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On 27 Apr, 11:49, wrote:
On Sun, 27 Apr 2008 05:54:22 -0400, "Roger Long" wrote: "Capt. JG" wrote The sailboat clearly was in the wrong. The only quibble is that perhaps the tow/barge could have acted sooner. I am surprised that neither David Taylor, you, nor Bob spotted the elephant in the room. The "sailboat" was proceeding against the tide. The New London buoy was evidently out of commission at the time but the mid sound buoy shows: YYYY MM DD hh mm WD WSPD GST WVHT DPD APD MWD BAR ATMP WTMP DEWP VIS TIDE 2007 09 09 13 15 280 4.1 5.7 0.40 4.00 99.00 999 1018.3 22.6 21.5 20.2 99.0 99.00 Possibly, a high performance boat could have made it through the bridge against that current on a broad reach but winds were probably lighter down in the wind shadow and he certainly would have had a problem when he hit the wind shadow of the bridge just upstream. If this goes to court, I think the operator will have to fight a strong presumption that he was actually a powerboat at the time. The article certainly should have clarified this out and done something to help dispel the widely held misconception that guys who operate boats with big sticks on them always have the right of way. The article states that the sailboat was under power at the time, and the wealthy, snobbish, asshole captain of the tug tried the radio repeatedly and blasted his horn, while waving his arms frantically. What a buffoon. He apparently thought it was more important to avoid the collision than to insist it was the other guys fault, and he shouldn't HAVE TO use his radio and other signals to try and clarify the situation. :') Rule 9 (a) is surprisingly limited in regard to the common sense idea that traffic moving with the current has right of way in a narrow channel. It's always true on the Great Lake and Western Rivers but otherwise only on waters specified by the Secretary. Whether that bit of water is "specified by the secretary" I don't know. Why 9 (a) doesn't apply to all waters, and what is different about Eastern Rivers is a mystery. where a vessel has reduced manoeuvrability i.e towing or trawling they have right of way, other boats are duty bound to avoid them. The primary duty of any skipper is to preserve the life of himself and his crew If the other guy is a lot bigger and he hits you it is going to hurt the barge tow was alert to the problem and took what steps he could to avoid collision the sail boat was lucky that there was not a "Bow Bell and Marchioness" incident. |
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