Compass Rose Review: Boat Names
An excerpt from Mariners Miscellany
By Peter H. Spectre
Superstitions about the names of vessels
• Seven letters in a name will ensure good luck, as will three of the letter “A.”
• Bad luck is certain if you launch a vessel without a name and then name her after she is afloat.
Other portents of bad luck:
• A name that begins with “A”
• A vessel named after a snake or reptile
• A vessel named after one that has sunk (Titanic, Andrea Doria, Edmund Fitzgerald, etc.), or after a storm (Hurricane, Gale, Cyclone, etc.), or a fearsome creature of the deep ((Kraken, Octopus, Serpent,, etc.), or a cataclysm (Quake, Eruption, Big Bang,, etc.), or an evil character ((Judas, Brutus, Pilate,, etc.)
• Don't give a vessel a high-and-mighty name (Sovereign of the Seas, Audacious, Winged Victory,) if she is not of the highest quality, as the gods of the sea might be angered.
When choosing a name, keep in mind that it should be
• Easy to remember
• Easy to spell
• Easy to pronounce
• Easy to understand
• Easy on the ears
Whatever name one chooses, it may soon be invested with properties one didn't mean it to have; it may lack qualities one had hoped for. Yet, one is impressed by names like Bloodhound and Northern Light, which seem to evoke the long, lean ocean-racing yawls they were attached to. There is a martial ring of discipline and strength to Resolution and Despatch , and an inescapable romance in Malay , Bandit , and Finisterre .
—Anthony Bailey
Now, what a ship was christened, so let her stay, I says.
—Long John Silver
On renaming the boat
Don't do it (bad luck will likely follow if you do), but if you must:
• Go heavy on the appeasement end of things.
• Confess your sins, and beg the gods and goddesses of the sea for forgiveness.
• Never perform the ceremony on a Friday.
• Never, ever, rename the craft Black Pig or Friday the 13th.
• Circle the boat twice, against the sun, or counterclockwise, to awaken the demons; then with the sun, or clockwise, to drive the demons away. If the boat is on land, circle her on foot: barefoot preferably; if not, wear sandals. If the boat is afloat, circle her by rowboat; oars or paddle only, as the gods and goddesses referred to above are offended by outboard motors.
• Burn the old nameboard and scatter the ashes on the sea.
• Wash away the old name—figuratively speaking—by splashing the bow of the boat with a pail of fresh water.
• Break a bottle of the most expensive wine or single-malt Scotch over the bow (the gods and goddesses of the sea are not impressed by cheap hooch).
• Whisper the new name so as not to alert the demons.
• Promise the gods and goddesses of the sea that you will sin no more.
The Compass Rose Review is a blog written by Peter H. Spectre, editor of Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors magazine, former editor of WoodenBoat magazine, former editor of International Marine Publishing Company, author of the annual Mariner's Book of Days, A Mariner's Miscellany, and other books. Click here to visit Compass Rose Review.
Copyright © 2007, Peter H. Spectre.
Copyright © 2007, Peter H. Spectre.
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