T The Seafarers Club

             
 

  

History

 

What went before


New Cruise Ships


Cruise Ships for sale

 

The Actual Ship


More Ship Details

 

Plans and Cabins


State Room Sizes


 

 Financial

 

As an Investment


 Maintenance

 

 Where to

 

Itineraries


Faq's

 
Progress Reports


More info

 

  Cruise line Info


Crystal Cruise

Holland America

Royal Caribbean

Celebrity Cruise

P&O Cruises

Yacht Charter

Residensea

ROC in trouble

Norwegian Non-Refundable Tips

Boycot Carlson

Carnival goes crazy

 

 

Cruise Types

World Cruises

Luxury Cruises

Family Cruises

Corporate Cruises


Last minute Cruises

Golf Cruises

Nude Cruise

Cruise Consolidators

Flu Shot Cruise

 

Other

Alaska Vacations

World's largest Cruise Ship

Carnival's Pinnacle

World's largest Yachts

Cruise Ships for Sale
(1,2,3,4,5,6)

Yacht & Boat News

Live Ship Cams

Virtual Cruises

Crossing the Atlantic

Cruise Casino Unsafe?

Nelson's Philanderings

World's most expensive Cruises

SS United States

Tiger's Honeymoon Yacht

Booze Cruises

Willem Ruys

Cruise Ships for the Elderly

Yacht ChARTERS

The Christina O

Sea Dream 344 Ft

Alysia 280 Ft

Annaliesse 280 Ft

Leander 246 Ft

Talitha 262 Ft

Solemar 201 Ft

Apogee 205 FT

Giant 245 FT

100 Ft to 200 Ft
100 Ft to 200 Ft(2)


100 Ft to 200 Ft(3)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Click here for Honeymoon Cruises!   
 

Yachts and Ships - Sale and Purchase of luxury yachts and commercial ships.
Maritime and Shipping financing.

 

 


 

 

 

Maritime flags

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

 


Flags are particularly important at sea, where they can mean the difference between life and death, and consequently where the rules and regulations for the flying of flags are strictly enforced. Flags (and pennants) are flown for signalling and for identification.

Ensigns

Ensigns are national maritime flags flown by ships, at the stern or from a gaff or from the yard-arm. In some countries (e.g. the United Kingdom or Australia) there are distinct naval and merchant ensigns, while in other countries (e.g. the United States or France) the merchant and naval ensigns are identical to the national flag flown on land.

Ensigns are usually required to be flown when entering and leaving harbour, when sailing through foreign waters, and when the ship is signalled to do so by a warship. Warships usually fly their ensigns between the morning colours ceremony and sunset, when underway, and at all times when engaged in battle.

[edit]

 

Etiquette

The position of honour on a ship is the quarterdeck at the stern of the ship, and thus ensigns are traditionally flown either from an ensign staff at the ship's stern, or from a gaff rigged over the stern. Nowadays when a ship is at sea the ensign is often shifted to the starboard yardarm. It should be noted that the usual rule that no flag should be flown higher than the national flag does not apply on board a ship: a flag flown at the stern is always in a superior position to a flag flown elsewhere on the ship, even if the latter is higher up.

Nautical etiquette requires that merchant vessels dip their ensigns in salute to passing warships, which acknowledge the salute by dipping their ensigns in return. Contrary to popular belief the United States Navy does dip the Stars and Stripes in acknowledgement of salutes rendered to it. Merchant vessels also traditionally fly the ensign of the nation in whose territorial waters they are sailing at the masthead or yard-arm. The flying of a ship's ensign upside-down is a mark of distress, and the flying of the ensign of one country below that of another country on the same ensign staff is a sign that the ship has been captured by forces of that other country.

[edit]

 

Jacks

Jacks are additional national flags flown by warships (and certain other vessels) at the head of the ship. These are usually flown only when not underway, and when the ship is dressed on special occasions. In the Royal Navy the Union Jack at sea serves both as a naval jack and as the rank flag of an Admiral of the Fleet. It is illegal for a merchant ship or yacht to fly the Union Jack: a civilian jack (sometimes known as the pilot jack as it was formerly used to request a pilot) exists, and consists of the Union Jack with a white border. The St George's Cross flown from the jack staff is known as the Dunkirk jack, and is customarily flown by ships and boats which took part in the Dunkirk rescue operation in 1941. The flying of the St George's Cross elsewhere on a civilian ship is illegal, as it is the rank flag of a 4-star Admiral.

[edit]

 

Other flags

[edit]

 

Rank Flags

  •  
    • In the Royal Navy, Admirals fly rectangular rank flags: an Admiral of the Fleet flies a Union Jack, while an Admiral flies the St George's Cross. The flags of Vice-Admirals and Rear-Admirals have one and two additional red balls respectively. Commodores fly a Broad Pennant which is a short swallow-tailed pennant based on the St George's Cross, with a red ball at the canton (upper quarter next to the staff).
[edit]

 

Pennants

  •  
    • A warship also flies from its masthead a masthead or commissioning pennant (or pendant), that is, a long narrow pennant which indicates the commission of the captain of the ship (and thus of the ship itself).
  •  
    • In the Royal Navy, the commissioning pennant is a small St George's Cross with a long tapering plain white fly. In the United States Navy, it is red above white, with seven white stars in the blue hoist. The commissioning pennant may be displaced by various rank flags, namely the personal flags of members of the Royal family, the President of the United States, or the flags/pennants of admirals or commodores.
  •  
    • The Senior Officer Present Afloat Pennant is green on the hoist and fly with a white field between.
  •  
    • The Church Pennant has the St George's Cross in the hoist and a fly which is horizontally divided red-white-blue. It is said that it is a combination of the English and Dutch flags which was invented during the Anglo-Dutch wars to signify a truce during church services.
  •  
    • The Gin Pennant means that the Wardroom invites Officers from ships in company to drinks. The origins of the Gin Pennant are uncertain but it seems to have been used since the 1940s and probably earlier. Originally it was a small green triangular pennant measuring approximately 18 inches by 9 inches, defaced with a white wine glass. Its colour, size and position when hoisted were all significant as the aim was for the pennant to be as inconspicuous as possible, therefore having less ships sight it and subsequently accept the invitation for drinks.
[edit]

 

Yacht Club Burgee

Yachts belonging to yacht clubs fly their yacht club's triangular burgee from the masthead. This is compulsory if the yacht is flying a special ensign which members of the club have been granted permission to fly.

[edit]

 

Unit Citations

Warship of various navies may be awarded a Unit Citation, for which a burgee (tapering flag with swallow-tail fly) is flown in-port.

  • Ships of the United States Navy:
    • Presidential Unit Citation - yellow with blue stripe on top and red stripe at the bottom.
    • Navy Meritorious Unit Citation - green with four yellow stripes divided by two blue and one red stripes at the centre.
    • Navy Unit Citation - symmetrical colouring from the centre: green, red, yellow, blue.
  • Ships of the Royal Australian Navy may have:
    • Unit Citation for Gallantry - burgee with narrow white band surrounding green field summounted by a silver star.
    • Meritorious Unit Citation - design as above with yellow field.
[edit]

 

Signal flags

There is a system of International maritime signal flags for each numeral and letter of the alphabet. Each flag or pennant has an additional meaning when flown individually.

[edit]

 

See also

 
 

 

 

 

 

                                                             

  

 

Home

More Resources For You are Here