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I doubt that one. Gold earrings were expensive. Those ships had a lot of sailors on board. In those days your ship had to be able to fight, or you wouldnât have it long.
Gold ring for the dangers of Cape Horn; paper gold star for missing the reefs in writing a paper. Visible proof commensurate with significance of event. Pride is outcome in both. But. . .um. . .still working on Frazzâs comment.
Space weather can kill you just as dead as earth weather, such as solar radiation and getting hit with little hunks of really fast moving micro-meteorites.
Piffle. The gold earring is to pay for a Christian burial if you fall overboard and your body washes up on a âcivilizedâ shore. This is well-documented in the literature.
When I taught third grade, I put my sticky gold stars on the kidâs foreheads instead of on the paper because " Your brain did it, the paper doesnât deserve to get a star". Some of the kids wore those stars for a week or so, until they got dirty enough that the glue stopped working.
Really enjoyed todayâs comments. Each taught me something I did not know about Cape Horn lore. Whatever sailors got for that passage, they suffered beyond reason for it and deserved that and more.
For the longest time, I used to think of the old sailors as the astronauts of their day. But the more I learn, the less sure I am of what I used to believe (to quote Frazzâs lyrics in one of the very first episodes, âitâs educationâs special curse, it works its magic in reverse. The more I learn, it seems, the less I knowâ). Without diminishing in the slightest how brave and smart and well-trained the modern astronaut, and while fully appreciating the harsh and unforgiving environment they venture into, at least outer space doesnât have weather.
RAGs over 6 years ago
If he was from the northern hemisphere, he was already a Shellback.
fuzzbucket Premium Member over 6 years ago
I doubt that one. Gold earrings were expensive. Those ships had a lot of sailors on board. In those days your ship had to be able to fight, or you wouldnât have it long.
Nachikethass over 6 years ago
I thought they got a dunking.
ACK! Premium Member over 6 years ago
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a5/Tsunami_by_hokusai_19th_century.jpg
sandpiper over 6 years ago
Gold ring for the dangers of Cape Horn; paper gold star for missing the reefs in writing a paper. Visible proof commensurate with significance of event. Pride is outcome in both. But. . .um. . .still working on Frazzâs comment.
Happy Tinkerbelle Premium Member over 6 years ago
Why did I just picture a pirate tourist shop just past Cape Horn?
glennaschubert over 6 years ago
Space weather can kill you just as dead as earth weather, such as solar radiation and getting hit with little hunks of really fast moving micro-meteorites.
waltermatera over 6 years ago
Piffle. The gold earring is to pay for a Christian burial if you fall overboard and your body washes up on a âcivilizedâ shore. This is well-documented in the literature.
stairsteppublishing over 6 years ago
I think the gold earring was for rounding The Horn for the first time.
Diane Lee Premium Member over 6 years ago
When I taught third grade, I put my sticky gold stars on the kidâs foreheads instead of on the paper because " Your brain did it, the paper doesnât deserve to get a star". Some of the kids wore those stars for a week or so, until they got dirty enough that the glue stopped working.
Larry Kroeger Premium Member over 6 years ago
The gold earring is for the ear closest to land. West to East left ear, East to West right ear.
Bob. over 6 years ago
They didnât call it âCape Stiffâ for nothing.
JP Steve Premium Member over 6 years ago
An âearringâ was also the rope loop that held the outside corners of a sail onto the yardarm.
mauser7 over 6 years ago
Your thinking of the Shellback initiation done on Naval ships when they cross the Equator.
sandpiper over 6 years ago
Really enjoyed todayâs comments. Each taught me something I did not know about Cape Horn lore. Whatever sailors got for that passage, they suffered beyond reason for it and deserved that and more.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] over 6 years ago
Frazz19 hrs ·
For the longest time, I used to think of the old sailors as the astronauts of their day. But the more I learn, the less sure I am of what I used to believe (to quote Frazzâs lyrics in one of the very first episodes, âitâs educationâs special curse, it works its magic in reverse. The more I learn, it seems, the less I knowâ). Without diminishing in the slightest how brave and smart and well-trained the modern astronaut, and while fully appreciating the harsh and unforgiving environment they venture into, at least outer space doesnât have weather.