Camper6
Well-known Member
- Location
- Northwestern Ontario Canada
You are on the right track but that's not right.Two different flags?
That's a good answer. Here's another clue. The answer is written in the wind.
By the way. The ship was called old Ironsides but the sides are made of Oak.
Not the main mast sails....look againBut the sails are full and the ship is sailing with the wind.
Remember now . This is an artists rendition of an actual battle that took place. Usually there is what is called a prevailing wind. That's when a warship will go out because they have to get into position to fire the cannons. There will be gusts of course but once the sails are full they are not effective. Artists try to capture the moment and take a few liberties. On the original the flag is not right either. There should be only 13 stars on the flag representing the original 13 colonies.The wind will whip any direction though. I understand your observance but does the wind have tomove in only one direction at every moment?
No it wouldn't capsize. The sails are the right size for the ship and sailing ships had huge keels to stabilize the huge ships. If the wind gets too heavy. They drop the sails. Takes a huge crew running around controlling ropes that sets the sails. There would be lots of action, hollering and with the cannons going off and smoke a lot of confusion. It would be quite the experience. Thanks for participating. I can tell the artist knew about ships and sailing. They can sail into a wind sideways using the rudder but they don't sail a straight line. It's like a zig zag pattern.The wind is coming from the side of the two ships, wouldn't that make the ship capsize? The sails should either be 'inflated' from the front or the rear of the ship. Sorry, don't know much about ships so don't know the proper names. So, actually, the flags should be 'pointing' at us, not pointing to the back of the ship.![]()
Interesting. I sent the picture to my grandson in grade school. He couldn't figure it out.Y'know, I remember a little test in grade school history involving an artist's rendition of a battle ship.
The question was 'what is wrong with this painting?'
Sure enough, it was the flags going the wrong way
Nobody got the answer, but there were a lot of groans and forehead slapping after finding out
That night, first thing I did after dinner was turn my flags around on my model of Old Ironsides