• 'Columbus' ship Pinta docks in Fort Walton Beach for week

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 25 08:48:22 2022
    XPost: sci.milirary.naval

    LOCAL
    'Columbus' ship Pinta docks in Fort Walton Beach for week
    Devon Ravine
    Northwest Florida Daily News

    A little bit of living history will be on display in Fort Walton Beach
    now through Jan. 2.

    The Sanger Ship’s Pinta, a replica of one of the Portuguese caravel
    sailing ships used in Christopher Columbus’ voyage across the Atlantic,
    is currently docked at Brooks Bridge Marina.

    The 85-foot-long by 24-foot-wide ship was made in Brazil and took three
    years to construct. It's made of Brazilian cherry hardwood, using the
    same techniques that Portuguese shipwrights used to construct the
    original craft. Completed in 2005, the ship weighs about 100 tons and
    has about a 7-foot draft.

    The ship Pinta, a modern-day replica of one of the ships used in
    Columbus' 1492 trip across the Atlantic Ocean, sails through Santa Rosa
    Sound in this photo from January, 2021. The Pinta will be available for self-guided tours now through Jan. 2 at the Brooks Bridge Marina on
    Okaloosa Island.
    This version is a bit larger than the original Pinta and is powered by
    diesel engines. Beyond that, there’s little evidence of modern
    technology found on the deck, and steering the ship is still done by
    hand using a long tiller mounted at the ship’s aft.

    And while the Pinta hasn’t followed Columbus’ famous journey from Spain
    to the new world in 1492, it nevertheless racks up about 8,000 to 10,000
    miles per year touring ports across the eastern United States. The ship
    runs a circuit around the Gulf of Mexico, up the Eastern Seaboard, into
    the Great Lakes and into parts of the Illinois, Ohio, Mississippi and
    Tennessee rivers.

    Stephen Sanger demostrations the massive tiller used to steer the Pinta,
    a replica of one of the ships used during Columbus' voyage across the
    Atlantic Ocean in 1492. The ship will be on display now through Jan. 2
    at the Brooks Bridge Marina on Okaloosa Island.
    “We’ll start each year in Mobile,” said Stephen Sanger, the ship’s owner
    and captain. “We’ll typically travel about nine months out of the year, hitting about 20 to 30 stops.”

    At each of those stops, visitors can walk the ship's deck and imagine
    what it must have been like for the 26 men who sailed west across the
    Atlantic Ocean for 70 days, not knowing what they would find on their
    journey.

    The Pinta, a modern-day replica of one of the ships used during
    Columbus' 1492 journey across the Atltanic Ocean, is on display now
    through Jan. 2 at the Brooks Bridge Marina on Okaloosa Island.
    “Luckily for them they were cruising around the Caribbean; that’s
    probably the only blessing they had,” Sanger said of those early
    explorers. “Back in the day, they used pine on the hulls of the ships as
    a preservative, so they would have been covered in pine tar. They all
    slept out on the main deck, because down below deck you had all your provisions, including the livestock.”

    The Pinta, a modern-day replica of one of the ships used during
    Columbus' 1492 journey across the Atltanic Ocean, is on display now
    through Jan. 2 at the Brooks Bridge Marina on Okaloosa Island.
    The Pinta will be available for self-guided tours from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
    daily through Jan. 2, when it will head to Pensacola for its next stop. Admission is $8 for adults, $7 for seniors and $6 for children ages
    5-16. Guided tours can be booked for a reduced rate of $5 per person
    with groups of 15 people or more. Guided tours can be made by visiting
    the website at website https://www.ninapinta.org/.

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