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If by "local" you mean the US, then yes.
Generally, you are more apt to hear these terms on the Gulf coast and East coast, but you may still hear them out on the West coast. Keep in mind that pilots tend to work on channels you are not normally monitoring so that much of their normal "passing" traffic may not be heard by you and it is not uncommon for tugs and other workboats to know these channels (except when pilots use UHF) so they switch and make passing arrangements on those channels. You would need to frequent a particular area for awhile to know for sure whether these terms were being used there, but it's probably more important to know that you MAY hear them. Where I work, I normally use "port to port", etc., but I frequently will hear "red to red" and occasionally "one whistle"...... no big deal, one way or the other. otn "Gary" wrote in message news:JaXyg.278951$IK3.238705@pd7tw1no... So what you are saying is it's slang, local terminology? I have visited many American Ports, most recently Seattle a couple weeks ago where I took a 100 foot sailing ship up the Chittendam Locks talking all the way with Seattle traffic and other ships and no-one said one or two whistle anything. I thing it must be a very local phrase, certainly not in common use out here or in Canadian Ports. Gary |
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