billskip
Well-Known Member
Yer right, maybe football hooligans, buy boats nowadays.When a visitor in somebody else’s country you should be empathetic and courteous. If not don’t go?
Yer right, maybe football hooligans, buy boats nowadays.When a visitor in somebody else’s country you should be empathetic and courteous. If not don’t go?
A reasonable option is also the courtesy flag sets you can download from No Foreign Land website and send to a printer. You end up with a bedsheets that contains the courtesy flag of a given cruising ground (say, North Atlantic, the Med, or Caribbean). Then you just need to cut them out and sew in a flag line.However if you’re seriously that strapped for cash, get an old singer sewing machine with a crank handle (often available free or almost free) and scrounge a range of coloured cloths from and make your own courtesy flag for the next country while on passage. Don’t laugh, I’ve heard it’s been done.
An Ecosse car sticker is essential. I am thinking of getting several tee/sweat shirts made up with 'Je suis écossais' across the front. Thankfully, Mrs Sandy speaks fluent French having spent time at the University of Rennes 2 as part of her degree.If you are going for a Scottish "ensign" I always think you should do the Scottish white "ensign", as it doubles the volume of spilt G&T (no whisky gets disturbed).
But yes in France, as well as a regional courtesy flag (eg Brittany) we fly a saltire as house flag on the port spreader. And an Ecosse sticker on the car.
When I first trailed a motorboat to France, with its tiny flagstaff and the smallest red duster, I couldn’t find a French flag small enough. I had to get a Dutch courtesy flag, cut it in half, flip it 90deg and sew up the rough edge.I have a vague recollection of once contemplating a last-minute trip to the Netherlands, and lacking a Dutch courtesy flag discussing how we could mount our French courtesy flag turned through 90 degrees.
Worth listening to the advice of that very experienced sea dog JM.
Forget “rules”
Sometimes people ask the wrong question without realising it.Who completely failed to answer the question.
Struggling to find information about the area that is considered suitable to fly red ensign without the necessity of a local courtesy flag.
Obviously, in Britsh waters, around Channel Islands and Gibraltar are quite clear - no local courtesy is required for a British vessel. But what about Overseas territories?
Basically, what I'm asking is if Red Ensign territory list is where British vessel does not need to fly a local courtesy flag (e.g. British vessel navigating Aguilla, Bermuda or Turks and Caicos does not need to fly a local national flag as courtesy). Some might argue that one can display their courtesy and still fly a local flag, but do we have to?