When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: reed's boat shop

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Reed boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reed_boat

    Totora reed fishing boats on the beach at Huanchaco, Peru. Reed boats and rafts, along with dugout canoes and other rafts, are among the oldest known types of boats.Often used as traditional fishing boats, they are still used in a few places around the world, though they have generally been replaced with planked boats.

  3. Caballito de totora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caballito_de_totora

    Caballitos de totora are reed watercraft used by fishermen in Peru for the past 3000 years, archaeologically evidenced from pottery shards. Named for the way they are ridden, straddled ('little reed horses' in English), fishermen use them to transport their nets and collect fish in their inner cavity.

  4. Viracocha expedition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viracocha_expedition

    Each boat required two and a half million reeds, which were harvested from the shores of Lake Titicaca, a high-altitude lake located on the border of Bolivia and Peru, where the totora reeds are abundant. To obtain the required quantity of reeds, a long cutting pole was used to cut them from small rowboats.

  5. Traditional fishing boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_fishing_boat

    Boats, rafts and even small floating islands have been made from reeds. Reed rafts can be distinguished from reed boats, since the rafts are not made watertight. [8] The earliest known boat made with reeds (and tar) is a 7000-year-old sea going boat found in Kuwait. [4] The Uros are an indigenous people pre-dating the Incas.

  6. Uru people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uru_people

    Uros island view Uro man working on his reed boat. Uro man pulling boat made of reeds. The Uru or Uros (Uru: Qhas Qut suñi) are an indigenous people of Bolivia and Peru. They live on a still-growing group of about 120 self-fashioned floating islands in Lake Titicaca near Puno. They form three main groups: the Uru-Chipaya, Uru-Murato, and Uru ...

  7. Balsa (ship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balsa_(ship)

    Read boat in Lake Titicaca. A balsa is a boat or ship built by various pre-Columbian South American civilizations constructed from woven reeds of the totora bulrush. They varied in size from small canoe sized personal fishing boats to large ships up to 30 metres long. They are still used on Lake Titicaca in Peru and Bolivia.

  8. Totora (plant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Totora_(plant)

    Totora made artificial floating islands of the Uru peoples, as traditional settlements, in Lake Titicaca where Totora grows Aymara Totora Reed Boat on display at the Smithsonian, Washington, DC. Totora (Schoenoplectus californicus subsp. tatora) is a subspecies of the giant bulrush sedge.

  9. Ancient shipbuilding techniques - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_shipbuilding...

    Ancient boat building methods can be categorized as one of hide, log, sewn, lashed-plank, clinker (and reverse-clinker), shell-first, and frame-first. While the frame-first technique dominates the modern ship construction industry , the ancients relied primarily on the other techniques to build their watercraft.