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Opinion
What about boat names?


Underway: A Rose by Any Other Name…

"What’s in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet." So says Shakespeare’s Juliet to Romeo when she tries to make the point that she is in love with him, the person, not the Montague name.

What about boat names? People can be very picky about them, which makes choosing one no small deal. Builders often give new builds a code name right up until the launch. Contributing editor Bill Ando has tracked the build process of a 269-foot oceAnco in each of our issues since last winter. In the monthly "On the Horizon" column, we followed the yard’s lead and have been calling this boat "Y702." Next month you’ll read that Y702 has morphed into Alfa Nero.


Photograph by Neil Rabinowitz. (Click image to enlarge)


The Lürssen shipyard has a number of code names for its boats. The recently launched project "Falcon" is now named Kismet. According to contributing editor Justin Ratcliffe, who wrote about this new, 223-foot Espen Øino/Reymond Langton-designed yacht, the name means "destiny" in Turkish, Arabic, Urdu and Hindi.

Boat names run the gamut from nouns, proper nouns and verbs, to adjectives and epithets. Take Marco Polo, the very appropriate moniker for the 148-foot, Ron Holland-designed long-range explorer built by MCC in China. The vessel’s namesake was a Venetian trader and explorer who, in the mid-thirteenth century, was one of the first Westerners to travel the Silk Road to China and to visit with Kublai Khan, leader of the Mongol Empire.

More often than not, boats (which we always address as "she") are named after a woman, be it a girlfriend, a daughter or a wife: Lady Linda, Kelly Sea, Miss Michelle, Princess K. Ann Avery wrote about the Firestone Family and Friends’ new 171-foot Perini Navi sailing yacht, Tamsen, which is named after the Firestone family matriarch. The name transcends the boat in more ways than one in that Tamsen is also the moniker for a new designer label whose prints are inspired by the original art work of the elder Firestone. The boat is replete with fabrics also made from his artwork, but that are unique to the yacht. Some people believe it’s bad luck to change the name of a boat. Tradition aside, it may get sticky honeymooning with your new bride Victoria aboard a boat called Selma W.

In Tom Zydler’s photojournalistic story of cruising to Antarctica with the owner of Whale Song, we get the gist that the multiyear journey for this owner is all about using his boat to explore nature.

At the Codecasa Shipyard in Viareggio, Italy, the first in the company’s 41S series was named Bellissima C. Adjectives work well in Italian, as do verbs. It makes sense to have a beautiful boat called Bellissima or even Andiamo. Somehow the spoken English translation doesn’t work as well: "Beautiful, Beautiful," "Come in, please." Anyhow, that’s now a moot point. Bellissima C since has been purchased and renamed Family Day, the meaning of which is apparent.


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