Salty old seadogs are a breed apart; hardy and tough, seemingly unfazed by the chaos around them. But, what are they talking about? There is a whole vocabulary around boats which seems to have been created to confuse landlubbers. Here are a few useful terms and translations.

  • Heads = toilet
  • Saloon = living room
  • Cabin = bedroom
  • Galley = kitchen
  • Companionway = steps that lead from upper deck to inside boat
  • Port = left
  • Starboard = right
  • Bow = pointy bit at the front of the boat
  • Stern = wide bit at the back of the boat
  • Mast = tall vertical pole in the middle of the boat
  • Boom = horizontal beam below mainsail
  • Shrouds = wire ropes supporting the mast
  • Bilge = lowest point of the inner hull
  • Washboard = broad thin plank to keep out seawater
  • Freeboard = distance from waterline to upper deck
  • Halyard = rope for hoisting and dropping sails
  • Sheet = rope for trimming sails
  • Gunwhale = upper edge of side of boat
  • Tack = to turn the bow of the boat into and through the wind
  • Gybe = to turn the stern of the boat across the wind
  • Jib = small sail at the bow
  • Genoa = large sail at the bow, coming back past the mast

Well done if you’ve made it this far – you’re nearly ready to tie a bowline in the aft cleat, take the spring line through the fairlead and make it off with a hitch on the forward pontoon cleat. 🙂