spudgel n also spudget*, spudgin*, spudgy* [phonetics unavailable].
EDD ~ sb 1 'a wooden bowl with a long handle used for bailing' Gl IW Do So;
DC Nfld (1775, 1937) for sense 1.
1 Small wooden bucket
with a long handle, used to bail water from a deep-keeled boat; PIGGIN.
[1775] 1792 CARTWRIGHT ii, 73 The boat proved so leaky, that the
spudgel was scarce ever out of hand. 1792 ibid Gloss i, xv ~ A small bucket fixed
to the end of a pole, to throw the water out of a boat, which has no pump. 1897 J A
Folklore x, 210 ~ a small bucket used for dipping the water out of the dill and
bailing their boats. [c1900] 1978 RLS 8, p. 26 ~ a boat bailer consisting of a
bucket with a long handle through it. 1937 DEVINE 47 Spudgell. A bailing bucket. It is
different from a piggin in being tub shaped and having a long handlesomewhat
like a corn-cob pipe. 1951 Nfld & Lab Pilot i, 208 Otter Rub point, with
Spudgell cove close north-eastward of it, lies 1¼ miles east-northeastward of the
entrance to Pays cove; Spudgell Cove rocks extend three-quarters of a cable southward. P
102-60 If a man was a bit of a cooper [he would go] to the coopershop and make piggins
and spudgils out of pork barrel staves. The difference between a piggin and a spudgil:
one was about 10 or 12 inches high with one stave about 5 or 6 inches longer than the
others to use as a handle; the spudgil was about the same size but through the handle
stave was bored a hole about one inch in size through which was passed a round stick from
the top and fastened to the bottom and about 4 or 5 feet long so as the man using it did
not have to stoop down to bail out water from the dill in the after part of the boat. T
43/7-64 A piggin got the handle attached, an' the spudgel is the one with [the handle] on
an angle. T 90-64 The spudgel [is] the little tub with a long stick in it for the larger
boats, to throw the water over the gunnel. 1971 NOSEWORTHY 248 ~, spudgin, spudgy. A
ten-pound tub with a long wooden handle, 5 or 6 ft. long, nailed on. It is used for
bailing out deep, keeled boats. P 209-73 Spuggal. A large wooden container with a long
handle used to bail water from a boat. 1975 BUTLER 38-9 1 had two big long-handled
spudgels aboard. I said 'Jack, here, take one of those and,' I said, 'if you ever worked
in your life, work now, if you don't want to drown.'
2 Metal or
wooden container with a long handle, often larger than a boat bailer, used to dip water
from a well, hot bark in the tanning of nets, and for other purposes.
T 14/19-64 You'll take your spudgel and you'll dip out your tan out
of the boiler and throw it on your twine and let it remain there all night. T 94/5-64 An'
in the summer when [the well would] go a bit low they'd have a spudgel, a big can on a
wooden machine they madea long stick went right through from side to side so it
wouldn't come off-and you'd fill up your buckets with that. C 71-103 The kind of spudgel
that was used to draw water from a well consisted of a large can and a long wooden
handle [that] went through a hole in the side and on down to the bottom. 1973 BARBOUR
51-2 ~ It is made of wood, shaped like a bucket, and has a long handle which goes through
the bucket slantwise, or, as a fisherman would say, 'scow ways.' At Blanc Sablon the
spudgel was used to dip water from over the side of the wharf in order to wash down the
troughs and wharf. In lots of places the spudgel is used mainly to dip fresh water from
deep wells. 1979 TIZZARD 55 This water was usually drawn up or taken from the well by a
spudgel, a small tub or can made fast to the end of a long pole.
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