No Limits

Well, that's shut me up. I was led to believe bananas on a boat were bad luck. But at 3 min into the vid they can clearly be seen on the table, and if this boat has covered 11000 miles without issue, then that's good news for any boater who is a fan of bananas 😂
 
Well, that's shut me up. I was led to believe bananas on a boat were bad luck. But at 3 min into the vid they can clearly be seen on the table, and if this boat has covered 11000 miles without issue, then that's good news for any boater who is a fan of bananas 😂
Ever since I was told that (and I wish I wasn’t)...we actually change our banana eating strategy....bananas are so good for you but before a boat trip we stop buying them...so we either eek out our banana supply or binge eat them if we have miscalculated or it’s a spur of the moment trip
 
Bouba I'm the same. Bananas are my favourite fruit, but they are banned from our boat after a mate of mine told me about this superstition. I didn't believe him at first, but good old google search engine gave this answer........Yes, bananas are a very common and persistent superstition in boating and fishing, considered bad luck that brings no fish, mechanical failures, or even shipwrecks.....

So I wouldn't normally listen to superstitions, but in this case I don't take any chances 😂


Sorry for taking your thread off in a weird tangent 👍
 
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The problem with bananas on board is that they give off ethylene, which makes all other fruit ripen at once - however carefully you've bought it to ripen in turn. We had an undoubtedly very healthy (but rather unfragrant and tuneful) first week of our Atlantic crossing 🤢

I'm guessing that ethylene being a potentially explosive gas (quite apart from the quantities of methane we produced) is the reason for the superstition.
 
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