Leave the Bananas at Home

As fisherman we are all superstitious if not just a little, to the point we blame other people, objects, or mother nature for our own short falls of the day.  One of these superstitions is that bananas are bad luck on the water. Captains for centuries have blamed fowl weather, motor trouble, lack of fish, nearly anything negative that happens on the water can be blamed on the banana.

Here are some of the explanations of how this superstition came to fruition.

  • When top-heavy ships of earlier eras would sink, precious little other than the bananas they’d carried would be found floating on the surface, thereby leaving some to conclude conveyance of the fruit itself had led to these naval mishaps.
  • Spiders, snakes, and other poisonous vermin living among bananas carried in the hold would, on long haul trips, expand their horizons by infesting other parts of the ship.
  • Because the speediest sailing ships were used to get bananas to their destinations before they could spoil, those attempting to fish from them never caught anything while trolling.
  • Fisherman became ill after eating the fruit.
  • Other fruits would spoil more quickly when bananas were being shipped along with them, causing folks to deem bananas “bad luck.” (Actually, it wouldn’t have been ill fate that resulted in the spoilage of other foodstuffs, but instead the ethylene gas emitted by bananas as they ripen.)
  • Crew member injured by slipping on discarded banana peels.
  • Fisherman misses landing the big one due to a case of “the runs” caused by bananas he’d ingested.
  • Banana oil rubs off onto the hands of fisherman, thereby “spooking” the fish.
  • Early anglers in Hawaii would embark upon lengthy fishing trips in dugout canoes provisioned with (along with other food items) bananas. The farther they went, the fewer the fish, causing some of them to mistake correlation for causation.

Whether you want to believe this or not, Superior Pursuits is a banana free vessel, better to be safe than sorry.

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