Yacht's crew divided by a common language
- Wed, 11 Nov 2009
- Comments (16)
Sailing is a great leveller. You can discover many things about your crewmates when confined to a small, wet yacht mid-ocean. But it seems that some on-shore differences are harder to shake off than you might expect. American round the world crew member Quannon Au on board California in the Clipper 09-10 Round the World Yacht Race shares some tips from the American-flagged, mainly British-crewed entry...
"Dont let the giant stars and stripes flag on the mainsail fool you. With our skipper and most crew either hailing from the UK or having a British background, we are definitely more a steak and chips than a burgers and fries boat, with just a few Americans onboard. Sometimes when I hear Pete call for the Yankee 3 to be brought on deck immediately, I wonder whether one of my fellow Americans has gotten in trouble with skipper, before realizing that hes talking about one of the headsails.
Part of my ongoing training on this race, then, has been learning to navigate the subtle and not so subtle cultural differences. The following are my results thus far after many weeks of painstaking cultural anthropology. But dont cry for me, Arkansas. If my work can help just one American coming onboard in a future leg then it will all have been worthwhile.
Tea: Where else would we start but with tea? Brits drink tea as much as Americans drink coffee. Actually, Brits drink tea as much as Americans drink any liquid. Whereas our franchise coffee shops foisted things like the grande latte mochaccino with soy on the rest of the world, on the boat youre more likely to hear something like tea, white, strong, 1 sweetener, extra milk. Also, tea can apparently mean dinner. Or lunch. Which seems like it could lead to questions like would you like some tea with your tea?
Biscuits: What we call a biscuit, they call a bread roll. What we call a cookie, they call a biscuit. Crackers can be biscuits or crackers. But chocolate chip cookies are always cookies. Chocolate chip biscuits? Dont be silly.
New and Exotic Foods: These may require some practice to get used to. Remember, your British crewmates have had their entire lives to get accustomed to the flavour. You have a lot of catching up to do. Dig in and add an extra helping of that Branston Pickle. Ask your crewmates about that jar of Marmite and theyll tell you that many of them have eaten it from a very young age. They may also tell you that its a brown gooey substance left over from an industrial process.
Fascinating.
Repetitive Sauces: Peri peri sauce. Reggae reggae sauce. I havent yet seen saucey sauce sauce but it could be hidden somewhere in the galley. Asking for brown brown sauce or mango mango chutney chutney will only elicit strange looks, however.
Potatoes: Fries are called chips. Chips are called crisps. Jacket potatoes are what we call baked potatoes except, um, wearing cute little potato-sized biker jackets, I guess.
Manners. You may hear your crewmates ask for things using lots of extra words. Dont be intimidated. This is called being polite, but being American no one will expect you to learn it. Just remember that I couldnt perhaps trouble you for a hot drink, could I? translates roughly in American English to Yo! Lemme get a coffee!
Aluminum vs. Aluminium: Brits dont know that we spell the word without the extra I. Dont let them know this and instead insist that we pronounce it differently just to make them mad. Then watch as they get mad. Good clean fun every time.
Buoys: Brits prounounce this boy and find our pronunciation of boo-ey to be hilarious. See aluminium. Rinse and repeat.
Clothing: Pants are called trousers. Underwear is called pants. So saying wow, my pants sure are dirty may result in awkward silence. Followed by humiliating laughter.
Shortening words to make them more fun to say. Searching for a breakfast with chocolate biscuits? Do a recky on a brekky with some chocky bickies! If youre a smoker you might even enjoy a ciggy afterwards. You can actually say these things.
Finally, if youre a guy and someone accuses you of wearing a big girls blouse, well, you can probably guess that its not a good thing. British dudes dont like wearing big girls blouses."

Latest comments
January 13 09:04
James Windle
And another thing: A sandwich is not a sandwich to an American unless it contains A LOT of absolutely everything you can find in the galley.
January 13 19:51
Davey
Aw that's just the tip of the iceberg. Someone I worked with went across the pond to do a tough course about maintaining a piece of military hardware. After making a drawing error he asked "has anyone got a rubber?" which caused some very strange looks. More strange looks followed after he followed the first mistake by saying "Cor I could do with a fag". Same language but often poles apart.
January 15 16:13
Jayprime
Surely the accusation is of 'being a big girls blouse' not of wearing one!
February 04 15:40
Brian
I spent a bit of time in the US. Then came back and had the family on the ferry to France. Arrived down to the car on arrival in Cherbourg to find a puncture on the right-rear. Crewmember: "Wot's up ?" Me: "I've gotta flat". Crewmwmber: "No prob, happens all the time". He reappears with pertable battery and jump-leads...