[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
ECONOMIC LIFE 209 ~ Only in Tomman Island does there appear to have beena variety of canoe smaller than the nimbembew, and possibly a degenerate form of the latter (see Fig. IO a & b). The hull is hollowed from a tree trunk, some twenty-one feet long, bluntly pointed fore and aft, and somewhat clipper bowed. To each gunwhale is lashed a pole, neso, running from end to end, and on each side of this, where it touches the hull, are supplementary laths, presumably to keep the whole water-tight. To these neso again are fastened four short poles (naai ririvi) lying at right angles to them and projecting about a foot over the water on either side of the hull. A number of long bamboos are now laid, running horizontally across the projecting portions of the naai Viv-im' so as to fonn two platforms similar to the platforms on a nimbembew, and like them called nawz/mgk ambu. The four
Fro. 10 (b). Transverse section of the hull.
outrigger booms (niwinei) are then ï¬Åxed in position. They rest on top of the bamboo platform and are so arranged that one of the mmi ririvi lies immediately below and parallel to each one of these booms, which is lashed ï¬Årmly both to it and to the bamboos (see Fig. Io). The outrigger float (nesem) has much the same shape as the hull save that it is ï¬Åat on top instead of being hollowed and is cut so that the prow end is the same as the stern end. It is apparently carried on the starboard side of the vessel, and is fastened to the booms by a simple crossed stick attachment, COMPOSED of two pairs of sticks called niwin langu- Zzmgk. In addition to this the fastening of the boom nearest the prow is strengthened by a ï¬Åfth stick inserted at an angle in the near side of the float. As with the nimbembew so too in managing this canoe, the men paddling probably sit on the bamboo platforms. The paddle (called nowoh) (see Fig. I06) P