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#1
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So im sitting in a room with about 15 other guys. There is a 2M, CM,
3rd engineer, 3 unlimited ocean masters, a 1600, 500 and a couple 200 master guys plus three coasties, and a few ABs. We were talking about Col Regs. One guy mentioned sailboats and the room gave a collective groan. Then came the "stupid sailboat" stories. According to those who make a living on the water by far the biggest offenders n idiots are recreational sailboat operators. Just thought Id pass that along for discussion. |
#2
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Bob wrote:
So im sitting in a room with about 15 other guys. There is a 2M, CM, 3rd engineer, 3 unlimited ocean masters, a 1600, 500 and a couple 200 master guys plus three coasties, and a few ABs. We were talking about Col Regs. One guy mentioned sailboats and the room gave a collective groan. Then came the "stupid sailboat" stories. According to those who make a living on the water by far the biggest offenders n idiots are recreational sailboat operators. Just thought Id pass that along for discussion. Ah com'on, that bait's so rancid that that starving squid wouldn't sniff it. Cheers Marty |
#3
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On Thu, 1 May 2008 16:46:34 -0700 (PDT), Bob
wrote: Then came the "stupid sailboat" stories. According to those who make a living on the water by far the biggest offenders n idiots are recreational sailboat operators. It must be that they don't see that many jet skiiers, wake boarders and tube pullers. |
#4
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On Thu, 01 May 2008 20:45:42 -0400, Marty wrote:
Bob wrote: So im sitting in a room with about 15 other guys. There is a 2M, CM, 3rd engineer, 3 unlimited ocean masters, a 1600, 500 and a couple 200 master guys plus three coasties, and a few ABs. We were talking about Col Regs. One guy mentioned sailboats and the room gave a collective groan. Then came the "stupid sailboat" stories. According to those who make a living on the water by far the biggest offenders n idiots are recreational sailboat operators. Just thought Id pass that along for discussion. Ah com'on, that bait's so rancid that that starving squid wouldn't sniff it. Cheers Marty What's this? Down the Union Hall there looking for a job? Engineers are down in the engine room and never see a sail boat, an Unlimited Tonnage Foreign going Master hob nobbing with a 200 tonner? And, a few A.B.'s? Com'mon, tell us another one. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) |
#5
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On Thu, 1 May 2008 21:41:26 -0400, "Roger Long"
wrote: The sailboats are just slower at getting out of the way after they do something dumb. Yes, and then there's that "holier than thou" attitude to contend with. :-) |
#6
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Wayne.B wrote:
On Thu, 1 May 2008 21:41:26 -0400, "Roger Long" wrote: The sailboats are just slower at getting out of the way after they do something dumb. Yes, and then there's that "holier than thou" attitude to contend with. Last year I took the ferry from Martha's Vineyard to Wood's Hole and sat up by the bow to watch the traffic. Dozens of powerboats crossed in front, all clearing by a wide margin. But amongst them were four sailboats, limited to 5-6 knots. Three were able to pass clear, but the smallest one obviously wasn't going to make it, and the 230 foot ferry had to use reverse to stop in time. I wish I had seen the beginning of the sequence, I thought the sailboats tacked in front of the ferry, but I wasn't sure. So this brings up the question: in some jurisdictions the ferry boats have right of way while in their assigned channels. I think SF is one such place, but I don't believe Massachusetts has that rule. Does anyone know of other places that do? Here's a video taken about 20 miles away. As it turned out, the sailboat won the law suit, I assume because the ferry refused to back down and give it time to turn around. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZPWA_3YfIM |
#7
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"jeff" wrote in message
. .. Wayne.B wrote: On Thu, 1 May 2008 21:41:26 -0400, "Roger Long" wrote: The sailboats are just slower at getting out of the way after they do something dumb. Yes, and then there's that "holier than thou" attitude to contend with. Last year I took the ferry from Martha's Vineyard to Wood's Hole and sat up by the bow to watch the traffic. Dozens of powerboats crossed in front, all clearing by a wide margin. But amongst them were four sailboats, limited to 5-6 knots. Three were able to pass clear, but the smallest one obviously wasn't going to make it, and the 230 foot ferry had to use reverse to stop in time. I wish I had seen the beginning of the sequence, I thought the sailboats tacked in front of the ferry, but I wasn't sure. So this brings up the question: in some jurisdictions the ferry boats have right of way while in their assigned channels. I think SF is one such place, but I don't believe Massachusetts has that rule. Does anyone know of other places that do? Here's a video taken about 20 miles away. As it turned out, the sailboat won the law suit, I assume because the ferry refused to back down and give it time to turn around. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZPWA_3YfIM No. The ferries out here do not have right-of-way status... except leaving or arriving at the ferry dock of course. There's no way you could get out of their way in the middle of the bay. They're fast, maneauverable, and only a portion of them are on fixed routes, so it's hard to predict where they're going. They routinely slow and change course to avoid sailboats under sail. All that said, most intelligent people don't twist the ferries' tails. We maintain our course and speed, worst case. Best case, we take early action to let them know our intentions. Sometimes there are hundreds of sailboats, and it would be chaos if they all tried to take evasive action. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
#8
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"jeff" wrote in message
. .. Wayne.B wrote: On Thu, 1 May 2008 21:41:26 -0400, "Roger Long" wrote: The sailboats are just slower at getting out of the way after they do something dumb. Yes, and then there's that "holier than thou" attitude to contend with. Last year I took the ferry from Martha's Vineyard to Wood's Hole and sat up by the bow to watch the traffic. Dozens of powerboats crossed in front, all clearing by a wide margin. But amongst them were four sailboats, limited to 5-6 knots. Three were able to pass clear, but the smallest one obviously wasn't going to make it, and the 230 foot ferry had to use reverse to stop in time. I wish I had seen the beginning of the sequence, I thought the sailboats tacked in front of the ferry, but I wasn't sure. So this brings up the question: in some jurisdictions the ferry boats have right of way while in their assigned channels. I think SF is one such place, but I don't believe Massachusetts has that rule. Does anyone know of other places that do? Here's a video taken about 20 miles away. As it turned out, the sailboat won the law suit, I assume because the ferry refused to back down and give it time to turn around. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZPWA_3YfIM I believe Syndey harbor has such a rule... -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
#9
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![]() "Capt. JG" wrote in message news:TMGdnTi8ufcsDobVnZ2dnUVZ_uqdnZ2d@bayareasolut ions... "jeff" wrote in message . .. Wayne.B wrote: On Thu, 1 May 2008 21:41:26 -0400, "Roger Long" wrote: The sailboats are just slower at getting out of the way after they do something dumb. Yes, and then there's that "holier than thou" attitude to contend with. Last year I took the ferry from Martha's Vineyard to Wood's Hole and sat up by the bow to watch the traffic. Dozens of powerboats crossed in front, all clearing by a wide margin. But amongst them were four sailboats, limited to 5-6 knots. Three were able to pass clear, but the smallest one obviously wasn't going to make it, and the 230 foot ferry had to use reverse to stop in time. I wish I had seen the beginning of the sequence, I thought the sailboats tacked in front of the ferry, but I wasn't sure. So this brings up the question: in some jurisdictions the ferry boats have right of way while in their assigned channels. I think SF is one such place, but I don't believe Massachusetts has that rule. Does anyone know of other places that do? Here's a video taken about 20 miles away. As it turned out, the sailboat won the law suit, I assume because the ferry refused to back down and give it time to turn around. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZPWA_3YfIM I believe Syndey harbor has such a rule... -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com Yes, Sydney Harbour Ferries carry an orange diamond signal which gives them priority of way over sailing vessels. I have just come back from a week on Sydney Harbour which can be very busy at times and require regular changes of course to avoid other vessels. Bill |
#10
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Jeff,
You provide a link to a video and state that the sailboat won a lawsuit over something. Can you provide more info on the lawsuit? A URL? Dave M. |
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