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Pillage, THEN burn.
JR Frogwatch wrote: Hmm, I wouldnt fly one myself but why would a Jolly Roger make anybody look any more foolish than some of the faux sailing stuff people do. Every time I see someone wearing a captains hat I groan inside thinking "What a doofus". "Burgees" put me in that mind too although I can understand part of the reason for having them. Every time I see someone trying to look "Yachtie" I want to burn and pillage. Chuck Gould wrote: wrote: hey folks - As they say in the radio business - first time caller, long time listener.... this is more of a light topic - but I was recently in one of the many local marine store in my neighborhood for the first time - (there are quite a few in Seattle). We happened upon the section of the store that sells flags for your boat, some serious, some not so... commodore flags, diver flags, and even jolly roger flags. My friend and I joked about getting one for my small 18' foot runabout boat - but we were warned that flying such a flag regardless of size of boat would garner unwanted attention from coast guard, police, and fellow boaters. We heeded the warning, but thought it was odd to hear such a thing in todays times. Has anyone heard of such a scenario when people flew a jolly roger flag? The Jolly Roger is now considered a "private signal", not a pirate signal. Flying one from just about any boat won't get you into any trouble at all with any sort of law enforcement suspecting you of being a pirate, but it will tend to label you as a sort of boater who doesn't take the activity seriously and *that* might, possibly, get you a closer look by harbor patrol or the USCG. Experiened boaters will give you a wide berth, not because they think you're a pirate but because if you're going to do something as lubberly as fly skull and crossbones who know what other goofball move you have in store. And in fact, the skull and crossbones version of the "pirate flag" may never have flown on any pirate ship before Errol Flynn started shooting movies in Hollywood. The private signals of some of the more infamous sea raiders (Blackbeard, etc) have been recorded by historians and they have two things in common: Each is fairly unique to the ship or captain that flew it, and none is exactly the skull and crossbones that we call the Jolly Roger. Darts, hourglasses, Satan, skeletons, etc were popular motifs. The dart and the hourglass was intended to communicate, "time is running out, surrender your ship and live or we will take it by force and you are likely to die". The term Jolly Roger is itself a corruption of the French term for "Colorful or beautiful red banner". The last thing you wanted to see if approached by a ship of seagoing thieves was the red banner hoisted aloft; it meant that once battle was engaged there would be no quarter given and that no prisoners would be taken; a fight to the death of one side or the other. Unless you want to look the serious fool, my opinion would be to pass on the skull and crossbones. -- -------------------------------------------------------------- Home Page: http://www.seanet.com/~jasonrnorth |
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