REPLY1850
Depinges
By W. R. F.
(No. 18. p. 277., and No. 20. p. 326.).—I have received the following information upon this subject from Yarmouth. Herring nets are usually made in four parts or widths,—one width, when they are in actual use, being fastened above another. The whole is shot overboard in very great lengths, and forms, as it were, a wall in the sea, by which the boat rides as by an anchor. These widths are technically called " lints " (Sax. lind?); the uppermost of them (connected by short ropes with a row of corks) being also called the " hoddy " (Sax. hod?), and the lowest, for an obvious reason, the " deepyin…
Topics: Herring Nets, Fishing Techniques, Linguistic Etymology
Locations: Yarmouth