โJan-13-2014 05:21 AM
โJan-13-2014 11:29 AM
joebedford wrote:
A Canadian friend of ours had his Canadian flag stolen from their site in RGV.
In the USA I fly 3 flags - USA in the middle with CDN and Union Jack on the sides.
What _I_ find disrespectful is the Fleur-de-Lis. That should NEVER be flown outside Quebec.
โJan-13-2014 11:15 AM
โJan-13-2014 11:01 AM
obgraham wrote:You tell us what the Canadian flag code says. I know what the US code says and it is disrespectful to fly another nations flag solo.
Well it does work both ways -- many is the time I've seen US flags flying in Canada, mostly in campgrounds. With no Canadian flag alongside. Do those of you who fly the Stars & Stripes outside the US also fly that nation's flag?
I think some folks look too hard to be offended.
Bob & Betsy - USN Aviation Ret'd '78 & LEO Ret'd '03 & "Oath Keeper Forever"
โJan-13-2014 10:34 AM
โJan-13-2014 10:31 AM
'tiredTeacher wrote:John&Joey wrote:
I've always been taught that this was disrespectful to the hosting country.
That's the crux of the issue; you were taught. Flag etiquette is a thing of the past. Think of your neighbors who use Old Glory as a porch decoration, leaving it up at night, using it until it is faded and torn.
Here's an excerpt from the U.S. flag code:
"When flags of two or more nations are displayed, they are to be flown from separate staffs of the same height. The flags should be of approximately equal size. International usage forbids the display of the flag of one nation above that of another nation in time of peace."
This would make a second flag pole necessary. Unless ... the RV world adopts the sailing custom of flying Courtesy Flags: "A courtesy flag (or courtesy ensign) is flown by a ship in foreign waters as a token of respect by a visiting vessel. It is often a small (that is, smaller than the ship's own national ensign) national maritime flag of the host country .... The flag is customarily worn at the foremasthead of multi-masted vessels, the dockside yardarm or crosstree of the mast of single-masted vessels, while the house flag would be outboard. It may be flown from the jackstaff of vessels without masts."
So the RVs flag staff would require a cross tree. The RV's home nation flag at the top, the host nation's ensign on the awning side of the cross tree, and the owner's flag (or state flag) on the street side of the cross tree.
Sounds too complicated?
Teach
โJan-13-2014 10:26 AM
โJan-13-2014 10:07 AM
Barb & Dave O'Keeffe - full-timing since 2006
Figment II
(2002 Alpine 36 MDDS) ๐โJan-13-2014 09:57 AM
fla-gypsy wrote:
It is disrespectful if the host country has an etiquette code for flying the flags and this country does in fact have one. Is it really so hard to do a little research and do it correctly!
โJan-13-2014 09:27 AM
โJan-13-2014 09:18 AM
โJan-13-2014 09:18 AM
โJan-13-2014 08:30 AM
โJan-13-2014 07:21 AM
โJan-13-2014 07:15 AM
โJan-13-2014 06:46 AM
joebedford wrote:
A Canadian friend of ours had his Canadian flag stolen from their site in RGV.
In the USA I fly 3 flags - USA in the middle with CDN and Union Jack on the sides.
What _I_ find disrespectful is the Fleur-de-Lis. That should NEVER be flown outside Quebec.