Loving some boat names
There are so many great traditional boat names, and so many clever but tasteful ones, too.
I saw one inside Manasquan Inlet, "True Love" that made want to consider "True Wuv", if you saw "The Princess Bride" movie. But, I couldn't see hailing at tugboat/barge captain asking if he would approve an overtake to starboard by "True Wuv".....
I stuck with my first choice, "Boatwright", named for the boat builders who create our vessels, and a family name descended from King William's (William the Conqueror) Norman Invasion in 1066 - the Batuvrais - pictured in two panels the Tapestry of Bayeux. These Vikings living in northwest France - "Normandy" - land of the Norse Men - built William's longships for his forces to allow William to take his rightful seat as King of England via the Battle of Hastings. William gave key members of his invasion force land grants in England for their service, including the "Batuvrais", which in Old English, "Bat Wyrtha" - Boat Wrights, and in England as surnames were often tied to professions, Boatwright became such a surname. John Boatwright of Fressingfield, born in 1603 is the first identified family member of a Boatwright family that emigrated to the New World in the mid 1600s, and my maternal grandmother, maiden surname Boatwright, born c. 1880, was the spiritual foundation of more recent families, a true Pioneer Woman, and a woman whose strong Christian character and wisdom I chose to honor in naming my son and in naming my trawler.
Incidentally, a Boatwright was chaplain to King Henry II and master of Christ College of Oxford University in 1445, likely not a relative, but his coat of arms showed three anchors on the shield and in some renditions a ship above the shield - beautifully nautical. Ample versions are easily researched on line, if you wish to see it.
So, while I tremendously enjoy clever nautical names (Cod-Father across the fairway in our marina is a favorite), True Wuv had to take a backseat to Boatwright on my Camano's stern.
Thanks for all who have shared truly clever/clean names as well as more traditional strong names among our favorite avocation! It's a subject that always entertains!