Please select your home edition
Edition
Zhik 2024 March - LEADERBOARD

How to make fun of a sailor

by Edward Killeen, www.examiner.com on 9 Feb 2009
Edward Killeen SF Sailing Examiner SW
Sailors take themselves pretty seriously. The more pretentious out there call it 'yachting'; some even wear 'yachting' gear when not on the boat. In short, as a subculture, sailors are ripe to be made fun of. But you have to pick your moments, you need to know when they're doing something that even their own compatriots will laugh at. Here's a short list.

When to make fun of a sailor:

1. When they're 'baylining'. This is the condition that many find their boats in when they're lazy; they left the slip with, egads, their fenders still dangling overboard. If you see this, the appropriate reaction is to point and laugh. I sometimes take pictures.

2. When the crew is wearing matching foul weather gear. This is OK if you're competing for the America's Cup. It's ridiculous if you're out for an afternoon sail. The appopriate response is to beat them in the race and then ask them at the party afterwards where they got their 'cool gear'.

3. When sailors talk about how fast they're going. This is absurd. Really really fast boats go about 20 MPH. Race boats go around 8 to 10 MPH. My boat goes around 5 to 6 MPH. Let's compare...humans walk around 3 MPH and jog at about 7 MPH. So race boats are a bit above a jog. World class marathon runners average around 10 MPH, Usain Bolt runs at about 23 MPH. Are sailboats really fast? Proper reaction is to walk away and ask, 'hey, can your boat keep up with me?'.

4. O boy, topsiders. What can you say about topsiders? Maybe in the early days of 'yachting', a leather shoe with oddly placed laces and weird ridges was considered high tech. But do 'yachties' really have to wear them off the boat? I don't know the appropriate reaction...like most everyone my age, I wore them in high school so perhaps just look down in mutual shame?

5. This one is probably the most important. Sailors talk funny with all that starboard and avast and tiller and boom and other odd terms. At one point there must have been a reason for sailors to have their own language; most likely because a ship could have sailors from many different countries and cultures (this still exists, see the America's Cup crews). But is there really a reason to exclude the common man from conversation? Why ask someone to 'trim the afterguy' when 'pull the blue rope' will suffice? Why use terms like galley and head when kitchen and bathroom are far more understandable? The appropriate reaction is, obviously, a blank stare or ask them to repeat themselves in whatever foreign language you know.

6. Now for the last rule, don't make fun of sailors, they might give you a ride (see crew list). Then you can wear a cool yellow outfit with topsiders while talking funny about how fast you went with your fenders dangling. Just like real sailors.

For more info: Don't click anywhere, just go to your local marina and look around, observing sailors in their natural habitat.

Edward Killeen is a lifelong sailor with two ocean crossings and a ton of daysails to his credit. Living on San Francisco Bay allows him to sail year round and he tries to take advantage of that. www.examiner.com
Rooster 2023 - Aquafleece - FOOTERCyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERSCIBS 2024 FOOTER

Related Articles

Youth in the limelight at Antigua Sailing Week
Axxess Marine Youth 2 Keel Race Day The breeze was on the up for the second day of Antigua Sailing Week, celebrating youth sailing on Axxess Marine Youth 2 Keel Race Day. The 10-knot easterly breeze piped up during the day, gusting up to 15 knots.
Posted today at 5:34 am
America's Cup: Shoeby on that Splash and Sail
It was nice to tick all that off in one day.” Kevin Shoebridge on ETNZ's Day 1 Splash and Sail We thought, 'We've got a bit of time. We'll pull the mainsail up'. Then we ended up going for a sail [and fitting in three dry foiling tacks]. It was nice to tick all that off in one day.” Kevin Shoebridge on ETNZ's Day 1 Splash and Sail.
Posted today at 5:20 am
100 entries and counting
For Ocean Dynamics and Mount Gay Airlie Beach Race Week Entries for Ocean Dynamics and Mount Gay Airlie Beach Race Week 2024 have already touched 100 and continue to grow as organiser, Whitsunday Sailing Club (WSC), announces a new Regatta Director, Jenni Birdsall.
Posted today at 5:02 am
2024 52 Super Series PalmaVela Sailing Week Day 2
Gladiator open their 2024 account with race 1 victory Tony Langley's Gladiator team took the first race win of the 2024 52 SUPER SERIES season at 52 SUPER SERIES PalmaVela Sailing Week after profiting from a bold call on the first downwind leg.
Posted today at 4:34 am
Olympic qualification at the Last Chance Regatta
Friday's rankings became the final overall rankings for the ILCA 6 and ILCA 7 sailors The Last Chance Regatta finished early with the Medal Race in heavy rain and shifty winds at French Olympic Week (SOF).
Posted today at 3:55 am
SailGP's Racing on the Edge latest episode
Big crashes and all of the drama from the ITM New Zealand Sail Grand Prix The latest episode of SailGP's Racing on the Edge docuseries, in partnership with Rolex, unfolds all of the drama and action from the ITM New Zealand Sail Grand Prix in March.
Posted on 29 Apr
Jérémie Beyou on his way to Lorient
Leading Transat CIC contender turns around with forestay damage Jérémie Beyou, one of the top hopes for the Transat CIC solo race from Lorient to New York is returning to Lorient after damage to his J2 forestay.
Posted on 29 Apr
New York Vendée - Les Sables d'Olonne Preview
One month to go until the final race before the Vendée Globe One month from now, 31 skippers will set sail from New York towards the Vendée, for the final qualifying and selection race to qualify for the Vendée Gobe: the most challenging sailing race around the world.
Posted on 29 Apr
470 Europeans at Cannes Preview
The last major international event for the class before the Olympic Games The Yacht Club de Cannes is hosting the last major international event before the Olympic Games.
Posted on 29 Apr
Grantham local skippers crew of non-professionals
Hannah Brewis has led amateur sailors across the world's largest ocean "I didn't think when I was learning to sail on Rutland Water that it would one day eventually lead to me crossing the biggest ocean in the world as a skipper."
Posted on 29 Apr