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![]() "Joe" wrote in message om... "Donal" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote in message om... "Donal" wrote in message ... Are you claiming that you can maintain a proper lookout with radar alone? Thats what I'm claiming Donal. I would not suggest it running a strange river for the first time, but if you have navigated the same area many times and you know it like the back of your hand then you can safely run it with a quality fine tuned radar. Emmmm... Aren't we discussing the Coll Regs? The International Rules for the avoidance of Collisions?? on a dark night can you walk to your bathroom without smaking into the walls? Usually ..... [not always ... though]. I've never ****&d into the wardrobe (yet). Well maybe I mean most normal people have a memory that they use to their advantage, I can see how this will not apply to you. Ahaaaa! Are you claiming that you can *remember* where the small boats were? Is that why you don't need to keep a lookout? I don't see how "familiarity" with a particular stretch of water can help you avoid a collision. I know you cant, thats because your always lost. Now, now, Joe! Your neck is displaying its colour again! I've done it a thousand times. Nothing to it. If it's fog bound in an area I'm not familiar with I usually wait and follow someone that knows the area. Jeeeze! I'm only an amateur, but one of my basic rules is "NEVER Follow Anybody" - they might be as lost as you are! Thats because you are an amateur, you not smart enough to figure out if someone in front of you runs aground that not the best way to go. No, Joe! That's because I have seen what happens when people follow locals. I think you missed the point of talking to everyone you meet on the radio. If you do that you might be able to figure out that they know the local area better than you do. But since you never go anywhere new to you, ahem I think that your [red] neck is showing again! I have posted many accounts of *new* experiences here over the past few years. I guess this is a experience you will never have to do in real life. Don't guess. You aren't very good at guessing. And yet you claim that you are happy to follow somebody else when you are in unfamiliar waters??? (See above). Following people who "know the area" is the best way of running aground that I have come across. Read the above. Locals are one of your best sources of recent knowledge. Joe, are you rreally stupid enough to believe that locals can relieve you of your duty to keep a lookout in thick fog? Back in Mark Twains day on the mississippi they use to tie wooden Kegs or barrels at diffrent areas of the river. Inside these barrels the skippers would leave notes to each other about shifting sand bars, snags, currents and anything that has changed locally. We are talking about keeping a lookout for other vessels! Even in Mark Twain's day, people weren't stupid enough to document the positions of small vessels in small wooden kegs. Today we have what is called the LOCAL notice to mariners that is compiled mostly by LOCALS that see things that change from what printed on charts. Perhaps your to macho to talk to a local and ask for quideance, Im not. Local notices to Mariners would be effin clever if they were able to tell you where small craft were sailing. We're talking about "keeping a lookout" in this thread. Joe, You are a menace! It is obvious that you shouldn't be allowed to sail anywhere. Donal your a idiot with very limited knowledge of how to go anywhere except on a crystal clear day with up to date charts and channels that are very well marked. Its odvious you would be laughed off any proffesional fleet. I have several million miles under my belt on all types of keels, and you? I dunno! About 15,000, I guess. Perhaps I learn as much in one mile, as you do in 1000 miles. Regards Donal -- |