Never Say P*g
The Book of Sailors’ Superstitions
The nautical reference book you never knew you needed: a compendium of all superstitions maritime and marine. Learn your A-B-Seas of sailors’ guiding magic and mythos — and why you should never stir your tea with a knife, lest you invite trouble and strife.
Ever wondered why the skipper gave you a hairy eyeball when you stepped aboard the ship with your left foot? Or why a brolly or a bumbershoot — for the newly seasoned sailor, an umbrella — will bring trouble aboard? Find out all this and more in Never Say P*g, the never-seen-before collection of maritime superstitions ranging from the East Coast to the Great Lakes of Canada, the Inuit to the First Nations Peoples of the Pacific Northwest. From A: why killing an albatross is bad luck, but seeing one is good luck — to B: why bananas are so feared that some sailors only refer to them as 'that curved yellow fruit' — to C: clapping aboard a ship will bring thunder — you’ll be fluent in sailing superstitions in no time!
From sailor and author R. Bruce Macdonald — who swears he didn’t know not to stir his tea with a knife — comes an indispensable guide to the ways in which we ward off bad luck at sea and attempt to keep ourselves safe by shaping fate through signs and symbols. The original 'marine insurance' for sailors, superstitions offered a semblance of control amidst a dangerous and volatile life aboard, at the mercy of the weather, the crew, the ship — even pirates. Ultimately, this encyclopedia reveals that superstitions have always been with us to comfort, to charm and to ease fears. Learn them all as you sail the high seas!
R. Bruce Macdonald is a writer, sailor and artist with a passion for maritime history. He has logged over 100,000 nautical miles. Macdonald has contributed to SAIL, Cruising World, Ocean Navigator, Soundings and Sailing magazine, and is the author of North Star of Herschel Island (FriesenPress, 2012) and Sisters of the Ice (Lost Moose Books, 2021). He lives aboard North Star with his family, along the coast of Vancouver, British Columbia.