022.
It is good to see that those stubborn people up north will now have the perfect excuse to keep building these inherent structure hull construction boats for a few more thousands years... and it's alright, they still have sails and can sail far, but they've lost the habit of sailing South in the Summer months... instead they have Netflix or fly to sunnier tourist destinations in Winter so when the cold dark season is over they are cool, relaxed and collected... Vi ses senere.
Aside from an updated sail plan and removal of the fore and stern posts, seaboats used until after World War 2 were fundamentally similar to longships.
Skal brother its good to see you back.
I live in Australia and I am a sailor.
I’ve owned a Clinker Years ago , was a Swedish Folkboat . Used to sail it in Tasmania. Very safe boats . Great feel when under sail .
Wooden boat building is definitely a Art that should never die .
Tasmania has a small guild of craftsman that have kept wooden boat building alive in franklin southern Tasmania.
They have built many clinkers . And even have a wooden boat festival every two years in Hobart .
Thanks for Video Mate . Happy New Year 🍺
Welcome back
That is truly great news.
Tak Skjalden . I am deeply disappointed to hear that Floki did not invent the klinker built boat . Great vid as always . Godt Nyt Ar
Happy New Years, Hail Odin the Ravengod Allfather. Skál💀🍻👍Awesome video
1st video of the new year for me.
Happy new year.
Happy New Year, it's good to see you again, especially at the dawn of the year.
I have been to the Roskilde museum many, many years ago, maybe within a decade of it opening. i suspect that it has greatly changed now and has been enhanced by new technologies of display? It would be good to see it again, but I fear that in the present conditions of the World and my health that it is just a pipe dream. At least I had the priviledge to see it, so I'm not complaining.
Happy New Year, Colin.
I hope your health improves so you can go where you want, it is difficult to travel right now, but it is not impossible. If you decide to visit the museum again, then the summer months would, in my opinion, be the best time.
@@Skjalden Thanks. If I'm able to travel it would only be in the Summer as part of my problem is due to neural damage following an amputation, and the cold would only aggravate it. Mobility is also a main concern now too but most places are made accessable thses days.
@@colinp2238 I am sorry to hear that, but I hope that you will still be able to travel to the places you want to visit.
Just found your channel and subbed. My parents are immigrants of Frisian and Gronengan stock with a dash of Danish. I have always loved clinker built boats. Is the Tjalk boat building style related> My daughter was in Denmark in 2017 for Medieval sword fighting and absolutely loved Denmark!
awesome news....about time
I thought there is nothing particular Scandinavian anyways ;) That we are all a blended, generic mass, with no individual cultures.
According to media.
UNESCO is proving the media wrong, and I am all for it!
Was this done to force Norway to actually not let them rot away as they are doing right now?
Thanks for the video! It's great news!
Happy New Year Skjalden, it's good to see you back. I hope this new year is finding you well. As you said, it's about time UNESCO includes the clinker boats. Clinkers are like a timeless classic as they've seemingly been around forever. A bit of history in our modern times. Cheers🥂 and best wishes for 2022.
Så dejligt med en ny video. Elsker at kigge med på din kanal :) Happy New Year everyone :D
some day i'll be able to build a living historical village on the lake i live near :) with a boat yard too! . . . some day :)
It is good to see that those stubborn people up north will now have the perfect excuse to keep building these inherent structure hull construction boats for a few more thousands years... and it's alright, they still have sails and can sail far, but they've lost the habit of sailing South in the Summer months... instead they have Netflix or fly to sunnier tourist destinations in Winter so when the cold dark season is over they are cool, relaxed and collected...
Vi ses senere.
😊😊😊
Aside from an updated sail plan and removal of the fore and stern posts, seaboats used until after World War 2 were fundamentally similar to longships.
Oh wow!