Sell Used Boat Parts SMS
"follow sellboatparts"
to
40404 (USA)
("unfollow sellboatparts")
Click Here To Create A Boat Parts Account To Sell Your Used Boat Parts On This Website        

 
|Cart |Login |Signup |About |Privacy |Terms |FAQ |Articles |New |Email |Follow |Forum |Chat |Fun |Sitemap |
  Product Search

  Article Search

 Shop by Category
Control & Steering
Deck & Cabin
Electrical & Lighting
Exhaust
Intake & Fuel System
Motor & Components
Other
Plumbing & Ventilation
Propellor

 Shop by Top Sellers
Advanced Marine Services
A.D.M. Marine
Zia Marine
C and C Marine Services
Herbert P Linder
Bob Dearien
Sarah F Choate
1st Mate Marine
Jamie Kost
Sell Used Boat Parts

 Shop by Keyword
Mercury
Johnson
Evinrude
Mercruiser
Yamaha
Kawasaki
Honda
Suzuki
Mariner
Force
Nissan
OMC Seadrive
Tohatsu
Sterndrive
Quicksilver
API Marine
CDI
Rapair
Outboard Recycle
Red Rhino
Sierra
Wiseco
Aqua-Power
Arco
Barr
Detmar
GLM
MES
Osco
Teleflex
Tempo
U-Flex
Solas
Michigan Wheel
Westerbeke
Crusader
Volvo
Velvet
Drive
Vetus

 Shop by Price Range
$0 to $9.99
$10.00 to $29.99
$30.00 to $89.99
$90.00 to $269.99
$270.00 to $809.99
$810.00 to $2429.99
$2430.00+

  Resources
Boat Parts Home
Boat Parts Signup
New Items
Links
Forum
Chat
Fun


Home > The Superstitions Of Sailors
We Have Found 0 Products for your search of The Superstitions Of Sailors.
Displaying Articles Page 1.

 Category  
Company  
   Price Range  
Sort by  
Keyword  

  The Superstitions Of Sailors  
Please vote and
rate this.
0
  (0 votes)

The Superstitions of Sailors

by David Bunch

Sailors, like other people, prognosticate winds and weather from the behavior of various birds and beasts, but they go a little farther than the rest of mankind in ascribing actual control of the elements to these creatures. The Ancient Mariner was reviled by his shipmates for shooting the albatross, "That made the breeze to blow." We are indebted to the seamen of antiquity for the belief that kingfishers cast a spell upon the deep, so that calm weather prevails during the "halcyon days," about the time of the winter solstice. Old salts still object to the presence of a cat on board ship, because she "carries a gale in her tail." Clergymen are unpopular.

Sailors have not ceased to whistle for a wind, though the custom is less general than it was a century ago. Basil Hall, writing in 1811 of a calm at sea, says: "One might have thought that the ship was planted in a grove of trees, so numerous were the whistlers." Scratching the mast is another superstitious method, not yet extinct, of raising a breeze. Some nautical authorities say the foremast should be chosen for this operation; others prescribe the mizzen.

Still another wind-raising process is to stick a knife in the mast, with the handle pointing in the direction from which the wind is desired to blow. At sea there are two distinct systems of describing the direction of the wind, while on land there is but one. The method common to sea and shore is to name the point of the compass from which it blows; but nine times out of ten the mariner prefers to indicate its direction with reference to the course of the ship-as "wind abaft, " or "on the port beam," and the like.

Please add
your comments.

On land the force of a wind is commonly expressed in miles per hour (or meters per second outside of English-speaking countries). Sailors almost universally use the Beaufort Scale, in which there are 13 degrees, ranging from 0 (calm) to 12 (hurricane). In estimating the wind according to this scale due allowance must be made for the motion of the ship, and accuracy is attained only through long practice. The appearance of the surface of the sea; is a great aid in the process.

One result of the substitution of steam-power for sails is that fog has become a much graver danger to navigation than it was a few generations ago. In foggy weather there is generally little wind. Hence sailing craft automatically slow down when they enter a fog, and when sails were universal collisions in a fog were very rare. A steamer is under no such natural limitations.

David is the author of many articles including Best Friend Quotes and also the author of Best life quotes

About the Author

Other articles:

Disney movie scripts

Disney Movie Quotes

Related Articles

  1. 0.00.00.00.00.0 (0 votes) Safety Measures to Take When Sailing by Yourself
    Gord Kerr Normally sailing is a social activity but there may be instances when you are sailing alone. Here are some safety tips and things to keep in... products, articles



  
0
  (0 votes)
          (more)
Please add your comments.

Back to Top

View CartView Cart

Your text link here!   Contact:   support (@) sellusedboatparts ! com

2007-2012 Sell Used Boat Parts

Valid HTML 4.01 TransitionalValid CSS!