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in message , Jeff Morris
') wrote: One more point - although Neal keeps claiming that not having a lookout is "illegal."Â*Â*AsÂ*farÂ*asÂ*IÂ*know,Â*thereÂ*isÂ*no Â*"law"Â*thatÂ*says youÂ*must follow the ColRegs in international water.Â* That's a bit definitional. There _is_ a law, it's the ColRegs, which are established by international treaty, and it does, as Neal says, require 'a proper lookout at all times'. The fact that there aren't nautical traffic cops lurking behind every iceberg in the southern ocean doesn't mean the law doesn't apply. Technically, I think single handing probably is illegal, and in boats as large, heavy and fast as B&Q/Castorama, I think it does raise some ethical issues - you really could be putting other people's lives at risk. But do you want to live in a world without great solo achievements? Everything in life involves some degree of risk, and a one and a half ton motor car travelling at 64 mph has the same kinetic energy - and the same ability to kill - as a six ton trimaran travelling at 16 mph. And the southern ocean isn't exactly crowded these days. -- (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/ ---===*** This space to let! ***===--- Yes! You, too, can SPAM in the Famous Brooke Rotating .sig! ---===*** Only $300 per line ***===--- |
in message , Capt. Neal®
') wrote: "Jeff Morris" wrote in message ... One more point - although Neal keeps claiming that not having a lookout is "illegal." As far as I know, there is no "law" that says you must follow the ColRegs in international water. That is, there is no penalty for failing to comply, unless that failure leads to an accident. In inland waters, that is not the case - you can be penalized for not having proper lights, etc. Did you know the Coast Guard can, does and will write a citation for not displaying an anchor light if anchored in international waters? (outside of a few designated anchorages, that is.) Do you know that the Coast Guard (UK, US or whoevers else you like) has absolutely no jurisdiction whatsoever in international waters, so they can write as many citations as they like? -- (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/ I'm fed up with Life 1.0. I never liked it much and now it's getting me down. I think I'll upgrade to MSLife 97 -- you know, the one that comes in a flash new box and within weeks you're crawling with bugs. |
"Capt. Mooron" wrote in message news:r3aOd.14517$K54.2604@edtnps84... "JimH" wrote in message Can someone explain how this boating thread is any better than the worst of the OT political threads often complained about by some here at rec.boats? Geez jimmy... it has to do with boats... Are all you guys at rec.boats such whiners or is it that jimmy boy is the group weenie? CM *ploink* Another asshole joins Krause in the bozo bin. |
Ok folks,
You all have missed it. Little Ellen can not be convicted for violation of COLREG #5. And I'll show you.. Capt. Neal states that COLREG Rule #5 "Every vessel shall at all times maintain a proper look-out by sight as well as by hearing as well as by all available means appropriate in the prevailing circumstances and conditions so as to make a full appraisal of the situation and of the risk of collision." IN THE PREVAILING CIRCUMSTANCES AND CONDITIONS (Little Ellen WAS solo) Capt. Neal wrote: "Neither little Ellen nor anybody else is capable of sight or hearing while they are asleep, exhausted below in a speeding sailboat." So by his own admittance, as a USCG Licensed U.S. Merchant Marine Officer ser.# 1045941 that Little Ellen was exhausted and IN THE PREVAILING CIRCUMSTANCE AND CONDITIONS of being solo, had to sleep, and could not keep a proper look out. So did she break the law? Yes. But IN THE PREVAILING CIRCUMSTANCES AND CONDITIONS of being SOLO, She had to. So good luck trying to find a court that will convict her on not having a proper look out in the prevailing circumstances and conditions. Now if you want to get picky, You can go give that guy who lasted 2 weeks at sea on a log raft after the tsunami a ticket. No proper look out, No night time running lights, Non-registered Vessel, un-seaworthy craft, failing to file a float plan, and the list goes on. And don't forget to give a ticket to all those who been stranded at sea in a rubber raft for the same thing. In The Prevailing Circumstances is in the prevailing circumstance. It does not state what that circumstance is. It does not state if it is life threating, a 30ft vessel, log raft, or a rubber raft. And it does not state what those conditions are to be also. And besides, it just sounds like Capt Neal is being ****y because the person he was rooting for didn't win. Have a great day... Ship Skipper "Capt. Neal®" wrote in message ... Just what don't you little Ellen supporters understand about the first part of the following COLREG Rule? Rule 5 Look-out Every vessel shall at all times maintain a proper look-out by sight as well as by hearing . . . Folks, even the most ignorant among you cannot claim you do not know what the words "sight" and "hearing" mean. Check out what Merriam Webster has to say about it. sight \"sït\ n 1 : something seen or worth seeing 2 : the process or power of seeing; esp : the sense of which the eye is the receptor and by which qualities of appearance (as position, shape, and color) are perceived 3 : inspection 4 : a device (as a small bead on a gun barrel) that aids the eye in aiming 5 : view, glimpse 6 : the range of vision - sight.less adj hear.ing n 1 : the process, function, or power of perceiving sound; esp : the special sense by which noises and tones are received as stimuli 2 : earshot 3 : opportunity to be heard 4 : a listening to arguments (as in a court); also : a session of (as of a legislative committee) in which testimony is taken from witnesses © 1995 Zane Publishing, Inc. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary © 1994 by Merriam-Webster, Incorporated "At all times" means at all times. It means if Ellen is sleeping she is failing to comply with Rule 5. In order to be legal there needs to be a human being seeing AND hearing at all times. This means Rule 5 states ANY long-distance race where solo skipper sleeps is in violation of the rule and an illegal enterprise. Those of you who argue that it only becomes illegal if Ellen has a collision argue falsely. Legal and responsible racing cannot include long-distance solo sailing racing by definition. Neither little Ellen nor anybody else is capable of sight or hearing while they are asleep, exhausted below in a speeding sailboat. Ellen is a whore because she gets paid and has a whole team pimping her engaging in an illegal activity. It's about time real sailors stopped supporting this illegal activity which is detrimental and dangerous to sailors everywhere. I certainly will not identify with, worship or give kudos to any law breaker. Until such time as little Ellen operates legally, I will continue to call a spade a spade. The only record she has broken, in my opinion, is 71 days in violation of Rule 5. It does not matter how much or what kind of electronic measures her boat employs. Unless she stays awake and maintains a look-out by sight and hearing twenty-four hours a day, she is operating illegally. Ellen is a lawbreaker by law and by her own admission. Those who support little Ellen support law breaking. You cannot argue otherwise intelligently. Every argument you attempt to employ will be shot down by the simplicity and explicitness of Rule 5. Captain Neal Warren USCG Licensed U.S. Merchant Marine Officer ser.# 1045941 --- Safety at sea is no accident. |
He's just a troll... forget him. But, nice explanation.
-- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com "Ship Skipper" wrote in message ... Ok folks, You all have missed it. Little Ellen can not be convicted for violation of COLREG #5. And I'll show you.. Capt. Neal states that COLREG Rule #5 "Every vessel shall at all times maintain a proper look-out by sight as well as by hearing as well as by all available means appropriate in the prevailing circumstances and conditions so as to make a full appraisal of the situation and of the risk of collision." IN THE PREVAILING CIRCUMSTANCES AND CONDITIONS (Little Ellen WAS solo) Capt. Neal wrote: "Neither little Ellen nor anybody else is capable of sight or hearing while they are asleep, exhausted below in a speeding sailboat." So by his own admittance, as a USCG Licensed U.S. Merchant Marine Officer ser.# 1045941 that Little Ellen was exhausted and IN THE PREVAILING CIRCUMSTANCE AND CONDITIONS of being solo, had to sleep, and could not keep a proper look out. So did she break the law? Yes. But IN THE PREVAILING CIRCUMSTANCES AND CONDITIONS of being SOLO, She had to. So good luck trying to find a court that will convict her on not having a proper look out in the prevailing circumstances and conditions. Now if you want to get picky, You can go give that guy who lasted 2 weeks at sea on a log raft after the tsunami a ticket. No proper look out, No night time running lights, Non-registered Vessel, un-seaworthy craft, failing to file a float plan, and the list goes on. And don't forget to give a ticket to all those who been stranded at sea in a rubber raft for the same thing. In The Prevailing Circumstances is in the prevailing circumstance. It does not state what that circumstance is. It does not state if it is life threating, a 30ft vessel, log raft, or a rubber raft. And it does not state what those conditions are to be also. And besides, it just sounds like Capt Neal is being ****y because the person he was rooting for didn't win. Have a great day... Ship Skipper "Capt. Neal®" wrote in message ... Just what don't you little Ellen supporters understand about the first part of the following COLREG Rule? Rule 5 Look-out Every vessel shall at all times maintain a proper look-out by sight as well as by hearing . . . Folks, even the most ignorant among you cannot claim you do not know what the words "sight" and "hearing" mean. Check out what Merriam Webster has to say about it. sight \"sït\ n 1 : something seen or worth seeing 2 : the process or power of seeing; esp : the sense of which the eye is the receptor and by which qualities of appearance (as position, shape, and color) are perceived 3 : inspection 4 : a device (as a small bead on a gun barrel) that aids the eye in aiming 5 : view, glimpse 6 : the range of vision - sight.less adj hear.ing n 1 : the process, function, or power of perceiving sound; esp : the special sense by which noises and tones are received as stimuli 2 : earshot 3 : opportunity to be heard 4 : a listening to arguments (as in a court); also : a session of (as of a legislative committee) in which testimony is taken from witnesses © 1995 Zane Publishing, Inc. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary © 1994 by Merriam-Webster, Incorporated "At all times" means at all times. It means if Ellen is sleeping she is failing to comply with Rule 5. In order to be legal there needs to be a human being seeing AND hearing at all times. This means Rule 5 states ANY long-distance race where solo skipper sleeps is in violation of the rule and an illegal enterprise. Those of you who argue that it only becomes illegal if Ellen has a collision argue falsely. Legal and responsible racing cannot include long-distance solo sailing racing by definition. Neither little Ellen nor anybody else is capable of sight or hearing while they are asleep, exhausted below in a speeding sailboat. Ellen is a whore because she gets paid and has a whole team pimping her engaging in an illegal activity. It's about time real sailors stopped supporting this illegal activity which is detrimental and dangerous to sailors everywhere. I certainly will not identify with, worship or give kudos to any law breaker. Until such time as little Ellen operates legally, I will continue to call a spade a spade. The only record she has broken, in my opinion, is 71 days in violation of Rule 5. It does not matter how much or what kind of electronic measures her boat employs. Unless she stays awake and maintains a look-out by sight and hearing twenty-four hours a day, she is operating illegally. Ellen is a lawbreaker by law and by her own admission. Those who support little Ellen support law breaking. You cannot argue otherwise intelligently. Every argument you attempt to employ will be shot down by the simplicity and explicitness of Rule 5. Captain Neal Warren USCG Licensed U.S. Merchant Marine Officer ser.# 1045941 --- Safety at sea is no accident. |
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"JimH" wrote in message *ploink* Another asshole joins Krause in the bozo bin. If you can't take the heat Jimbo... don't cross post! BTW - even your Plonk sounds Gay! You whiner!! *Can some kind soul repost this so lil jimmy can read it.. thanx!* CM |
Capt. Neal® wrote:
Just what don't you little Ellen supporters understand about the first part of the following COLREG Rule? Rule 5 Look-out Every vessel shall at all times maintain a proper look-out by sight as well as by hearing . . . Folks, even the most ignorant among you cannot claim you do not know what the words "sight" and "hearing" mean. Check out what Merriam Webster has to say about it. sight \"sït\ n 1 : something seen or worth seeing 2 : the process or power of seeing; esp : the sense of which the eye is the receptor and by which qualities of appearance (as position, shape, and color) are perceived 3 : inspection 4 : a device (as a small bead on a gun barrel) that aids the eye in aiming 5 : view, glimpse 6 : the range of vision - sight.less adj hear.ing n 1 : the process, function, or power of perceiving sound; esp : the special sense by which noises and tones are received as stimuli 2 : earshot 3 : opportunity to be heard 4 : a listening to arguments (as in a court); also : a session of (as of a legislative committee) in which testimony is taken from witnesses © 1995 Zane Publishing, Inc. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary © 1994 by Merriam-Webster, Incorporated "At all times" means at all times. It means if Ellen is sleeping she is failing to comply with Rule 5. In order to be legal there needs to be a human being seeing AND hearing at all times. This means Rule 5 states ANY long-distance race where solo skipper sleeps is in violation of the rule and an illegal enterprise. Those of you who argue that it only becomes illegal if Ellen has a collision argue falsely. Legal and responsible racing cannot include long-distance solo sailing racing by definition. Neither little Ellen nor anybody else is capable of sight or hearing while they are asleep, exhausted below in a speeding sailboat. Ellen is a whore because she gets paid and has a whole team pimping her engaging in an illegal activity. It's about time real sailors stopped supporting this illegal activity which is detrimental and dangerous to sailors everywhere. I certainly will not identify with, worship or give kudos to any law breaker. Until such time as little Ellen operates legally, I will continue to call a spade a spade. The only record she has broken, in my opinion, is 71 days in violation of Rule 5. It does not matter how much or what kind of electronic measures her boat employs. Unless she stays awake and maintains a look-out by sight and hearing twenty-four hours a day, she is operating illegally. Ellen is a lawbreaker by law and by her own admission. Those who support little Ellen support law breaking. You cannot argue otherwise intelligently. Every argument you attempt to employ will be shot down by the simplicity and explicitness of Rule 5. Captain Neal Warren USCG Licensed U.S. Merchant Marine Officer ser.# 1045941 --- Safety at sea is no accident. You are an idiot & pretty typical of the nay sayers who have & will never amount to anything. Merchant Marine Officer??? a hoot; sad, jealous, little uneducated coward more likely:-) With your limited IQ you "need" rules to mindlessly obey for every minute of your endless boring days, so you can feel safe & we can from you. After all your misfortune is always "someone elses fault". K Speaking of idiots:-) & the Krause lie of the day is........ from what we call the "father" series, this is a sad collection of lies about the mythical father, much the same as immature school kids make up. The sad part is that a man in his 50s would be so ashamed of his father's real achievements that he besmirches his memory with such infantile lies. My father, who died in the 1970s, was a fairly well known boating sportsman in the New England-New York area. He was a boat dealer and marina operator. For grins, he raced hydroplanes and utility outboards in the late 40's and early 50's, and won the Albany to New York race twice and a number of other races. For many years, he always had the *fastest* boat on Long Island Sound. I don't know whether that was true, but I don't recall anyone with a faster boat, and he drove all over looking for them. The boat, which changed from year to year, was always called "Bob's Hope." Later, he drove a twin 50-hp Evinrude powered Swedish boat across the North Atlantic in winter as a publicity stunt for a line of Swedish boats he was distributing in New England. Came over the lee of a tanker. He owned a *lot* of boats, including a PT boat for a while and a DUCK. I don't know that I have more experience with boats than anyone in here. I've been boating since I was about 7 or so, and that was 50 years ago. I've owned a *lot* of different kinds of boats. What *you* believe is your business. Frankly, I don't give a damn. Also of course, note the "in winter":-) My father and his chief mechanic once crossed the Atlantic in winter in a 22' boat powered by twin outboards. Yes, it is possible, even the fuel. Got a "fireboat" welcome in NYC. |
wrote:
I guess for some, ignorance is bliss, even if they have to work very hard at it. Trust, but verify. |
Graham Frankland wrote:
Try being on the bridge of a sub whilst submerged. I think the rule says something about all possible means. I presume subs have their methods to keep watch otherwise they'd keep bumping into things. |
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