Having been a sailor for 40 years, I am better at “red&green” than “left&right”, and I always knew that red was on the left and green on the right (duh, obviously).

When I was young, my dad (also a sailor) even made a point of mounting one red and one green grip on my bicycle handlebar; of course I did the same with with boys’ bikes.

Well, today I learned that this is called “Region A”, and the Americas and a few other countries are called “Region B” where the red&green is reversed: red is on the right (and green on the left)!

To make things even weirder, navigational lights are not reversed in Region B.

Mind blown.

  • @snake_baitman
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    31 year ago

    putting the Red on the Right seems like a no-brainer to me. If I had to guess, it’s down to whether the alliteration works in the respective region’s predominant language or not

    • @PlutoniumAcidOP
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      21 year ago

      Which regioin are you in? If in Region B (subject of this TIL), I guess you’re not confused by the aspect that markers and nav-lights are opposite, rather than same?

      In Region A, “red on red” is natural: When inbound, I will have a red lateral mark pass me by on my red navigational side. (As opposed to “red right returning” as stated in the Wiki article.)