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On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 18:12:41 GMT, Gary wrote:
Bil wrote: On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 08:50:35 GMT, "Dennis Pogson" wrote: richard wrote: as others have said it is red on right when returning your green river bouy may be a bit more challanging if the river is open at both ends or if it is so long that you don't know which way is returning. keep in mind that the bouy numbers go up when returning. One of the best things to do is to get charts and see what the red and green bouys are keeping you away from. then you begin to understand what they mean hope this helps In Europe the direction of bouyage is the same direction as the flood tide, and when entering a harbour or river mouth the bouyage is red-to-red and green-to-green. Time the shipping world got together on this and agreed a worldwide system. But IALA A and IALA B are the result of the world getting together and agreeing! I undertand that IALA B, now used only by the US, its territories, and its client states in Asia, was the original proposal. But the Europeans were slow to understand the import of a unified marker system. So they failed to support it. And then came IALA A and the current mess. If IALA B came first it would be IALA A! The europeans had buoyage systems in place when they discovered the Americas. Gaz How old are you, Gaz? Older or younger than 35? Buoyage was in a mess, in terms of the lack of existence of a 'system' or 'systems' until the 1970s. Cynics would argue it's still in a mess, just that the mess has superficial order imposed on it. IALA, then the International Association of Lighthouse Authorities (they've since renamed themselves, see http://www.iala-aism.org), started agitating for a single world system in about 1965. Nothing happened. A shipping accident off France in 1971, associated with misunderstanding of European buoyage 'systems' (or lack thereof), stimulated the final push that come up with two systems of lateral markers - the two systems, you guessed it, differed in how they used red and green markers. The first system (now called B) seemed close to acceptance until the final vote. Then the system now called A was put to the vote. The 'wise' men couldn't agree, so we now have System A and System B. The A and B monikers are there because those pushing for green to starboard when heading for a major port had their proposal in 'final' form first (but that was a couple of years after the debacle of the voting rounds, proving yet again that we cannot just all get along). AFAIK, System B was only in 'final' form in 1980 or thereabouts. Cheers |
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