Haha Not offended at all Monkeyman. It started back in the 40's with the Raiders. They spent a lot of time on ship with the Navy who used the knots to decorate the railings on the ships, which was heritage that actually came from European whalers way, way, way back in the day. The Raiders had to row onto the Japanese islands during WWII and everybody had their own paddle which was specific to their position in the zodiac. If you were KIA or left the unit, someone would wrap it for you as memorabilia. They disbanded the Raiders in 1944, but a lot of them left to join the Amphibious Recon unit that had been created the year prior because it shared many of the same capabilities and missions. It ended up spreading through the SEALS when they were created in the late 60's and even found it's way into the Rangers although they mostly decorate "walking sticks" instead of paddles. It eventually went on to many units in the military. Unfortunately, it is a dying art form. Not so much that people aren't doing it, but more because people aren't doing it properly because they're lazy. And as far as the history on it goes, there is a ton of debate. The part about the whalers is true and I only know that because I was able to research how coxcombing got into the Navy. But which unit actually started decorating paddles remains heavily argued. This is the way it was taught to me by MGySgt Padilla back when I was first in Recon training, but it is very possible that there is bias in the story haha.
So there's your history lesson for today! And unlike the History Channel, it didn't involve Nazi's, aliens, or the end of the world lol
EDIT: Thanks Tony!
[This message has been edited by ggfoster (edited 02-07-2013).]