;British Isles •
Coble, used on the English east coast from
Yorkshire to
Northumberland • Five Man boats, large 55–65 foot boats used for line fishing on the Yorkshire coast •
Cornish lugger • Deal lugger, the two larger types of boat used by
Deal boatmen to service ships anchored in
the Downs. These were beach-launched open boats, originally three masted, but the main-mast was later dispensed with to allow more room, ultimately giving
jib, dipping lug
foresail and a standing lug mizzen sheeted to an
outrigger. A first-class lugger or "fore-peaker" was typically 38 feet long, 12 ft 3 inches at greatest beam, carried 6 tons of ballast in a
clinker-built hull weighing 3.5 tons. They could carry a replacement
anchor and cable out to a large ship – a load of at least six tons. •
Fifie, a herring drifter of the Scottish east coast •
Hastings lugger • Manx nickey •
Manx nobby •
Sgoth Niseach, dipping lug ;Continental Europe •
Barca-longa, of the
Iberian and
Mediterranean coasts • Breton
chasse-marée. These were fast-sailing cargo vessels that took fresh fish to market, sometimes taking general cargo for the return trip. They set standing lugs on three masts and a jib. Topsails were often used and topgallants when racing. • French lugger (
lougre), of the coast of
Normandy ;United States of America •
New Orleans Lugger (also known as an
Oyster Lugger). These shallow draft vessels were typically 37 ft overall with a 12 ft beam, although they could vary substantially in size. They set a dipping lug on a single mast and had a centre board to help go to windward in deeper waters. They were used principally for fishing, with some cargoes occasionally carried. They could be found from Texas to the West coast of Florida. ;Australia • Some of the early
pearling luggers used off the northern coast line of Australia from about the 1870s, often ship's boats, carried a lug sail, but the purpose-built boats that were used from the 1880s stopped using it over time. The majority of these were
gaff-riged
ketches, although they continued to be called pearling luggers until the present day. ==See also==