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The Superstitions of Sailors

The sea has always played an important part in the lifeblood of Brittany; its waters have nourished and sustained generations of Bretons since time immemorial but the price paid has often been so very high. Little wonder then that, in a land once seeped in legend and superstition, those hardy souls that risked their lives upon the roaring waves surrounded themselves in practices designed to preserve them from misfortune.

For many Breton mariners, Fridays and Sundays were once generally considered unfavourable days on which to trust one’s life to the sea but certain days of the year were regarded as particularly inauspicious, namely; the Feast of Candlemas on 2 February, the Feast of the Holy Innocents on 28 December 28 and the Feast of Saint Sylvester on 31 December 31, New Year’s Eve.  

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When undertaking any sea voyage, whether to fish for cod off the Grand Banks of Newfoundland or to carry a cargo of mistletoe to Great Britain, certain sights were taken as omens predicting the success or failure of the voyage. For instance, around the north-east port of Saint-Malo it was considered a most propitious omen to see a donkey before setting out to sea; seamen there considered the animal stupid but courageous.

Similarly, sighting a rabbit or a hare before a voyage was a sign of ill fortune to come and even talking of these animals was believed to invite disaster. Some Breton fishermen were noted to have abandoned setting out to sea, in favour of tending to their boats and nets, if a hare had crossed their path on their way to the boats. These animals were also regarded as bad omens for those undertaking journeys on land but some have suggested that they were regarded as particularly ominous to sailors on account of the danger they posed to rope and caulking.

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The humble cat was also not viewed with any favour by Breton fishermen; the animal was not welcome aboard any sailing vessel and, like the hare, sighting a black cat before setting out to sea was enough to cause many sailors to postpone or even cancel their departure. Black cats were also once believed to possess the power to spoil the day’s catch if they merely crossed the path of fishermen here. Although seen as an unlucky animal, it was not one to cast away lightly as the killing of a cat was said bring-on bad weather.

Omens were not restricted to the creatures of the land, for the sky also had much to tell those who could interpret the signs. The sight of a cormorant at sea indicated that the catch of the fishermen would be poor and its cries were almost always believed to herald the approach of bad weather. Around the west coast port of Brest, the cries of seagulls above the breaking waves were also said to indicate the approach of a storm.

Along this part of the coast, these birds were believed to contain the souls of the shipwrecked and the drowned; warning the living to take care to avoid calamity. It was therefore popularly prohibited to touch a seagull for fear of harming the pitiful dead. A similar belief was noted around the Bay of Saint-Malo to the east where the sight of gulls perched atop the Phare du Jardin lighthouse announced that a boat from Saint-Malo had been lost; the number of resting gulls represented the number of fatalities to be expected.

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Conversely, along the coast of the Bay of Morlaix to the west, the appearance of the black-headed gull was regarded as a good omen and one that was said to announce a spell of fine weather at sea. Along the northern coast more generally, sighting a goose in flight was popularly taken as a sign of approaching good fortune.

Tales of the malevolent sea creatures and mermaids that once abounded off the Breton coasts have been recounted in earlier posts so I will not repeat them here but it is worth noting that the Devil or his demons were sometimes said to take the form of large fish to frustrate and terrorise the region’s fishermen. Not so the porpoise, for these creatures, especially those found in the Bay of Saint-Malo, were said to have a particular affinity for the mariners of Brittany. It was said that these mammals were the souls of sailors who had perished in shipwrecks and who now returned to catch sight of places once so familiar to them.

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Several superstitions were attached to the people sailors might encounter on their way to their vessels. For instance, it was considered very bad luck to encounter a lame person but good luck was assured if one chanced to meet an idiot. People were careful not to stop a seaman heading to his boat as such an interruption was said to invoke some misfortune upon him at sea; even calling out to the sailor was said to bring him bad luck. It was also important to never wish an embarking sailor good luck; to do so was to curse him with bad luck throughout his voyage. Likewise, to point one’s finger at a ship leaving port was said to condemn it to certain shipwreck.

Given the real perils often posed by the sea, surrounding the sailor with as much good fortune as possible was of keen concern to the people of Brittany’s coastal communities. Here, it was customary when building a boat to splash the hull with sea water so as to acclimatise it to its destined environment; such rituals being accompanied by prayers and charms for protection.

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The prayers of the Church were also called upon to keep sailors from harm in a formal ceremony popularly known as the ‘blessing of the boats’. Such services were once very common across Brittany’s coasts and saw priests bless all the boats in harbour, either conducting the ceremony on the quayside or, more typically, in a boat that sailed amongst the other craft. In some port towns, the tradition continues to this day and usually takes place on the Feast of the Assumption of Mary on 15 August or the Sunday nearest to it.

It was once believed that certain acts performed on land could cast their affects across the waves and women who had a loved one at sea were cautioned against combing their hair after darkness had fallen for fear that they would cause a storm at sea. Another, albeit more recent, superstition related to unintended consequences said that those who lit their cigarettes from a lighted candle risked causing the death of a sailor at sea.

Such a notion likely derived from the idea that using the flame of a candle saved the use of a match and thus denied a little income for the Hospitaliers Sauveteurs Bretons (the Breton Sea Rescue Society) who raised funds by selling matches. However, some have suggested that the belief may have been associated with the practice of households’ keeping a candle burning at the window for those sailors expected home from sea. Romantic and ancient as it sounds, the latter suggestion is unlikely as the cigarette lighting superstition was not recorded here before the 20th century.

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The act of spitting as a gesture to invoke good fortune was once noted in many places across the world and, unsurprisingly, the known superstitions of Breton sailors contain two notable examples that suggest spitting was thought to cast some form of magical protection against bad luck. In the first instance, fishermen spat on their nets in the belief that doing so helped to ensure a good catch. Spitting was also used in a popular charm to ward off the malign power of the rainbow; regarded here as a symbol of bad weather. Dangerous winds at sea were linked to the rainbow, whose ends were said to terminate in a terrible maelstrom.

To Breton sailors, the rainbow marked the passage between the realm of the living and that of the dead; to pass under the rainbow was to risk being taken by the sea. To ward off this bad omen, sailors would cut it by spitting in the palm of their left hand and cutting the spit with a strike from the side of the right hand or by tracing a cut across the sky with a piece of rope while reciting: ‘Cut, cut, rainbow or I will cut you with my thread’. Little wonder therefore that sailors took care never to point at a rainbow out of fear that their boat would fall victim to its storms.

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Another simple act that was traditionally discouraged aboard a boat here was whistling, as this too was said to raise uncontrollable winds and to even attract the attention of the Devil. It was believed that favourable winds could be summoned with a whistle but whistling during a breeze was frowned upon lest the breeze became a storm and sailors would not whistle when the weather threatened for fear of increasing the force of the wind.

If the prevailing wind at sea was weak or unhelpful, sailors were not long in invoking the intervention of Saint Clement, patron saint of mariners. If the saint appeared slow in responding to their supplications, then he was considered asleep but it was thought that he could be awakened and roused into action if he was loudly cursed at.

Other early Christian saints were also commonly petitioned; appeals were made to Saint Anthony, another saint regarded as a patron of mariners, for a favourable wind. Saint Mary the Virgin and Saint Houarden, who was said to have travelled to Brittany on a stone boat, were popularly invoked to calm the fury of a storm while Saint Budoc was called upon to change the direction of the wind; the saint was reputedly born in a barrel at sea.

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On the Île de Sein, Saint Corentin, one of the seven founding saints of Brittany, was particularly invoked and his statue in the chapel turned in the direction of the most propitious wind. Likewise, in Saint Michael’s chapel near Carnac, women, whose husbands were at sea, swept-out the chapel in the direction that they wanted to see a favourable wind blow but the ritual was not complete until they had prayed at the sacred fountain nearby and drank its water. Similar practices were once popularly noted in several other chapels across western Brittany.

The sailors of this same part of Brittany believed that sea water somehow protected one from catching a cold and claimed that those who suffered with a cold while ashore were quickly cured at sea by the waves whipped-up by a strong breeze. Around the northern port of Tréguier, the sick were thought to suffer more during a rising sea and to recover when it was in retreat. However, about 100km (63 miles) to the east, around the Bay of Saint-Malo, the contrary belief prevailed; the sick gained vitality with a rising sea and weakened with a falling tide.

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There were myriad superstitions relating to death at sea and I highlighted many of these in an earlier post and will not repeat them here. However, it is worth noting that underscoring most of the old superstitions was the belief that those who perished at sea were to be pitied because they were condemned never to rest until their bodies were recovered and buried in consecrated ground. Local legends tell of these lost souls forever raging along the coast or endlessly traversing the sea in ghostly boats. These pitiable souls carried no ill will towards the living whom they were often believe to help by warning of impending storms and other dangers.

Sometimes, the influence of the dead on the sea was more mischievous. Around the northern port of Paimpol it was said that those who had drowned without being in a state of grace were condemned to labour at the bottom of the sea until Judgement Day; their movements being responsible for causing the wild waves offshore. Further east, around the Bay of Saint-Malo, such waves were attributed to the movements of a sorcerer frantically searching the sea bed for a magical mill that he had lost there.

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It was once believed here that three worms lived inside the human body and that when a person drowned, each of them became embodied in a bone. These bones subsequently detached from the corpse and turned into seashells. The old sailors of western Brittany used to say, when they heard of someone dying at sea: “One less man, three more shells.” According to legend, some cursed islands off Brittany’s northern coast were formed from the skeletons of the drowned and such origins were ascribed to the Sillon de Talbert near Pleubian; a long, bone-white, furrow that points out to sea like an accusing finger of the dead.

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Published by Bon Repos Gites

Enjoying life in Kalon Breizh - the Heart of Brittany.

201 thoughts on “The Superstitions of Sailors

  1. So many superstitious and consequences, it’s a wonder they went to sea at all, I love that the donkey was a good sign.

    It always intrigued me in the Notre Dame de la Garde in Marseille all the wall plaques that were like prayers asking for protection for seafarers and lots of images of boats, you can feel the presence of how much more imported sea was to a way of life in the past and the importance of acting in ways to pacify her (the sea) and him (God) through Our Lady (Notre Dame).
    Thank you for your wonderful post.

    Liked by 7 people

    1. Yes, it is remarkable how such a relatively short time ago, superstition and ritual formed such a major part of the lives of our ancestors!

      I have not visited ND de la Garde but there are many coastal chapels here that are filled with models of boats, some suspended from the ceiling, that were given as votives in years gone by!

      Thank you for reading! I am glad you liked it and appreciate you letting me know! 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 3 people

    1. I am very pleased that you found it of interest! 🙂 The idea of whistling a wind and, to a lesser extent, a knotted rope controlling wind was noted in a few parts of Europe. Given the amount of coastal trading here, we will never know where the superstition first appeared. Little surprise that it reached the other side of the Atlantic as so many small (by today’s standards) ports here once had thriving trans-Atlantic trade!

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      1. I would have thought so. I know that many of the cod boats went to Iceland and Newfoundland and were away for long periods of time – long enough to have needed to replenish victuals. I shall see if I can find some first-hand accounts to verify! 🤞😉

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      1. I haven’t read as deeply as all of that. Though I would love your thoughts in the future. But I enjoyed their view of the afterlife. Of good Pirates going to Fiddler’s Green and bad Pirates going to Davy Jones’s Locker. I found it interesting that both are in the bottom of the ocean. A Muslim man once told me that many Muslims believe Hell is at the bottom of the ocean. Since Jinn are made of fire it makes since. Water must sting them.

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      2. It is wonderful how such beliefs developed isn’t it? Such an interesting world back then! 🙂 The old Breton view of hell was quite distinct from those of neighbouring places – to the Breton, hell was always icy cold and to be found exactly 1,250 leagues below the Earth’s surface. Goodness knows how that number was arrived at! 😉

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      3. Wow! That’s amazing! It’s why I love the lore of the UK. So much amazing knowledge and folklore. I had no idea that they viewed Hell as icy cold. That sounds a lot like Dante’s inferno. I mean there were lots of Mathematicians who used the occult back then. Maybe it’s possible that numerology played a role. Or maybe there is an original folklore that led to it.

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      4. You probably read this book already, but have you read “The Black Toad” by Gemma Gary? It’s a treasure trove of lore, folklore and history, and magic. I’ve used a lot of the spells in that book and I can tell from experience that they do work. Though some stuff I will never try. Like sacrificing a fish heart for a love spell. Not only don’t I do those but I also don’t want to hurt the little fish lol.

        Liked by 1 person

      5. No, I had not heard of that book until you mentioned it but have since rectified that, so, thank you! 😉 A fish heart? That is interesting as over here, fish do not really feature in folk medicine or witchcraft rituals – at least not in any of the old spells and remedies that have survived to this day. 🤔

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    1. Haha, yes, there are many aren’t there but if you had been brought up surrounded by them and your loved ones constantly reminded you of them, then I am sure you would have likely accepted them as second nature! 😉

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  2. I’m reading a TERRIFIC book on Madagascar – a mixture of modern day exploration and history, which involves lots and lots of shipwrecks and worse…a life on the sea must be grueling and so dangerous especially in the past!

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    1. Agreed! Madagascar? What always used to amaze me was that the old pirates with their very basic navigational aids, regularly sailed from Europe to New England, the Caribbean and across to Madagascar on a quite regular basis! Not a GPS link in sight! 😉

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  3. An absolutely fascinating account of the superstitions of Breton fishermen. I wonder if tales like these (especially about cormorants and seagulls) inspired Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s poem The Rhyme of The Ancient Mariner.

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    1. Thank you! I am pleased that you found them interesting! 🙂 I am sure that the sailors of Britain had similar superstitions from which Coleridge drew. Although his imagination was so great that I would not be surprised to learn if the opposite was true and he influenced some superstitions himself! 😉

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  4. Such wonderful paintings. What a skill, to be able to catch the movement of waves. I think it is not surprising that there were/are so many superstitions around the sea and those who travel. I believe we all have some insecurity when we leave home and especially in the days when sea journeys were quite perilous, to grasp at any notion that helped to ease the anxiety it quite natural. Aviators are also superstitious. You mentioned the Sea Rescue Society. In Britain they have the Royal National Lifeboat Institution. Such brave, brave people! Another great read. Thank you.

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    1. Some of the paintings are truly wonderful aren’t they?! 🙂 Yes, I can appreciate how and why the old sailors carried such superstitions. I think I too would have grabbed onto anything that might somehow keep me safe! 😉
      The Breton Sea Rescue Society merged with a similar organisation here in the 1960s and now covers all of France. It is the same type of organisation as the Royal National Lifeboat Institution and I take my hat off to the bravery and dedication of all who serve with them!! 🙏

      Liked by 2 people

    1. Ha, you are so very welcome! Thank YOU for taking the time to read this. I am glad that you found it interesting. 😊 I suppose we should not be surprised at the amount of superstitions sailors here had but I was surprised how some are at odds with those noted in other parts of France and even neighbouring Normandy.

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  5. Such a marvelous truth written dear friend 🌹🙏👌 so inspiring photos with more sad
    Photos clearly we can understand the dangerous sea !! My younger days in Kerala ,
    (Is peninsula) that time fishermen want to go sea for fishing , the ladies in front of the home will the
    Burn a potted lamp because they safely come back , the lamp lighten until they
    Come back 🙏👌✌️ cats cannot cross the way they leaving to the sea !! My
    memories 🙂 our some rituals still we keeping for sake of life 🙏❤️
    So beautifully written The Superstitions of Sailors dear friend 🌹👏 ❤️

    Liked by 4 people

    1. Thank you very much! I am very happy that you liked it and appreciate you sharing your memories!! 🙏😁 Isn’t it remarkable how the same communities, thousands of kilometres apart, once had such similar traditions!! Truly, the world is a much smaller place than we think!! 🙏🙏🤗🤗

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      1. Very true reply comment written and old days what all the
        Rituals still we Indians following , we pray sea mother for Mersey 🙏
        Don’t havoc and destroy shore people’s life 👏😊some modern
        People never believe these rituals ,their wish 👍🏻 thank you 🌹🙏♥️🌹

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  6. One persons unlucky hare is a Mother’s good fortune. I believe in the kuck of the hare and have been a big fan of these smart, athletic animals since a child. We have them around our house and they always outrun my dogs. Or perhaps I love them because of tales like Brer Rabbit and Peter Rabbit. So many superstitions, but then the seamen were off to do dangerous and uncertain work, they would have needed reassurance and confidence – I certainly would. Another beautifully written and enjoyable post Colin.

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    1. I enjoy seeing hares too! 🙂 We see far more hares here than rabbits! You make a very valid point, some of our opinions are formed at such a very young age aren’t they?
      Yes, I think I would take every bit of ‘help’ from whatever source I could if I was headed out to the Atlantic in a wooden boat! 😉
      Many thanks for reading Kate! I am glad you enjoyed it! Enjoy the weekend! 🤗🤗

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  7. Fascinating as always. I can only imagine how many sailors in the day who had no choice but to go to sea to earn a living or those who were press ganged would be a bit superstitious and simply longed to get back on solid ground again. I am also surprised at how many of the sailors of old never learned how to swim. I suppose, if you are lost in the middle of the Atlantic, what was the point. Thanks for sharing. Allan

    Liked by 4 people

    1. I agree with you Allan! I would take comfort and confidence from whatever source I could! 😉
      I have heard that about sailors and swimming!! It does seem odd but, as you rightly said, stuck in the middle of the North Atlantic is a far cry from swimming across the local river at home.
      Thanks for reading – much appreciated! 🙂

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  8. I wonder how many of these superstitions were based in reality. Seagulls on land (lighthouse and touching one) for example may have actualy been a sign of bad weather. I love that someone made killing a black cat bad luck. A good way to improve their morals. My favourite though is that the porpoises are sailors lost at sea. I wonder how many of these made it over to Newfoundland. Maggie

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    1. That is an interesting point Maggie! Some of these may well have been the result of empirical observation! 🤔 Back in the day, Newfoundland must have been an extraordinary place with Breton, Norman, Basque and British contingents fishing there in their hundreds! 😮

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      1. Even allowing for poetic licence and people’s desire to exaggerate, it is certain that the hatcheries there were once extraordinary! They must have been else why would so many folks have risked their lives for the reward!

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  9. How fascinating! 🙂. The poor sailors were at the mercy of the good and bad omens. People pointing at them and rainbows appearing for bad luck, and an idiot for good luck. I found it humorous that the sailor had some control over his fate through the power of spit! This is another great read! The writing and choice of pictures are delightful. I especially liked the painting of the old woman trying to comfort the young woman. Perhaps her husband was lost at sea. Take care!

    Liked by 3 people

    1. haha yes, a world of signs – good and bad! Imagine the predicament of a sailor encountering a donkey, not unreasonably, carrying a lame man? 🤔😉
      Thank you for reading and I am pleased that you liked it! 🙂 That painting is so striking isn’t it? Such sorrow yet the presence of the old lady comforting the new widow almost gives it a cyclical feel of ‘we have been here before and will again’. 😦

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  10. The seas are formidable and I can relate to the fear of those seaman whose livelihood depended on venturing out into the unknown. I imagine the omens and superstitions gave them a sense of control. The black cat cannot catch a break. To this day they are often considered bad luck. Thank you for the entertaining and absolutely wonderful look back Colin 😊

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Thank you Holly! That is much appreciated and I am very pleased that you enjoyed it! 🤗
      Like you, I can totally understand why (even if not the how 😉 ) such superstitions were clung too. Once out of sight of land, you rea;lly were in the lap of the gods!
      Haha, yes, it is strange how the black cat was once regarded so differently in countries not so far apart! Personally, I love black cats but the closest I have ever had were ones with flecks of white or white socks and nose!
      Have a good weekend Holly! 🙏🤗

      Liked by 1 person

  11. My book club just read “I’ll Never Be French,” a memoir by an American who bought a house in Brittany (which he rents out most of the year). I was in Normandy a year ago, but did not make it to Brittany–giving me a reason to return to France. We all agreed we want to visit Brittany. I look forward to reading more of your posts to learn about Brittany

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      1. Bayeux is charming and we have a host of similar medieval towns worth seeing too. 😉 Ah, Mont St-Michel – even today, some argue that it is still Breton! 😉

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      2. Ha, yes, it has been in both Normandy and Brittany but the established border is the river but people still argue about which side of the river and is it the course of the river today or that of a thousand years ago. 🙄🙄

        Liked by 1 person

  12. Ugh sometimes there can be a lot of sea gulls lol 😮😮 that would suck if was amount of fatalities 😮😮

    The word fatality reminds me of mortal combat lol … fatality – finish him lol … is a video game from yesteryear ✌️😘 you used to have to punch in a code to have gory lol

    I will never point at a ship again 😮😮

    And ahhhh the power of prayer – people can believe or not but in some cases how else you explain – I might be here because of power of prayer 😘

    The whistle thing is eerie … makes me think of those Pirates 🏴‍☠️ of the Caribbean movies … curse of the black pearl? Lol

    I would have the loud cursing down to wake that guy up to protect me lol … that one I got 👍

    We have a fountain of youth if you believe that – I have drank from it when I was a child ❤️👏👏

    I use that to explain why I look young lol 😄😄

    There are many lost souls from shipwrecks – Titanic one of the most published ones

    Some bodies never recovered

    Some superstitions … sometimes science can not explain things

    I just watched a program about this woman who literally was declared dead for 30 minutes and she told about the experience 😮 no brain damage and made full recovery – medical science can not explain

    Freaky things happen 😘✌️

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    1. You are right, there really is so much that we are yet to understand about the world around us! Your examples just show how diverse the unexplained is – from being clinically dead with no after effects to the power of prayer and belief! So many advances yet so much still the same haha 😉😮

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  13. Wonderfully written as usual! That is so interesting how many superstitions and beliefs they had. I wish it was still lucky to meet an idiot… Love the pictures you included too!

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  14. Me too! I am deeply wishing you to stay well and strong to write in this particular way of narration in all respects. My daughter and her husband have already traveled in Puerto Rico to attend their grand daughter’s godfather mariage who’s also my gender’s first cousin wherein there was summertime with swimming and all that summertime beautiful things and right after that, they have gone all together, my daughter, her husband, the cousin and his wife [who’s a nuclear physicist, by the way and native Puerto Rican] to… Chicago where the married couple live and work and it is hard winter there and it is snowing! Tomorrow they’ll be back, they’re gone for 12 days now and we all miss them! Well, as you see, I have some great and happy news to share when I want and am in the mood for that! Best regards, it is the Spring now here! 🙂 🙂 🙂

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    1. How wonderful although I would not welcome snow now! 😉 I am looking forward to Spring!! It is lovely to see the new buds start to form! 🙏
      I hope that you have a joyous homecoming celebration tomorrow! Keep well! 😊😊🙏

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  15. Oh, my dearest friend, thank you very much is just not enough to tell you wholeheartedly, because I’d love so much our families could be able to meet and know each other in person! And indeed, I do really love so much Spring time and literally despise snowing season because I’ve had so much enough of it and for so many years indeed, here, in this lovely city but right on the foot of the Pelion Mountain, permanently snowed during all the year! Spring and Autumn are my favorite seasons. Enjoy your family too, strong and healthy! Stay well, my warmest regards! 🙂 🙂 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You are, as ever, so very welcome! 🙂 Thank you so much for your kind words – they are much appreciated! 🤗
      Like you, Spring and Autumn are my favourite seasons! I adore seeing the changes and the vibrancy of the colours during those times! 😊😊

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  16. Marvelous post. I have always found maritime mythology of such fascination. It makes sense that an island race such as Bretons would have such a strong backbone of stories, beliefs and superstitions about the sea. Being a Pisces myself, I’ve always loved mermaid mythology, with of course the Brittany myth about the Fairy Melusina being one of my favorite. I can see why tales of mermaids would abound!

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    1. That is so kind of you to say! Thank you very much! 🙂 I am pleased that you liked it. 🙏
      Yes, given all the superstitions landward, the seafaring ones seem on the light side! 😉

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  17. Crazy and fascinating. But if I was a sailor, especially way back when, I’d probably be even more superstitious than everyone else, lol. And that first painting is amazing, btw. WOW

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    1. Agreed! It is no surprise that, in a land of superstition, sailors had their own means of helping ensure they returned home safely! 🙂
      It is such a striking painting, isn’t it?? It is by a Breton artist named Alfred Guillou and entitled, unsurprisingly, Adieu!

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  18. I suppose when we consider how perilous the sea can be, it’s no wonder that sailors have so many superstitions about going out there. Interestingly, here in the UK, ship crews would work in the theatre during the winter months. This is why British theatre workers are called crews and even use maritime terms occasionally. The superstition you wrote about it being inauspicious to wish a fisherman good luck, reminds me of the same with actors and performers, so they say “break a leg “ instead. A leg being a reference to a knot on a rope!
    With that many superstitions, I can’t help but wonder how many crossed over into the theatre! Would this have happened in Brittany also?

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    1. I did not know of the connection between seafarers and the theatre!! Thank you for that little nugget of information! 😊 The names are interesting too and I imagine that stage hands are nautical terms like crews?
      I am not aware of similar cross-overs here but I will now make a point of investigating further!! 😉

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      1. You’re very welcome, it might just be a British thing to be honest. No, stage hand is it’s own term for members of the crew who help move set pieces or pass props to the actors off stage, all under the supervision of the Stage Manager (again it’s own term). Even though technically they are all referred to as “crew”. 🙂

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  19. My Grandfather, who lived in Hawaii used to go fishing almost everyday and he and his friend even went spear fishing. I’m not sure why they did this- because his friend was British and he was Filipino and you wouldn’t think they had a lot of superstions in common but they never brought anything back like shells or other ‘finds’ even though there was money to be made from it because they said it was bad luck to take too much from the Sea.

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    1. What a wonderful anecdote!! This is a great example of how people, wherever they are from, share, at some level, so many similar beliefs! I love this notion of not taking too much from nature! Thank you for brightening my day with this!! 🙏😊🤗🤗

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  20. The sea can be a powerful foe. We lost a son-in-law “to the sea”.
    I also remember seeing with my own eyes the black coiffe of the old women in Sein, c.1976. I was in the Army. We were on alert when the Bohlen crashed there and spilled oil everywhere. We were sent to clean it. The old women still wore the black coiffe “pour les morts en mer…”
    Another great post. Merci.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I am sorry to hear that. As you say, the sea can be such an indiscriminate and unyielding foe.

      You saw the famed black coiffes of Sein? My goodness! That must have been close to the end. What an amazing piece of social history you witnessed.

      Sadly, the waters around that stretch of coast have taken so much over the years. Thankfully, there has not been an oil tanker lost for some time and let us hope it stays that way! 🙏

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I did. mid 70’s. Only a handful of old ladies still wore it. Yes. History. 😉 With my own eyes. But then I’ve seen the end of so many worlds… LOL.
        Hopefully oil tankers lost will stay far the coast. 🤞🏻

        Liked by 1 person

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