The Hull Truth - Boating and Fishing Forum


Go Back   The Hull Truth - Boating and Fishing Forum > BOATING FORUMS > The Boating Forum

Notices

Random Quote: Everything has to eat somebody. (Bruce the shark. "Jaws," the movies.)
Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 06-02-2009, 06:52 AM
  #1    
Senior MemberCaptains Club MemberPLEDGER
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Wilmington, NC
Posts: 457
Default Boat name change

Documented vessel. HMS Tuna Permit. Epirb. MMSI

I am thinking about a name change (for my Grand daughter).

ADDISON LEIGH

  • I know I will have to complete the CG documentation name change form
  • Notify NOAA about the epirb name change
  • Notify ??? about MMSI
  • Tuna Permit
I remember reading about a time period for changing the HMS permit. Would a name change fall into this catagory? Or would I be better off to wait till next renewal.

Anything else I have missed.

Horace
__________________
"SHALLOW MINDED"
2005 19' INTRUDER, 115 YAMAHA 4 STROKE
Capthorace is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-02-2009, 06:54 AM
  #2    
Admirals Club
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: 26 46' 18.72"N 80 02' 47.34"W
Posts: 2,635
Default

Dont do it.....things will start to break!
__________________
Cmann is offline   Reply With Quote
 
Old 06-02-2009, 07:25 AM
  #3    
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Miami FL
Posts: 23
Default

Go for it. BUT...
Remember the traditions of changing a boats name.
I copied this from Boatus site.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Renaming a boat? How bad could that be?
Superstition got you down?
John Vigor offers tips for renaming your boat and keeping it lucky By John Vigor.
I once knew a man in Florida who told me he'd owned 24 different yachts and renamed every single one of them. "Did it bring you bad luck?" I asked. "Not that I'm aware of," he said. "You don't believe in those old superstitions, do you?" Well, yes. Matter of fact, I do. And I'm not alone. Actually, it's not so much being superstitious as being v-e-r-y careful. It's an essential part of good seamanship. Some years ago, when I wanted to change the name of my newly purchased 31-foot sloop from Our Way to Freelance, I searched for a formal "denaming ceremony" to wipe the slate clean in preparation for the renaming. I read all the books, but I couldn't find one. What I did learn, though, was that such a ceremony should consist of five parts: an invocation, an expression of gratitude, a supplication, a re-dedication and a libation. So I wrote my own short ceremony: Vigor's inter-denominational denaming ceremony. It worked perfectly.
Freelance carried me and my family many thousands of deep-sea miles both north and south of the equator, and we enjoyed good luck all the way. I used the same ceremony after that to change the name of my Santana 22 from Zephyr to Tagati, a Zulu word that means "magic" or "bewitched."
I'll give you the exact wording of Vigor's denaming ceremony, but first you must remove all physical traces of the boat's old name. Take the old log book ashore, along with any other papers that bear the old name. Check for offending books and charts with the name inscribed. Be ruthless. Sand away the old name from the lifebuoys, transom, topsides, dinghy, and oars. Yes, sand it away. Painting over is not good enough. You're dealing with gods here, you understand, not mere dumb mortals. If the old name is carved or etched, try to remove it or, at the very minimum, fill it with putty and then paint it over. And don't place the new name anywhere on the boat before the denaming ceremony is carried out. That's just tempting fate.
How you conduct the ceremony depends entirely on you. If you're the theatrical type, and enjoy appearing in public in your yachtclub blazer and skipper's cap, you can read it with flair on the foredeck before a gathering of distinguished guests. But if you find this whole business faintly silly and embarrassing, and only go along with it because you're scared to death of what might happen if you don't, you can skulk down below and mumble it on your own. That's perfectly OK. The main thing is that you carry it out. The words must be spoken.
I compromised by sitting in Tagati's cockpit with the written-out ceremony folded into a newspaper, so that any passerby would think I was just reading the news to my wife, sitting opposite. Enough people think I'm nuts already. Even my wife has doubts. The last part of the ceremony, the libation, must be performed at the bow, just as it is in a naming ceremony. There are two things to watch out for here. Don't use cheap-cheap champagne, and don't try to keep any for yourself. Buy a second bottle if you want some. Use a brew that's reasonably expensive, based on your ability to pay, and pour the whole lot on the boat. One of the things the gods of the sea despise most is meanness, so don't try to do this bit on the cheap.
What sort of time period should elapse between this denaming ceremony and a new naming ceremony? There's no fixed time. You can do the renaming right after the denaming, if you want, but I personally would prefer to wait at least 24 hours to give any lingering demons a chance to clear out. Afterward
Now you can pop the cork, shake the bottle and spray the whole of the contents on the bow. When that's done, you can quietly go below and enjoy the other bottle yourself. Incidentally, I had word from a friend that the Florida yachtsman I mentioned earlier had lost his latest boat, a 22-foot trailer-sailer. Sailed her into an overhead power line. Fried her. She burned to the waterline. Bad luck? Not exactly.
He and his crew escaped unhurt. He was just very careless. He renamed her, as usual, without bothering to perform Vigor's famous interdenominational denaming ceremony. And this time, at long last, he got what he deserved.
Vigor's denaming ceremony
"In the name of all who have sailed aboard this ship in the past, and in the name of all who may sail aboard her in the future, we invoke the ancient gods of the wind and the sea to favor us with their blessing today.
"Mighty Neptune, king of all that moves in or on the waves; and mighty Aeolus (pronounced EE-oh-lus), guardian of the winds and all that blows before them:
"We offer you our thanks for the protection you have afforded this vessel in the past. We voice our gratitude that she has always found shelter from tempest and storm and enjoyed safe passage to port.
"Now, wherefore, we submit this supplication, that the name whereby this vessel has hitherto been known _____, be struck and removed from your records.
"Further, we ask that when she is again presented for blessing with another name, she shall be recognized and shall be accorded once again the selfsame privileges she previously enjoyed.
"In return for which, we rededicate this vessel to your domain in full knowledge that she shall be subject as always to the immutable laws of the gods of the wind and the sea.
"In consequence whereof, and in good faith, we seal this pact with a libation offered according to the hallowed ritual of the sea."
Christening ceremony

After a boat is denamed, you simply need to rename it using the traditional christening ceremony, preferably with Queen Elizabeth breaking a bottle of champagne on the bow, and saying the words:

"I name this ship ___________, and may she bring fair winds and good fortune to all who sail on her."

This article was taken from Good Old Boat Magazine, Volume 2, Number 4, July/August 1999




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Home : Government Affairs : Consumer Affairs : Shopping : Insurance : Towing Services : Foundation : Good Old Boat

©2009, Boat Owners Association of The United States. All Rights Reserved.
SushiBuff is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-02-2009, 07:42 AM
  #4    
Senior MemberCaptains Club MemberPLEDGER
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Hammond, LA
Posts: 11,645
Default

you need a goat, a bottle of clorox, and co-joined indonesian twins in order to complete the ritual correctly
__________________
cgrand is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 06-02-2009, 11:02 AM
  #5    
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Ft Myers, Florida
Posts: 124
Default

A woman has to run around the boat nekid and give it a big kiss.
flatfishn is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-02-2009, 10:50 PM
  #6    
Senior MemberCaptains Club Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Florida Keys
Posts: 6,000
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by cgrand View Post
you need a goat, a bottle of clorox, and co-joined indonesian twins in order to complete the ritual correctly
cgrand

No, not in Looosanna! That is the Florida ceremony.
KeyPineSavage is offline   Reply With Quote
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Boat name change superstitions mrossj1 The Boating Forum 12 04-22-2009 06:29 PM
Verado oil change/L/U change and Petit Vivid White update thundra The Boating Forum 7 09-11-2007 05:40 PM
Boat Name change BoatFull The Boating Forum 14 08-28-2007 10:31 PM
Boat Change mbj359 The Boating Forum 1 05-30-2006 06:59 PM
Boat name change B-Faithful Dockside Chat 25 11-19-2005 02:29 PM

 



©2009 TheHullTruth.com

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.2.0