0 an object used for travelling over snow and ice with long, narrow strips of wood or metal under it instead of wheels. It can be either a low frame, or a vehicle like a carriage pulled by horses or dogs. --
1 to ride or travel on snow using a sledge --
The implications go far beyond sledging and suggest the need for managers to have an intimate understanding of how things work.
Wood-workers furnished one-quarter of all animal-drawn vehicles for the army as well as 30,000 sledges in 1941.
The distance between these attachment points is 810mm, indicating the width of the sledge when assembled.
Tents, cookers, clothing, food for dogs, and dogs for food as well as the streamlined, light-weight sledge were all part of the system.
Why is there a compile-time performance cost to the sledge-hammer approach?
The planking for this was taken from the sledges.
You'll get dexterity with a sledge with time.
No item of equipment and food escaped his careful attention, and, in particular, the very robust dog sledges.