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"Long way up, short way down". Come to think of it, always reminded me of something out of the Kama Sutra.
George Wallace said:Just to add my 2 cents worth.....Our current salute, from our RCN traditions, is nothing at all like an "American" salute. I do think that if you can't see the difference, then you haven't looked at it close enough. I think that ours is much more professional and snappier in its' presentation. I think the Americans have a very sloppy salute compared to ours. If you think that our salute is sloppy also, then those presenting it are at fault for the sloppiness, not the salute itself.
What I have noticed in Canada though, is a tendency for pointy-ended army types (usually Officers or SNCOS) to have the thumb held straight out from the hand, as opposed to tight against the hand, with elbow quite a bit lower than parallel to the ground.
odd, never did it myself, nor, seen anyone of my fellow rank use type of salute either. Guess I am hanging out with the right kinda saluting SNCO's and Pointy heads..
Hands up for Queen and country
Cadet salute no sign of creeping Americanization
The Edmonton Journal
August 1, 2005
Re: "Eagle spreads its wings," by Bill Besse, Letters, July 25.
I am writing to clarify some misunderstandings that Bill Besse has regarding Sea Cadet (and Canadian Forces) drill and ceremonial procedures.
The salute that Besse observed the Sea Cadets use, which he refers to as a "U.S.-style salute" (with the palm of the hand facing downward) is, according to E.C. Russell's Customs and Traditions of the Canadian Forces (1980), the naval salute. It is the salute that was formerly used by the Royal Canadian Navy and has been used by the Canadian Forces since the unification of the three services (Navy, Army and Air Force) in 1968.
The form of salute that Besse would have known during his 25 years in the Royal Canadian Air Force, in which the palm of the hand is held flat and faces outward, was formerly used by both the Canadian Army and the RCAF before unification (and is still used by the RCMP). But it has not been used by the Canadian Forces for almost 40 years.
Both forms of salute are part of the wealth of customs and traditions that the Canadian military services inherited from their British counterparts, going back to the days when "the sun never set on the British Empire."
The fact that the U.S. military also use the naval salute shows that the Americans have also inherited many military customs and traditions from Britain.
So please rest assured, Bill Besse, that the form of salute which you saw the Royal Canadian Sea Cadets use at Commonwealth Stadium to honour their Queen and their country is not a sign of creeping Americanization but is, in fact, a time-honoured tradition inherited by the Canadian Forces (and the Canadian cadets) from the Royal Canadian Navy and, ultimately, from that most British of services, the Royal Navy.
Rick N. McKown,
Lieutenant-Commander, Commandant, Regional Cadet Instructor School (Prairie)
paracowboy said:how 'bout we just flash gang signs at each other, and carry on with the friggin' mission?
Beret colours, cap badges, uniform designs, forage caps, and now the salute...nice to realize that our priorities are firmly in place.
paracowboy said:how 'bout we just flash gang signs at each other, and carry on with the friggin' mission?
Armoured Signaller said:Here is a good one, why not go back to the 'old school' British salute from the days gone by of the palm of the hand facing toward the person being paid the compliment. Always found a warm spot when my old RSM; who was around when Centurion was a rank and not a tank, used it when handing off the Regiment to the Adjudant. <sigh> The good ol days.
Michael Dorosh said:Or the good old days of the 1970s, when post-Vietnam fallout and a Prime Minister who loathed the military unified the military (not a bad idea in its self) and stripped everyone of all their traditions, leaving the remaining few to soldier on mostly ignored and mildly detested?
paracowboy said:how 'bout we just flash gang signs at each other, and carry on with the friggin' mission?
Infanteer said:Unification was in the 60's under Pearson, not the 70's under Trudeau.