PHOTO Boat etiquette? It’s not just a matter of etiquette
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How should a “good sailor” behave? What does it mean to have sea foot? What’s more, are you sure you know how to properly arrange guard shifts and be prepared to deal with seasickness as best you can? Explaining what to do on any occasion are Paolo Ruffo Bernardini (publisher, actor, journalist and writer, referred to as “the poet of the sea” and Leonardo Zuccaro (longtime contributor to the Giornale della Vela and now director of Ancona’s Marina Dorica marina), in a delightful book, “The Etiquette of the Sea,” published by Biglia Blu in its Acqua series. An original overview where answers to most of the phenomena involving the individual and the crew of a boat can be found. In the editorial staff, when we decided to make this article, we wondered how to illustrate it in an original way. it is by scrabbling through our archives that we found the images you will find on these pages, all taken aboard the legendary J Classes in the 1930s: in the years of the Great Depression of 1900, for the first time real nautical clothing was born. Of an elegance never again achieved….
ENVIRONMENT AND ANCHORAGE

THE SEA FOOT
It is like taking the treadmill rhythm, only in this case the movements do not respect a single direction. Even the most casual sailor may experience an initial moment of uncertainty when, after a few months of inactivity, he sets foot on board again. Then, similar to what happens in climbing back up after years on a bicycle, the body regains confidence in the instability and the pace becomes more assertive.
THE NOISE.

THE GUARD.
One must scrupulously comply with all of the commander’s directions. When you awaken your guard successor, you must pass the handover, patiently waiting for the upright shift to have time to orient itself to the situation of the moment. Before returning to the bunk, offer coffee or hot tea as a gift to those who ride.
NAVAL ETIQUETTE
In seafaring tradition, naval etiquette refers to that set of rules concerning the proper way to communicate, in overt and unambiguous terms with flags and insignia a message or situation at hand. An example is that of the ship-to-ship greeting. The custom of saluting at sea is very old and dates back to the Greeks and Romans.
THE SEA SICKNESS.

THE COMMANDER.

THE ALREADY YOU ARE THERE

EQUIPMENT


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