BOSTON -- Jurors in the trial of Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev learned that the Watertown boat that he took refuge in was shot over 126 times before he was captured during an out of court field trip on Monday.

The jurors, attorneys and judge in the case, along with two pool reporters from The Associated Press and WBUR, were accompanied by a heavy security detail as they viewed the Slip Away 2 at an undisclosed location before the start of formal proceedings in Tsarnaev's trial.

The bullet-riddled boat, covered in shrink wrap since it was taken as evidence by the FBI, was largely unchanged from the day Tsarnaev spent inside it. Broken glass was still visible inside and the majority of the bullet holes appeared to be near the center and higher sections of the boat, particularly on the side where the long note by Tsarnaev was found.

FBI evidence teams identified over 200 pieces of evidence on the boat.

Tsarnaev's long note was written mostly in pencil though there was a third portion that was carved. There was no sign of the pencil or a carving utensil.

While jurors inspected the boat in teams of two in the presence of an FBI official Tsarnaev was sitting behind a table and under a canopy of sorts. He was situated between his attorneys Judy Clarke and David Bruck. Tsarnaev was unshackled and appeared much as he has throughout this trial: disinterested.

Judge George O'Toole instructed the jurors to take as much time as needed.

Tsarnaev hid inside the boat after he fled a shootout with Watertown police officers near Laurel and Dexter Streets. While fleeing the scene of the shootout he ran over his brother Tamerlan in a stolen black Mercedes SUV.