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Each player is dealt 7 cards and the rest are set aside. Players pick up their hand and discard one card to the table. When everyone has done that, each player picks up the discard on his right, which becomes part of his hand. The first player to collect 7 cards of the same suit, says "my ship sails" and lays her hand, face up, on the table. If two players go out simultaneously, there are two options for deciding the winner: either the first player to say "my ship sails" wins or the player with the highest ranking card wins.<ref name=Parlett2008/>
Each player is dealt 7 cards and the rest are set aside. Players pick up their hand and discard one card to the table. When everyone has done that, each player picks up the discard on his right, which becomes part of his hand. The first player to collect 7 cards of the same suit, says "my ship sails" and lays her hand, face up, on the table. If two players go out simultaneously, there are two options for deciding the winner: either the first player to say "my ship sails" wins or the player with the highest ranking card wins.<ref name=Parlett2008/>


{{anchor|Ochse leg dich|Ochse, leg dich|Ochse Leg Dich|Ochse, Leg Dich|Esel}}
== Ochse, leg dich! ==
== Ochse, leg dich! ==
[[File:Bavarian Pattern - Suit of Leaves.jpg|thumb|"Ochse, leg dich!" ("Ox, lie down!")]]
[[File:Bavarian Pattern - Suit of Leaves.jpg|thumb|"Ochse, leg dich!" ("Ox, lie down!")]]

Revision as of 09:18, 8 June 2023

My Ship Sails
English children's card game
"Wizzy, wizzy, wee!"
TypeCollecting
Players4
Age range5+
DeckFrench pack
Playclockwise
Playing time5-10 minutes
ChanceEasy
Related games
Ochse, leg dich!

My Ship Sails, also called My Bird Sings,[1] is an English card game for children that is played with a 52-card French pack. It appears related to the 17th-century gambling game, My Sow's Pigg'd.[2] In 19th century Shropshire, the latter game went under the name of Wizzy, Wizzy, Wee; the aim was to collect cards of the same suit, the first to do so throwing their hand on the table and crying "My sow's pigged!" or "Wizzy, wizzy, wee!".[3]

Rules

My Ship Sails may be played by four to seven players with a 52-card French-suited pack. The aim of the game is to be the first player to collect seven cards all of one suit.[4]

Each player is dealt 7 cards and the rest are set aside. Players pick up their hand and discard one card to the table. When everyone has done that, each player picks up the discard on his right, which becomes part of his hand. The first player to collect 7 cards of the same suit, says "my ship sails" and lays her hand, face up, on the table. If two players go out simultaneously, there are two options for deciding the winner: either the first player to say "my ship sails" wins or the player with the highest ranking card wins.[4]

Ochse, leg dich!

"Ochse, leg dich!" ("Ox, lie down!")

Ochse, leg dich! ("Ox, lie down!") is a German and Austrian variant played with 32 French or German cards (Skat pack). It is a simple, family card game that is often played with children and is useful for learning the card values and card suits.[5] It was popular with the German-speaking population of South Bohemia prior to their expulsion after the Second World War, and was known there as Ox, liach de![6]

The aim of the game is to collect all eight cards of one suit. Dealer deals 8 cards to each of the four players. Forehand leads by passing a card of his choice to the player on his left - middlehand. Middlehand then passes a card to rearhand and so on in clockwise order. Play continues in this way until a player has collected all eight cards of one suit in his hand, whereupon he lays them face up on the table and declares "Ochse, leg dich!" or "Ox, lie down!"[5]

The winner then receives as many chips or gaming counters from each other player as that player has fallen short in collecting eight cards of the same suit. For example, if a player has only collected five cards of one suit, he pays 3 chips to the winner.[5]

Among Danube Swabians the game was called Esel ("donkey") and a player called "Esel" on going out. The last player to lay down their cards was the Esel and became the next dealer.[7]

References

  1. ^ Cavendish (1875), p. 53
  2. ^ Parlett (1991), p. 141
  3. ^ Jackson (1883), pp. 527/528
  4. ^ a b Parlett (2008), p. 399
  5. ^ a b c Gööck (1967), pp. 27/28
  6. ^ Jungbauer, Dr. Gustav (1928). Sudetendeutsche Zeitschrift für Volkskunde, Prague: J. G. Calve. p. 279.
  7. ^ Esel at rick-heil.info. Retrieved 8 June 2023.

Literature

  • Cavendish (1875). Round Games at Cards. London: de la Rue.
  • Gööck, Roland (1967). Freude am Kartenspiel, Bertelsmann, Gütersloh
  • Jackson, Georgina Frederica (1883). Shropshire Folk-Lore: A Sheaf of Gleanings, Vol. 1. ed. by Charlotte Sophia Burne. London: Trübner.
  • Parlett, David (1991). A History of Card Games, OUP, Oxford. ISBN 0-19-282905-X
  • Parlett, David (2008). The Penguin Book of Card Games, Penguin, London. ISBN 978-0-141-03787-5