- A
bollard is a s****y, short,
vertical post. The term
originally referred to a post on a ship or quay used prin****lly for
mooring boats. It now also...
- Rheinauhafen, Cologne. It
depicts a man
making a
heavy rope or
hawser fast to a
bollard and is 6.5
metres (21 feet) in height. In 1980, it was
listed as one of...
-
mooring ship's
relative movement.
Mooring fixtures of
similar purpose: A
bollard is a
single vertical post
useful to
receive a
spliced loop at the end of...
- "a half of the knot,
which is used by the
sailors to
secure a boat to a
bollard in a harbor." The "MB" came to be
known as the
Munter hitch after Werner...
- A
corduroy road or log road is a type of road or
timber trackway made by
placing logs,
perpendicular to the
direction of the road over a low or swampy...
-
Track in the
Somerset Levels, England,
which dates from the
Neolithic age.
Timber causeways may also be
described as both
boardwalks and bridges. Look up...
- Lighterman's Hitch) is a knot
ideal for
heavy towing, or
making fast to a post,
bollard, or winch. It is easy to release, even
under great load. To tie, take a...
- The
mooring hitch can be used to tie a
small boat to a post, pole,
bollard or similar. As it is a quick-release knot, it can be
easily untied by pulling...
-
redeveloped during the 1990s. The
Baywalk Bollards were
created by
local artist Jan Mitc**** in the mid-1990s, with the
timber painted sculptures reflecting local...
- However,
Newcastle city
council have now
turned it into an
eyesore with
bollards and one way
systems . "Newcastle's Grey Street:
Built in the 1830s and...