Last modified: 2024-04-20 by rob raeside
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All "British Arctic Territory" flags are hoaxes, developed by Clay Moss et al. on April Fools' Days
See also:
image by Clay Moss, 1 April 2016
Celebrating its 21st birthday, the beautiful metropolis of Alert
presents the flag of the newly formed Alert Ice Sailing Club.
The club
has actually existed from the beginning of the BAT as a territory, but the flag
and ensign of choice for the club was the BAT red ensign. As interest in the
club exploded and ice boat tonnage rose, it was appropriately decided that the
club needed its own flag, and thus the attached image.
The club is in the
application process for a Royal Warrant that would make it the first "royal" ice
sailing club. Only time will tell if the warrant transpires, but word out of
Buckingham Palace sounds encouraging.
Clay Moss, 1 April 2016
image by Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 1 April 2016
When a club adopts its own flag later in its existence, it often takes the
emblem from its burgee, and the AISC is no exception. Now, for a flag, obviously
an ice sailer would be turned so that the proud polar bear in its sail would
face the hoist. For a club burgee there's no such concern, which is fortunate as
the shape of the charge wouldn't go well with the shape of the burgee that
way. Hence, the ice sailer isn't turned in the burgee.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 1 April 2016
There was considerable discussion at the Office of Vexillology as to whether
or not the ice boat should point toward the hoist, or point more naturally
toward the fly relative to what it is. Mr. Wynn Jammer, the artist of the ice
boat defacement pointed out that the sail on the ice boat was positioned to
tack. Therefore the boat needed to be facing toward the hoist, as it is sailing
into the wind.
As the officer's flags currently represent people who
typically flee from their duties, flyward facing ice boats are perfectly
acceptable metaphorically.
Clay Moss, 1 April 2016
The American ice
yacht clubs of old appear to have preferred officers
flags that were rectangular with crossing red and blue stripes, but the Alert
Ice Sailing Club isn't from that era. It's no surprise then, that the
officers' flags follow the American system of rectangular flags but use the
British system of officers and defacements: Commodore, derived from the burgee,
with no defacement; vice-commodore, derived from
the burgee, with one disk; rear commodore, derived from
the burgee, with two disks.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 1 April 2016
image by Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 1 April 2016
image by Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 1 April 2016