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On Feb 20, 10:32*pm, Two meter troll wrote:
all right Bob! have fun and be safe. State of the Art Review of GOM Mariner Training. I spent 3 hours in a classroom learning about water safety and the other 5 hours in a pool doing practical water safety/survival stuff. During the 8 hour Morgan City training I compared it to the 4 day Life Boatman and 5 day Basic Safety Training (STCW-95) held at Clatsop Community College, Astoria, OR. This is what I learned: 1) The Astoria training stressed the absolute importance of Immersion Suit (IS) proficiency. We spent at least 10 hours demonstrating in- pool Immersion Suit skills. 2) My GOM Morgan City Immersion Suit training totaled maybe 15 min with the instructor teaching four unsafe practices. the over all attitude was, ya these things are important but ya really dont needed em in the GOM cause none of the boats or rigs have them besides the SAR protocol plans on a 1.5-3.0 hour rescue response. I asked what the water temp was in the GOM. Instructor reply was, " 40 F to 80 F." ****, the GOM water temp is colder than it is in the PNW ! ! ! I wonder why nobody uses (IS) down here when the water temp gets that low and ya might have to spend 3 plus hours in 40 degree water?!?!?!?? Oh ya, its the gulf and they dont give a ****. 3) The highlight was the helicopter ditch simulator. The simulator was lowered into the pool. It held 4 mariners and 2 instructors. We got to escape through four different windows. So imagine this. Your buckled into a seat sitting there in coveralls and shoes. The helo drops into the water and now the cabin is completely filled with water. Then it inverts and goes turtle. Now there you are hanging upside down in a cabin filled with water. Your task is to remove the window, unbuckle, and swim out. We did that 6 times from different seats. Of course each seat had a different type widow to remove. This was by far the best event of the day. In summary, I learned several things. A)When taking survival training find the most badass weather area you can find and attend only the highest quality instruction available in that region. The “cold water” survival training in Morgan City was a dangerous joke. B) For all the recreational mariners….. get off you sedentary ass and take in-water training from somebody who offers top notch USCG courses. And NO I don’t mean USCG Aux Boater Safety courses. You may have to drop $1000 but it will be well worth your time. I have “Safe Gulf” later. Will advise. Bob Arrgg! |
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