row out to

row out to (something or some place)

1. To use a rowboat to reach some distant thing or location. Make sure you're wearing life jackets when you row out to the cabin on the lake. A skeleton crew will remain aboard the ship while the rest of us row out to shore.
2. To delivery or carry someone or something to some distant thing or location on a rowboat. We're rowing emergency supplies out to flood victims stranded on their roofs until they can be airlifted to safety. The kids want us to row them out to the island in the middle of the lake so they can explore for the afternoon.
See also: out, row
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

row (someone or something) out to something

to carry someone or something in a rowboat from the shore out to something. Will you row me out to the island? I rowed out all the visitors to the little island.
See also: out, row
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
See also:
  • row out to (something or some place)
  • off the map
  • out at (some place)
  • out at some place
  • distant
  • distant corner of the world
  • be over the hills and far away
  • over the hills and far away
  • go over the hills and far away
  • buttfuck nowhere