Last modified: 2010-12-03 by ivan sache
Keywords: morbihan | yacht club | arradon | hoedic | ermine (black) | cross (black) | crouesty-arzon | cross (red) | ile-aux-moines | carnac | sail (white) | dolmen | star (yellow) | trinite-sur-mer (la) | goret (le) | pig | larmor-plage |
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Burgee of ANIM - Image by Ivan Sache, 19 May 2001
Île aux Moines (Monks' Island) is a small island and municipality
located in the Gulf of Morbihan (in Breton "small sea"), a small gulf of ca. 20 km
width, separated from Atlantic Ocean by a narrow strait of 1 km in
width.
In the first century before J.C., Julius Caesar defeated the
Venetes during a naval fight in what is now the Gulf of Morbihan (but
geologists do not all agree that the Gulf was already constituted at
that time.)
The burgee of Association Nautique de l'Île aux Moines (ANIM) is yellow with a black border and the black letters "ANIM".
Source: ANIM website
Ivan Sache, 19 May 2001
Burgee of CNA - Image by Ivan Sache, 2 June 2009
The municipality of Arradon is located on the Gulf of Morbihan, a few kilometers west of Vannes. The town is famous for the scenic, thin stripe of land called Point Arradon. The local hero is the yachtman Eugè:ne Riguidel (b. 1940), winner of the Transat en double (Lorient-Bermuda-Lorient) with Gilles Gahinet in 1979, who abandoned racing in 1985 to become an ecologist militant.
The Centre Nautique d'Arradon (CNA), located on Point Arradon, uses a white flag with the square logo of CNA, as seen on a photo (page no longer available) taken in 2008 during the GP de Vannes race.
Ivan Sache, 2 June 2009
Burgee of CRG - Image by Ivan Sache, 19 August 2002
Le Goret is a small port located on Île aux
Moines.
Cercle des Régates du Goret (CRG) is a small yacht
club with a membership of c. 50. The burgee of the yacht club is
yellow with a red stripe placed along the hoist and a blue piglet in
the middle. The burgee is canting since a piglet is in French called
a goret.
Source: CRG website
Ivan Sache, 19 August 2002
Burgee of CNH - Image by Ivan Sache, 7 December 2009
The small island of Hoëdic (aka Hœdic; in Breton, Edig; 111 inhabitants in 2006; 208 ha), located a few miles off the coast of south Brittany, was made a municipality in 1891.
Club Nautique Hoedicais (CNH) was founded in 1964 by summer vacationers fond of sailing. To keep the club as friendly as possible and to respect the natual environment of the island, membership was restricted to 100, each member being awarded a numbered burgee.The burgee of CNH is white with a black cross, whose vertical and horizontal arms are fimbriated in white and black on their left and lower side, respectively. The vertical arm of the cross thinner than the horizontal one. A stylized black ermine spot is placed in canton.
Burgee No. 8 of CNH - Image by Ivan Sache, 7 December 2009
The Pavillon voyageur (Traveling burgee) section of the CNH website shows photos of members of the CNH proudly presented their numbered burgee in different places worldwide.
Burgee No. 8 was presented in October 2003 to the cartoonist Jacques Faizant (d. 2006) by Arnaud Rollet.Ivan Sache, 7 December 2009
Flag of SNL - Image by Ivan Sache, 4 October 2010/P>
Société Nautique de Larmor-Plage (SNL, website) was the first yacht club founded in the Lorient Harbor, in 1872, as the Société Nautique et d'Instruction Navale de Lorient (SNINL). After the Second World War, the club was relocated in the municipality of Larmor-Plage, at the entrance of the harbor, close to the Kernevel fort, and took its current name.
The emblem of SNL is made of a black fouled anchor with the French
and SNL flags crossed per saltire. The flag of SNL is white with
an horizontally divided blue-red-blue swallow-tailed flag in canton.
A photo taken in July 2009 during the National Snipe regatta shows the flag hoisted on the boat of the Race Committee.
The flag placed in the canton of the SNL flag was the registration flag for the maritime arrondissement of Lorient, sector Quimper-Lorient (Lorient included).
Ivan Sache, 4 October 2010
Burgee of SNT - Image by Ivan Sache, 16 July 2002/P>
La Trinité-sur-Mer (1,500 inhabitants) is a sea resort located on the Atlantic Ocean, at the mouth of the river Crach. The town is named after a chapel consecrated to the Holy Trinity. After the building of a modern marina in 1970, La Trinité rapidly became the Mecca of French offshore yachting. Several "Formula-One" sailboats are moored there.
Société Nautique de la Trinité-sur-Mer (SNT) was founded in 1879 and is currently the French yacht club with the largest membership. Its burgee is a 1:2 triangular flag, horizontally divided blue-red with two white triangles placed along the hoist.
Source: SNT website
Ivan Sache, 16 July 2002
Flag of SRC - Image by Ivan Sache, 16 October 2001
Société des Régates de Carnac (SRC) has a nearly square flag, with nine alternating blue and white stripe and a large, rectangular canton charged with a yellow star.
Source: Guide Vert Michelin Bretagne, edition 2001, showing a colour plate originally released by the SHOM (Service Hydrographique et Océanographique de la Marine), undated.
Ivan Sache, 16 October 2001
Burgee of YCCA, two versions - Images by Ivan Sache, 26 December 2004
Arzon is a small town located at the end of the peninsula of Rhuys, which separates the gulf of Morbihan from Atlantic Ocean. Crouesty is the marina located on the municipality of Arzon.
Yacht Club Crouesty-Arzon (YCCA) has a truncated burgee quarterly divided white-blue-blue-blue by a red cross fimbriated in white. A sailing ship (blue sail, yellow hull) is placed in the first quarter and the initials "Y. C. C. A." in yellow are placed in an arched pattern in the third quarter.
Source: YCCA website
The list of the clubs affiliated to Yacht Club de France shows the burgee of YCCA with a blue border around the canton.
Ivan Sache, 26 December 2004
Burgee of YCC - Image by Ivan Sache, 19 May 2001
Carnac (4,444 inhabitants) is famous for its megalithic alignments (more than 2,000 menhirs and a few dolmens, erected between 5000 and 2000 BC). Menhirs are erected stones. Dolmens are the stone frameworks of underground funerary rooms whose earth backfill has disappeared, so that they look like a stone table. Several legends have been associated with menhirs and dolmens, not to mention the most famous menhir cutter and thrower, Obélix.
Yacht Club de Carnac (YCC) has a light blue burgee with a white sail over two white waves at hoist and a yellow dolmen at fly.
Source: YCC website
Ivan Sache, 19 May 2001